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Updated May 16, 2026 · 13:55
India News Updated May 16, 2026

India Seizes First-Ever Captagon 'Jihadi Drug' Worth Rs 182 Crore

India has made its first-ever seizure of Captagon, a banned synthetic stimulant known as the "Jihadi Drug," valued at Rs 182 crore under 'Operation RAGEPILL'. Union Home Minister Amit Shah announced the seizure, stating a foreign national has been arrested and the consignment was destined for the Middle East. The operation reflects the government's zero-tolerance policy against drugs as part of its resolve for a 'Drug-Free India'. This comes amid a series of major anti-drug operations, including a recent seizure of 349 kg of cocaine worth Rs 1,745 crore in Mumbai.

India makes first-ever Captagon seizure worth Rs 182 crore under 'Operation RAGEPILL': HM Shah

New Delhi, May 16

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday said enforcement agencies have made India's first-ever seizure of Captagon, a banned synthetic stimulant, commonly referred to as the "Jihadi Drug", valued at Rs 182 crore.

In a post on X, Shah said the seizure was made under "Operation Ragepill" and described it as a major step in the Centre's anti-narcotics campaign.

He said the consignment was destined for the Middle East and confirmed that a foreign national had been arrested in connection with the case.

"Modi govt is resolved for a 'Drug-Free India'. Glad to share that through 'Operation RAGEPILL', our agencies have achieved the first-ever seizure of Captagon, the so-called 'Jihadi Drug', worth Rs 182 crore," he said in a post.

He noted that the operation reflected the government's "zero tolerance against drugs" policy and reiterated that authorities would act against narcotics trafficking through or into India.

"I repeat we will clamp down on every gram of drugs entering India or leaving the country using our territory as the transit route," Shah said while congratulating officers of the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB).

Captagon is a banned stimulant that has been linked internationally to organised crime and conflict zones in parts of West Asia.

Indian authorities have in recent years intensified monitoring of synthetic drugs and transnational narcotics networks operating through maritime and air cargo routes.

The latest seizure comes amid a series of major anti-drug operations highlighted by Shah over the past year.

Earlier this month, the NCB seized 349 kg of high-grade cocaine worth Rs 1,745 crore in Mumbai after uncovering what Shah described as a major international narcotics ring.

The agency said the operation followed a "bottom-to-top" investigation strategy tracing a smaller consignment to a larger network.

In another operation announced previously by Shah, the NCB recovered high-grade cocaine, ganja and cannabis gummies in Mumbai in a seizure estimated to be worth around Rs 200 crore.

Investigators said the syndicate involved overseas operators and international courier routes.

According to reports, the NCB seized more than 1.33 lakh kg of narcotic substances worth nearly Rs 1,980 crore in 2025 and arrested 994 traffickers, including 25 foreign nationals, in 447 cases across the country.

Speaking at an anti-narcotics event on Friday, Shah said, "The government had prepared a roadmap to make India drug-free by 2047, and no narcotics consignment should be allowed to enter or transit through Indian territory."

— IANS

Reader Comments

Sarah B

Impressive work by Indian authorities. Captagon is particularly dangerous because of its links to terrorist groups. It's reassuring to see India taking a strong stance against this "jihadi drug." The bottom-to-top investigation strategy sounds smart—disrupting the entire network rather than just making surface-level seizures.

Vikram M

Great job by NCB! But I hope the focus isn't only on big seizures. The real battle is at the grassroots—schools, colleges, and local dealers. 25 foreign nationals arrested is good, but what about the domestic networks? Need to see more awareness campaigns and rehabilitation centers. Still, a step in the right direction. 👏

Kavya N

Every gram matters! Proud to see India taking on this global menace. Captagon isn't just a drug—it's a weapon of war. If it was being routed through India to the Middle East, we were becoming part of the problem. Now we're part of the solution. Hope the foreign national arrested gives up the big bosses. 🤞

Rohit P

"Drug-Free India by 2047" is a great vision, but it seems too far away. Every year we hear about record seizures, yet drugs keep flowing. Need stricter punishments—life imprisonment or even death penalty for major traffickers. These people are destroying our youth. Operation RAGEPILL should be a sustained campaign, not just a one-off.

James A

As someone who's seen the impact of Captagon in the Middle East, this is significant. It's often called "the poor man's cocaine" but it causes severe psychosis. India's

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