Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Customs officers find gold bars worth ₹19.38L under plane seat

In another case last week, officers found a bag containing 12 gold bars worth RS38L

- HT Correspond­ent

Officers from the Air Intelligen­ce Unit (AIU) of Mumbai customs on Monday found a bag containing six gold bars, worth Rs19.38 lakh, inside an aircraft at Mumbai airport. “The bag had been cleverly concealed inside the cavity of the horizontal pipe frame below a passenger seat,” said an officer. AIU has launched an investigat­ion.

It was the second such discovery at Mumbai airport in the past few days; on Thursday, AIU officers found an unclaimed bag full of gold bars at the internatio­nal airport.

The bag contained 12 gold bars of 10 grams each, worth Rs 38 lakh in all.

Officials suspected that a smuggler may have left the gold for someone else to pick up.

Customs officials have in the past arrested loaders, cleaners, trolley handlers and others who work at the airport in smuggling cases.

A source such staffers have passes that allow them to move around freely within the airport and thus help smugglers.

A source said that one method involves a smuggler concealing gold bars under his seat and leaving them there for a cleaner to pick up and smuggle out of the airport in a dustbin.

AIU officials have in the past found gold bars in bags hidden inside plane toilets, in lifejacket pouches, tissue paper holders, under seats, in toilets near immigratio­n counters and even inside oxygen mask cavities in plane toilets.

AIU investigat­ions have revealed that most of the gold smuggled into India comes from Dubai, Bangkok, Singapore, Colombo, Muscat, Kuwait, Sharjah, Abu Dhabi, Hong Kong, Madagascar, Mauritius and Nairobi. Some of these places are free ports, where there is no scrutiny.

A sessions court on Tuesday rejected the applicatio­n of a defence lawyer seeking to question Pakistani-american Lashkar-e-taiba operative David Coleman Headley again in connection with the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks case.

Wahab Khan, advocate for attack handler Zabiuddin Ansari alias Abu Jundal, had in April moved an applicatio­n before sessions judge GA Sanap to recall the witness. Headley was cross examined through video-conferenci­ng from March 22 to 26. Khan said he wanted to question Headley before the court in connection with Tawahur Hussain Rana, the Pakistani-canadian businessma­n.

The Mumbai police on Tuesday filed a reply opposing the bail applicatio­n of artist Chintan Upadhyay, arrested in the double murders of his artist wife Hema and her lawyer Haresh Bhambani.

The police and the crime branch also responded to co-ac cused Pradeep Rajbhar’s applica tion where he had claimed his confession was coerced.

The prosecutio­n submitted a 14-point rebuttal to Chintan’s bai applicatio­n at the Dindoshi ses sions court.

 ??  ?? David Coleman Headley
David Coleman Headley

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