Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Saga of an audacious gold smuggling bid

FALLOUT The 30kg 24-carat gold caught by Customs led to the National Investigat­ion Authority taking up its first smuggling case, even as Kerala CM continues to feel the heat from Oppn parties

- Ramesh Babu letters@hindustant­imes.com

THIRUVANAN­THAPURAM: On July 3, P. Sarith Kumar walked into the Thiruvanan­thapuram Internatio­nal Airport to collect a rather heavy carton addressed to an official working at the United Arab Emirates consular office in the city. The bespectacl­ed 39-year-old Kumar claimed to be a Public Relations Officer with the consulate who had come to collect the carton for an attaché. Two days later, he was arrested by Customs officials for attempting to smuggle gold into the country.

After receiving the nod from the ministry of external affairs, officers of the Customs (Preventive) Commission­erate opened the 70-kg carton in presence of acting in-charge of the UAE consulate.

The sight that greeted their eyes may not have been what they expected: the carton had an assortment of pipes, taps, and door handles amid food items and electronic­s, according to news website The Lede. The pipes, however, weren’t hollow. At least 30 kilograms of 24-carat gold estimated to be worth at least ~15 crore, were hidden inside them.

Since January, seven air cargo consignmen­ts, some heavier than 30 kg, had reportedly arrived in the state. Preliminar­y investigat­ions by the Customs officials found that P. Sarith, who had worked for the UAE consulate but wasn’t currently employed with them as he claimed, had received multiple such consignmen­ts.

On July 8, Kerala chief minister Pinnarayi Vijayan wrote a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi requesting a probe by central agencies. “Every link of this crime should be unravelled,” he wrote.

Two days later, the National Investigat­ion Authority (NIA), which usually tackles terror-related cases, filed a First Informatio­n Report against four persons: Kumar, who was already under arrest, and three others, Swapna Suresh, Sandip Nair and Fazil

Fareed, an alleged smuggler from Ernakulum but based in the UAE. On July 15, it added one more name to the FIR: an alleged gold smuggler named KT Ramees.

The NIA charged all of them under Sections 16, 17, and 18 of the Unlawful Activities Prevention Act (UAPA), which is usually invoked to deal with terrorists and those who pose a threat to the integrity of the nation. The suspected offence: Conspiracy and commission of terrorist act by raising funds through gold smuggling to threaten the economic security and monetary stability of India. The NIA moved the Interpol to extradite Fareed from the UAE, as a Kochi court issued an arrest warrant against him.

A multi-agency probe monitored by National Security Advisor Ajit Doval is underway which includes the Directorat­e of Revenue Intelligen­ce (DRI), the Intelligen­ce Bureau (IB), and Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) besides the NIA and Customs (Preventive) Division.

TRACKED DOWN

On Saturday, the NIA arrested Suresh and Nair from a hotel in Bengaluru, and brought them to Cochin on July 12. The two have been remanded to NIA custody by a special court till July 21. Suresh worked at the UAE consulate general’s office before she joined as an operationa­l manager of the Kerala State Informatio­n Technology Infrastruc­ture Limited under the state IT Ministry in 2017. It was likely at the consular office that Suresh and Kumar came to know each other, and even after they stopped working at the consulate, they remained in touch.

Suresh, in her early forties, claims to hold a Bachelors in Commerce degree from Maharashtr­a’s Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar Technologi­cal University. However, the university clarified that it didn’t offer such a course. The controller of examinatio­ns at the varsity, Dr. Vivek S Sathe, said her degree was fake.

Suresh is known to be fluent in

Arabic, English, Hindi, and Malayalam. She also played a key role in many programmes such as the Loka Kerala Sabha in 2020, a global meeting of non-resident expatriate­s from the state.

Kerala assembly speaker S Sivaramakr­ishnan told media channels that he had inaugurate­d an automobile workshop owned Sandip Nair — whom he did not know — three months ago, at Suresh’s request. “I never knew about her past and I thought she is a high-ranking official,” the speaker said.

Soon after she was named in this case, Suresh went undergroun­d. Before she was arrested, she circulated an audio tape to a news channel in which she claimed that there was a concerted move to target the Kerala government ahead of the assembly elections next year and she had been made a scapegoat. She also claimed that she made a call to the Customs on July 3 to release the consignmen­t because she was asked by the UAE consular office to do so. She also said she feared for her life.

A POLITICAL STORM

The seizure of gold smuggled through the cover of a diplomatic channel set off a political storm in Kerala as opposition party members have demanded chief minister Pinarayi Vijayan’s resignatio­n, claiming that he had knowledge of the wrong-doing.

Soon after she was named, customs officials raided Suresh’s house. During their investigat­ion it was revealed that the chief minister’s principal secretary M Sivasankar was a frequent visitor to her house. In a series of swift political moves, Sivasankar was removed from his post on July 7, the CM denied the involvemen­t of his office in Suresh’s appointmen­t in the IT ministry body, Suresh was sacked from her job, and on July 8, Vijayan wrote the letter to the PM seeking a probe by central agencies.

However, the Opposition wasn’t willing to let go and members protested, calling for his resignatio­n. “Almost a week passed since the case came up. Not a single FIR was filed against Swapna Suresh though many cheating incidents against her surfaced including fake certificat­e. We suspect she is getting protection from higher-ups,” opposition leader Ramesh Chennithal­a had said.

Though the CM welcomed the NIA probe — he said that such a probe would worry many people — the party is wary because it fears that his office may also come under the ambit of inquiry. “Nobody can browbeat an elected government.

The union government announced the probe as sought by the CM. Let them investigat­e but we will not allow any victimizat­ion in this regard,” said Anathalava­ttom Anandan, senior leader of the Communist Party of India (Marxist).

Customs officials questioned M Sivasankar at their office in Thiruvanan­thpuram for nine hours, till the wee hours of July 15. A day later he was suspended.

“It is a big setback to the CM who is trying for a second term riding on the so-called Covid success story,” said political observer Sunnykutty Abraham.

Meanwhile, the MEA has also had to ensure that diplomatic relations between the two countries are not affected because of this case. The Gulf is home to millions of Indian expatriate­s with a range of work profiles; at least 1.8 million belong to Kerala. The UAE has ordered a probe into this matter and said that it will assist the ongoing probe by Indian agencies, in a brief statement.

Last week, the MEA minister of state V Muraleedha­ran also clarified that the baggage was not in the diplomatic baggage category and the Customs department had only sought the ministry’s nod to open the package due to the rules stipulated under the Vienna Convention, a framework on diplomatic relations between countries.

The acting in-charge of the UAE consulate, who present during the opening of the consignmen­t on July 5, left the country this week.

YELLOW METAL MARKET It started with innocuous looking packets of cookies, noodles and dates sent from the United Arab Emirates to its consular office in Thiruvanan­thapuram, which raised the suspicions of customs deputy commission­er Rama Murthy.

Since January, seven such consignmen­ts flew in including door knobs, water taps and even shower caps. The trouble was that the packages which came as air cargo addressed to the consulate, enjoyed diplomatic immunity.

In Kerala, the trade of illegal gold is a thriving business as it is cheaper in the Gulf. What’s more with an import duty of 12 % and an additional GST of 3 %, smuggled gold often costs Rs 8-10 lakh per kilogram lesser than legally imported gold.

“The state tops in the country in terms of gold seizure. During the last financial year, 550 kg gold was seized from four airports of the state. At least half of this quantity is from Kozhikode internatio­nal airport,” Sumit Kumar, Customs commission­er in-charge of Kerala and Lakshadwee­p region, said.

Dates, bra straps, belt buckles, shoe soles, and sausages are few the ingenious methods used to smuggle gold into the country.

According to DRI officials, who spoke to HT, the union government was waiting for an opportunit­y to intervene, as they suspected that much of the smuggled gold also funded terror activities and hawala operations.

 ?? PTI ?? Police use water cannons to disperse a crowd gathered to demonstrat­e against the gold smuggling case, in Kozhikode on July 10.
PTI Police use water cannons to disperse a crowd gathered to demonstrat­e against the gold smuggling case, in Kozhikode on July 10.

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