At least, 50 Nigerians have been arrested in one of India’s largest coordinated crackdowns on a transnational narcotics and money-laundering network. The arrests — carried out in a sweeping multi-state operation — mark a major escalation in India’s fight against synthetic-drug trafficking and international criminal syndicates.
Authorities say those arrested are believed to be linked to a sprawling drug-distribution and hawala-laundering cartel operating across several major Indian cities, including Delhi, Noida, Gwalior, and Visakhapatnam. The syndicate, according to investigators, ran a highly structured supply chain dealing in methamphetamine, cocaine, and other synthetic substances.
A Multi-Agency Strike Months in the Making
According to a report on Thursday by NDTV, the operation was led by the Delhi Police Crime Branch in close collaboration with the Telangana Police’s Elite Action Group for Drug Law Enforcement (EAGLE). Months of intelligence gathering culminated in days of simultaneous raids across Delhi — from Mehrauli to Munirka — enabling teams to dismantle multiple layers of the cartel’s network in one coordinated sweep.
Officials disclosed that the syndicate relied on encrypted communication, layered anonymity, and highly sophisticated delivery methods. Much of the distribution chain was modeled after food-delivery applications, allowing dealers to execute “dead drops” — the placement of drugs at secret locations — to avoid face-to-face exchanges.
“The network was extremely sophisticated. They used layered communication channels and app-based delivery patterns to evade law-enforcement detection,” NDTV’s report quoted investigators as saying.
Sex-Trade Network Used as Cover
The drug operation was further intertwined with a sex-trade ring that provided both cover and logistics. Investigators say sex workers were used as couriers, facilitators and intermediaries, helping the cartel maintain mobility and disguise drug deliveries amid legitimate urban movement.
Authorities identified approximately 2,000 individuals who had received drugs through courier dispatch, coded locations, or dead-drop methods coordinated through encrypted messaging platforms.
“The sex trade was used as a cover for drug supply and distribution, extending the criminal reach of the cartel,” the report stated.
A Financial Empire Built on Hawala
The cartel’s financial operations were just as complex as its distribution system. Investigators revealed that the network relied heavily on hawala operators to launder drug proceeds. Instead of moving cash directly, illicit profits were converted into export goods — including garments and human hair — which were then shipped to Lagos, Nigeria, to disguise criminal earnings as legitimate trade flows.
One suspected kingpin is believed to have laundered at least ₹15 crore (over $1.7 million) through these channels alone.
“The proceeds from drug sales were funnelled through local hawala operators, converted into goods, and exported to Lagos, effectively cleaning the illicit earnings,” officials said.
A Pivotal Moment in India’s Drug War
Authorities say the arrest of the 50 Nigerian nationals represents a major breakthrough in India’s ongoing war against international narcotics syndicates. The coordinated raids included the participation of police teams from Telangana, Delhi, Noida, Vizag, and Gwalior — highlighting the scale of cooperation required to dismantle the cartel.
This operation also comes amid a troubling spike in arrests of foreign nationals — particularly Nigerians — involved in synthetic-drug trafficking. Recent seizures in Bengaluru, Goa, and Delhi have exposed a rapidly expanding methamphetamine circuit with deep international links.
Indian authorities described the dismantled network as “entrenched and continually evolving,” noting that its operations adapted quickly to law-enforcement pressure through technological sophistication and cross-border coordination.
What Comes Next
Police say the next phase of the investigation will focus on:
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tightening immigration checks and reviewing visa-overstay patterns,
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tracking hawala operators and financial conduits connected to the cartel, and
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identifying the remaining cartel commanders believed to be operating from outside India, possibly from Nigeria or other parts of Africa.
The arrests have been hailed as a landmark blow to transnational drug trafficking — but officials warn that the larger network remains active and under investigation.

