J&K Police attach 4 properties worth ₹3.34 crore in Srinagar under NDPS Act

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J&K Police attach 4 properties worth ₹3.34 crore in Srinagar under NDPS Act

Synopsis

Srinagar Police struck at the financial roots of drug networks on 17 July, attaching four residential properties worth ₹3.34 crore under the NDPS Act — the proceeds of narcotics cases spanning 2025 and 2026. The move signals a deliberate pivot from arresting traffickers to dismantling the wealth they accumulate.

Key Takeaways

Srinagar Police attached four properties worth ₹3,34,51,957 on 17 July under Section 68F of the NDPS Act.
The action was part of the Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan – 100 Days Campaign , carried out by Police Station Safakadal .
The four accused — Adnan Lateef Sheikh , Danyal Ahmad Bisati , Shahid Gul , and Adil Ahmad Mir — are linked to separate FIRs under the NDPS Act.
The highest-valued attachment is a three-storey house at Nawakadal worth ₹1,19,90,765 .
Accused are barred from selling, leasing, or transferring the attached properties without prior permission of the competent authority.

Srinagar Police on Friday, 17 July attached four immovable properties valued at ₹3,34,51,957 under Section 68F of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, 1985, as part of a sustained crackdown on drug trafficking in Jammu and Kashmir. The action was carried out by Police Station Safakadal under the nationwide Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan – 100 Days Campaign.

Properties Attached and Accused Named

The four residential properties — spread across localities in Srinagar — were identified as assets illegally acquired through proceeds of the narcotic trade. Details of each attachment are as follows:

A three-storey residential house at Estate Nawakadal, valued at ₹1,19,90,765, belonging to Adnan Lateef Sheikh, son of Late Mohd Lateef Sheikh, of Braripora, Nawakadal — linked to FIR No. 74/2026 under Section 8/22 NDPS Act.

A single-storey house on 7 marlas and 50 sq. ft. at Estate Palpora, valued at ₹1,18,28,965, belonging to Danyal Ahmad Bisati, son of Aijaz Ahmad Bisati, of Palpora, Noorbagh — linked to FIR No. 24/2025 under Sections 8/20 and 29 NDPS Act.

A double-storey house on approximately 4.5 marlas at Estate Barthana, Qammerwari, valued at ₹71,31,905, belonging to Shahid Gul, son of Ghulam Mohammad Sheikh, of Barthana, Qammerwari — linked to FIR No. 48/2026 under Section 8/20 NDPS Act.

A single-storey house on three marlas at Estate Goripora, valued at ₹25,00,322, belonging to Adil Ahmad Mir, son of Mohammad Sultan Mir, of Palpora, Srinagar — linked to FIR No. 62/2025 under Sections 8/21 and 29 NDPS Act.

What the Orders Prohibit

All four accused have been formally served with attachment orders. They are prohibited from selling, leasing, mortgaging, transferring, or otherwise disposing of the attached properties, or from creating any third-party interest in them, without prior approval from the competent authority.

Context: Targeting Drug Networks' Financial Backbone

The use of Section 68F of the NDPS Act — which allows attachment of property believed to be derived from drug proceeds — reflects a deliberate shift in enforcement strategy: dismantling the financial infrastructure of narcotics networks, not just arresting traffickers. This comes amid heightened anti-drug drives across Jammu and Kashmir, where authorities have repeatedly flagged cross-border smuggling as a persistent challenge. Notably, the four FIRs span 2025 and 2026, indicating these investigations were well advanced before the asset-attachment stage.

Police Appeal to Citizens

Srinagar Police reiterated its commitment to building a drug-free society and urged residents to share any information related to drug trafficking with the nearest police station or through the official Police Helpline.

Point of View

Suggesting this is coordinated case-building rather than opportunistic action. The real measure of success, however, will be whether these attachments survive legal challenge and whether the underlying prosecutions result in conviction — outcomes that have historically been uneven in NDPS cases across India.
NationPress
17 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What properties did Srinagar Police attach under the NDPS Act?
Srinagar Police attached four residential properties worth a combined ₹3,34,51,957 on 17 July under Section 68F of the NDPS Act. The properties are located across Nawakadal, Palpora, Qammerwari, and Goripora in Srinagar, and are linked to four separate drug-trafficking FIRs.
What is Section 68F of the NDPS Act?
Section 68F of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 empowers police to attach property believed to have been acquired from the proceeds of drug trafficking. The attachment prevents the accused from selling or transferring the property until the case is resolved.
Who are the accused in the Srinagar NDPS property attachment case?
The four accused are Adnan Lateef Sheikh of Nawakadal, Danyal Ahmad Bisati of Palpora Noorbagh, Shahid Gul of Barthana Qammerwari, and Adil Ahmad Mir of Palpora Srinagar. Each is named in a separate FIR under various sections of the NDPS Act registered at Police Station Safakadal.
What is the Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan – 100 Days Campaign?
It is a nationwide anti-drug campaign under which police forces across India are conducting intensified operations against drug trafficking, including arrests, seizures, and asset attachments. The Srinagar action on 17 July is part of this campaign.
Can the accused sell or transfer the attached properties?
No. All four accused have been served with formal attachment orders prohibiting them from selling, leasing, mortgaging, transferring, or creating any third-party interest in the attached properties without prior permission from the competent authority.
Nation Press
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