US Bans Visas for 13 in Fentanyl Crackdown with India

The United States has banned visas for 13 associates of Indian company KS International Traders due to fentanyl trafficking. The firm was previously sanctioned for supplying counterfeit pills filled with fentanyl and other drugs. US officials cited a shared commitment with India to combat drug trafficking networks. The Treasury Department had already blocked assets of the company's owners, Khizar Mohammad Iqbal Shaikh and Sadiq Abbas Habib Sayyed.

Key Points: US Bans Visas for 13 in Fentanyl Crackdown with India

  • US bans visas for 13 people linked to Indian firm KS International Traders
  • Firm sanctioned for trafficking fentanyl, a "Weapon of Mass Destruction"
  • Owners Khizar Mohammad Iqbal Shaikh and Sadiq Abbas Habib Sayyed targeted
  • Treasury Department blocked assets and financial transactions
2 min read

US bans visas for 13 persons, cites shared commitment with India against drug trafficking​

US bans visas for 13 associates of Indian firm KS International Traders over fentanyl trafficking, citing shared commitment with India to fight drug trade.

"This action underscores the United States' and India's enduring and shared commitment to dismantling illicit drug entities and disrupting trafficking networks that harm Americans. - Tommy Pigott"

New York, May 12

Citing the shared commitment with India to fight drug trafficking, the United States has banned visas for 13 people associated with an Indian business that was already sanctioned for allegedly trafficking in the deadly drug fentanyl, State Department Spokesperson Tommy Pigott announced on Tuesday.​

They "are close business associates of KS International Traders and its owner", and the company "generated revenue through the trafficking of illicit fentanyl, which President Trump designated as a Weapon of Mass Destruction", he said.​

"This action underscores the United States' and India's enduring and shared commitment to dismantling illicit drug entities and disrupting trafficking networks that harm Americans," Pigott said.​

He did not name the people covered by the visa ban.​

He said the visa ban was imposed on them under a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act that bars drug traffickers from entering the United States.​

In September, KS International Traders, its owner, identified as Khizar Mohammad Iqbal Shaikh, and Sadiq Abbas Habib Sayyed, both Indian nationals, were placed under United States Treasury Department sanctions.​

The sanctions blocked their assets and prevented them from financial transactions in the United States.​

The Treasury Department's announcement of the sanctions against them accused them of "collectively supplying hundreds of thousands of counterfeit prescription pills filled with fentanyl and other illicit drugs to victims across the United States".​

"Too many families have been torn apart by fentanyl," said Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence John Hurley.​

"Today, we are acting to hold accountable those who profit from this poison."​

The Treasury Department said that Sayyed and Shaikh, working with narcotics traffickers in the Dominican Republic and the United States, marketed and sold pills filled with illicit drugs like fentanyl, a fentanyl analogue, and methamphetamine.​

According to the Centers for Disease Control, 70,231 people died from drug overdoses in the 12 months ending in November in the United States.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Appreciate the US-India collaboration here. Fentanyl is no joke - it killed 70,000 people in a year. Hope India's agencies learn from this and tighten surveillance on chemical exports. We need stricter checks! 🇮🇳🤝🇺🇸
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Vikram M
This is a slap on the wrist. Visa bans won't stop these criminals - they need to be extradited and prosecuted. India should also blacklist these companies. But I'm glad the US is acknowledging our cooperation in this fight.
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Rohit P
Finally some action! These drug mafia guys think they can operate from India and target US citizens? Good to see both governments working together. But we need more enforcement at our ports and labs producing precursor chemicals.
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Michael C
As an American, I'm grateful for India's partnership on this. Fentanyl is devastating our communities. The 13 people banned are just the tip of the iceberg - hope we can trace and dismantle the entire network together.
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Kavya N
One question: why is the US designating fentanyl as a 'weapon of mass destruction' but not taking similar strong action against opioid companies in their own country? India should cooperate but also ensure our businesses aren't unfairly targeted. Just saying! 😅
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Deepak U
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