KeralaNews

The Narcotic Shadow: 48,000+ Youth Cases and ₹554 Cr. Haul Mark a Decade of “Drug Mafia” Surge in Kerala

THIRUVANANTHAPURAM – As the state concludes a decade under the Pinarayi Vijayan-led administration, the shadow of a burgeoning drug mafia looms larger than ever. Recent data presented in the State Assembly suggests that 2016–2026 may go down in history as the period when Kerala’s youth became the primary targets—and often the conduits—for a sophisticated narcotics trade.
A Decade of Alarming Growth

Excise Minister M.B. Rajesh, responding to queries in the Assembly on January 27, 2026, revealed that between 2016 and January 20, 2026, the state registered 48,371 cases under the NDPS Act involving students and young adults. This surge highlights a systemic effort by drug syndicates to embed themselves within educational institutions and youth hubs.
The ₹554 Crore Inventory

The financial scale of the seizures over this decade is unprecedented. The total market value of confiscated drugs reached ₹554.57 crore, with high-value synthetic drugs and traditional narcotics flooding the streets.

Value of Major Drug Seizures (2016–2026):

Hashish: ₹272.24 Crore

Cannabis (Ganja): ₹146.13 Crore

Methamphetamine: ₹65.66 Crore

MDMA: ₹60.99 Crore

Heroin: ₹8.30 Crore

Brown Sugar: ₹0.54 Crore

Cocaine: ₹0.42 Crore

Opium: ₹0.29 Crore

The “Source” Problem

While the government points to these high seizure numbers as proof of proactive enforcement, critics argue that the sheer volume proves that the state has become a major destination for traffickers. The most critical failure highlighted is the inability of investigative agencies to identify and dismantle the “Source” of these drugs, which often originate from international routes or industrial synthetic labs outside the state.

Observers note that while thousands of students are booked, the “kingpins” and the logistical backbone of the mafia remain largely intact, creating a cycle that continues to trap the next generation.

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