The Hindu (Kolkata)

At Bengaluru airport, a cat-and-mouse game between enforcemen­t agencies and mules

The city’s Kempegowda Internatio­nal Airport has emerged as a ‘preferred landing point’ for all kinds of contraband, including drugs, gold, wildlife, and wildlife artefacts, even as the consignmen­t destinatio­ns have been other cities. Detecting them has be

- ILLUSTRATI­ON: SEBASTIAN FRANCIS

Officials at the Kempegowda Internatio­nal Airport (KIA) in Bengaluru were intrigued by a 40yearold Venezuelan passenger flying from Dubai (UAE) to Bengaluru on February 9. Throughout the journey, he refused to consume anything, including water. This raised red flags. He was detained and subjected to a medical examinatio­n. It turned out that the passenger had capsules containing 920 grams of cocaine in his belly. The drugs were worth ₹9.2 crore, one of the biggest seizures at the KIA in recent times.

The accused was a mule for an internatio­nal drug racket. He was carrying the narcotics for his contact in New Delhi, officials from the Directorat­e of Revenue Intelligen­ce (DRI) said.

On February 28, DRI officials arrested a 25yearold man from Delhi who was carrying 1,498 grams of gold bars. Based on passenger profiling, officials zeroed in on the accused who was caught soon after he landed at the KIA from Dubai.

In another case, Customs officials caught a Thai national flying in from Dubai on March 1, trying to smuggle 824.6 grams of gold paste worth ₹50.7 lakh, concealed within his body.

In February alone, DRI and Customs officials seized over 20 kg of gold being smuggled through the KIA. After Terminal 2 (T2) became operationa­l on January 15, 2023, the KIA registered a 35% growth in passenger traffic in 2023 compared with the previous year, and served 3.72 crore passengers. The cases of smuggling of contraband, mainly narcotics and gold, have also gone up.

The KIA has emerged as a “preferred landing point” for all kinds of contraband, including wildlife and wildlife artefacts, apart from narcotics and gold, heading to other cities, according to recent airport intel.

In another instance, KIA Customs unearthed a wild animal traffickin­g racket, arrested a 34yearold man from Tamil Nadu flying in from Bangkok, Thailand, and rescued 234 wild animals — python, chameleon, iguana, turtles, alligators, and a dead baby kangaroo — in August 2023. The consignmen­t was destined for Chennai.“This is a constant catandmous­e game, where we keep playing catch up and the smugglers try to evade us. The KIA was reporting several narcotics smuggling cases a few years ago. After we busted a series of narcotics cases, the landing point had shifted to Mumbai, and the cases had come down in Bengaluru. But after many smuggling attempts were foiled at both Delhi and Mumbai airports, the KIA has again emerged as a preferred landing point. We have heightened our vigil, which is reflected in the number of attempts to smuggle contraband we have been foiling,” a senior official posted at the KIA said.

Identifyin­g mules

The main challenge for Customs officials at the KIA has been identifyin­g mules carrying contraband in their body as technology has been of little help in this regard. Even after identifyin­g a suspected mule, officials have the Herculean task of convincing the mule to subject themselves to a medical examinatio­n, which is the only way the contraband in the body can be confirmed. Mules are identified mostly through human intelligen­ce — constant surveillan­ce and profiling of passengers, and lookout for behavioura­l indicators that raise red flags.

Every person walking into or out of the airport is put under constant surveillan­ce by field officers both physically and through CCTV cameras back in the control room apart from several electronic devices, like Xray machines, baggage scanners, and metal detectors.

“Back in the control room, all officers are glued to their screens, but smugglers can slip through the cracks of the system in the blink of an eye. This is over and above the field officers, who profile passengers, apart from those who check passengers and their baggage,” explained a senior Customs official.

Though the airport is equipped with adequate surveillan­ce, antisabota­ge, and contraband checking mechanisms, technology has some limitation­s, which is exploited by smugglers. For instance, the scanners detect solid gold and metal paste, but many times fail to detect gold in impure forms and contraband concealed in body parts, sources in the Surveillan­ce Department of Customs said. This makes the expertise of field officers and human intelligen­ce critical in identifyin­g mules. The Customs and the DRI have designed a detailed SOP to identify suspected mules among a sea of passengers.

Officials look out for three broad categories of cues to identify mules — ticket characteri­stics, baggage characteri­stics, and behaviour of passengers, a senior Customs official said. The first red flag is ticket characteri­stics, given the officials also have a list of source countries from where mules usually come and the kind of passengers who act as mules, apart from suspicious ticket bookings.

For instance, a senior DRI official said that Dubai and other Gulf countries have always been the top countries from where “foreign origin gold” is smuggled in. These trends keep changing, the official said.

In another emerging trend, smugglers are using couples with children, and men accompanyi­ng aged parents to smuggle contraband. Recently, officials at the KIA caught a couple travelling with minor children involved in gold smuggling. Smugglers also look for fresh faces with cleanslate background­s, officials said.

Behaviour patterns of mules are also the biggest giveaway to an experience­d observant eye, said a senior DRI official.

Despite all these measures, smuggling of contraband continues to thrive as mules often outsmart field officials with novel modus operandi.

Tracking the chain

As most of the focus is on foiling smuggling attempts and recovering contraband at the airport, a majority of these cases are often not taken to their logical conclusion. “The passenger caught with contraband often doesn’t have informatio­n about the receiver. Mules are often asked to wait at the airport, and a receiver having all the details of the mule and their photograph will be waiting outside to collect the consignmen­t. If the mule is caught and doesn’t emerge from the airport in 1520 minutes after the plane’s arrival, the receiver slips away, cutting off the chain,” a senior official explained.

Some of these cases are transferre­d to agencies such as the Narcotics Control Bureau and the Directorat­e of Enforcemen­t for further probe. But without a local link to the mule, there is little they can do.

Dubai and other Gulf countries have always been the top countries from where ‘foreign origin gold’ is smuggled in. But these trends keep changing.

A SENIOR

DRI OFFICIAL

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