Drug peddler's ₹1.23 crore property attached in J&K's Sopore under NDPS Act
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Jammu & Kashmir Police on Monday, 13 July attached two immovable properties worth over ₹1.23 crore belonging to an absconding drug trafficker in the Sopore sub-division of Baramulla district, as part of the ongoing 100-Day Nasha Mukt Jammu & Kashmir Abhiyaan. The action was taken under Section 68F of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, 1985, following a detailed financial investigation linking the assets to proceeds of narcotics trafficking.
What Was Attached
The seized properties belong to Mohammad Ashraf Mir, also known as Ashu, son of the late Farooq Ahmad Mir, a resident of Jamia Qadeem, Sopore, currently listed as residing at Krankshivan Colony, Nageen Bagh-B, Sopore. The attached assets comprise a double-storey residential house with a boundary wall and land measuring 1 kanal 10 marlas under Survey No. 365 Min.
The Investigation and Legal Basis
The attachment is connected to FIR No. 23/2026 registered at Police Station Sopore. According to a police statement, a financial probe established that the properties were acquired through proceeds generated from illicit narcotics trafficking. The proceedings were carried out in the presence of independent witnesses, in compliance with the NDPS Act's procedural requirements.
Accused Absconding, Multiple Cases Registered
Mir is currently absconding in the NDPS case, and a Hue and Cry Notice along with a Look Out Notice has already been issued against him. He is reportedly involved in multiple NDPS cases, pointing to a sustained pattern of drug trafficking activity. Sopore Police said the attachment is aimed at dismantling the financial infrastructure that sustains the narcotics trade in the region.
Part of the 100-Day Anti-Drug Drive
The action forms part of the 100-Day Nasha Mukt Jammu & Kashmir Abhiyaan, a focused campaign to eradicate the drug menace across the Union Territory. By targeting illegally acquired assets, authorities seek to deprive traffickers of crime proceeds and weaken the economic foundations of narcotics networks. Sopore Police reiterated its zero-tolerance stance, stating that stringent legal and financial action will continue against all those involved in the narcotics trade.
This is among a series of asset-attachment actions under the NDPS Act in Jammu & Kashmir in recent months, reflecting a broader shift in strategy — from arresting individuals to dismantling the financial ecosystems that sustain drug networks.