ED busts ₹1,500 crore betel nut smuggling-money laundering racket across 4 states

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ED busts ₹1,500 crore betel nut smuggling-money laundering racket across 4 states

Synopsis

The ED has cracked open a ₹1,500 crore areca nut smuggling and money laundering ring that ran from the Myanmar border through four states, using fake GST invoices, hawala transfers, and real estate across seven cities to hide the proceeds. A district that officially produced zero areca nut was listed as the source — the paper trail that ultimately unravelled the syndicate.

Key Takeaways

The ED uncovered an alleged ₹1,500 crore money laundering network linked to areca nut smuggling from Myanmar .
Raids on 3 July covered 20 locations across Assam, Mizoram, West Bengal , and Uttar Pradesh . ₹1.30 crore in cash was seized and 33 bank accounts frozen.
The syndicate used forged GST invoices , fake firms, and hawala channels to launder proceeds.
Champhai district — listed as origin of most consignments — recorded zero domestic areca nut production in the relevant period.
Alleged crime proceeds were invested in villas and commercial properties across Champhai, Silchar, Guwahati, Nabadwip, Falakata, Kolkata , and Varanasi .

The Directorate of Enforcement (ED) has uncovered an alleged ₹1,500 crore money laundering network tied to the large-scale smuggling of foreign-origin betel nut (areca nut) from Myanmar into India, officials said on Monday, 6 July. Searches conducted on 3 July across 20 locations in Assam, Mizoram, West Bengal, and Uttar Pradesh resulted in the seizure of ₹1.30 crore in cash and the freezing of 33 bank accounts.

How the Syndicate Operated

According to the ED, the organised syndicate routed smuggled areca nut through the Champhai-Zokhawthar corridor along the India-Myanmar border before dispersing consignments across multiple states. The network allegedly used forged GST invoices, fictitious supplier and buyer entities, and fabricated transport documents to disguise the illicit origin of the goods.

A critical finding by investigators was that official government production data showed Champhai district — from which the bulk of consignments were claimed to have originated — recorded zero domestic areca nut production during the relevant period, effectively confirming the foreign origin of the goods.

Money Laundering Trail

The ED alleged that proceeds from the smuggling operation were layered through hawala channels and a web of transit bank accounts before being routed back to smugglers in Myanmar. Searches yielded diaries, business records, electronic devices, property documents, and title deeds.

Investigators also found that alleged proceeds of crime had been invested in villas and commercial properties across Champhai, Silchar, Guwahati, Nabadwip, Falakata, Kolkata, and Varanasi — indicating a deliberate strategy to park illicit wealth in real estate spread across multiple states.

DRI Findings and Legal Background

The ED's investigation drew on earlier findings of the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), Guwahati, which had previously seized 655.32 metric tonnes of areca nut along with vehicles used for transportation, following directions of the Gauhati High Court. The case originates from multiple First Information Reports (FIRs) registered in Assam under the Indian Penal Code and the Customs Act, relating to illegal areca nut smuggling and customs duty evasion.

The searches were conducted under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA).

What Comes Next

Further investigation is underway, according to officials. The scale of the network — spanning border smuggling, document fraud, hawala transfers, and real estate investment across seven cities — suggests a long-running and well-capitalised operation. Arrests and additional asset attachments are likely as the probe advances.

Point of View

And it went undetected long enough to build a ₹1,500 crore network. That is not just a smuggling failure; it is a GST verification failure and a customs intelligence gap. The investment of proceeds in real estate across seven cities, including Varanasi and Kolkata, points to a laundering architecture sophisticated enough to require professional facilitation — accountants, lawyers, or shell-company operators. The ED's reliance on DRI groundwork and Gauhati High Court directions also signals that this investigation has judicial oversight, which should accelerate asset attachment. The real accountability question is how long forged invoices circulated through the GST network before anyone flagged the Champhai anomaly.
NationPress
6 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the ₹1,500 crore betel nut money laundering case uncovered by the ED?
It is an alleged money laundering network worth ₹1,500 crore, built on the large-scale smuggling of foreign-origin areca nut from Myanmar into India. The ED conducted raids on 3 July across 20 locations in four states, seizing ₹1.30 crore in cash and freezing 33 bank accounts.
Which route was used to smuggle areca nut into India?
The syndicate allegedly used the Champhai-Zokhawthar corridor along the India-Myanmar border to bring in smuggled areca nut. Consignments were then moved across multiple states using forged GST invoices and fabricated transport documents.
How were the smuggling proceeds laundered?
According to the ED, proceeds were routed through hawala channels and a network of transit bank accounts before being sent back to smugglers in Myanmar. A portion of the alleged crime proceeds was also invested in villas and commercial properties across seven cities including Guwahati, Kolkata, and Varanasi.
What evidence did the ED find during the raids?
Investigators seized diaries, business records, electronic devices, property documents, and title deeds during searches at 20 locations. The agency also found that Champhai district — listed as the origin of most consignments — had recorded zero domestic areca nut production during the relevant period.
What is the legal basis for the ED's investigation?
The ED conducted its searches under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). The case stems from multiple FIRs registered in Assam under the Indian Penal Code and the Customs Act, and also draws on earlier findings of the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence, Guwahati, which had seized 655.32 metric tonnes of areca nut following Gauhati High Court directions.
Nation Press
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