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His Swedish model-girlfriend named Lucky Farmhouse alias Amori posted the grainy, shaky video clip that became an instant Internet must-watch. An Israeli drug peddler revealed that policemen supplied him drugs stolen from a police godown. His arrest led to Goa's first drug-related gang war. In the video, Atala speaks about his drug operation and how Goan police on his payroll advised him of ways to avoid getting caught - don't buy a cellphone in your own name and change phone numbers frequently because your calls are monitored. This is the mafia,' is how Atala describes the confederacy of crime between the police, politicians and the drug cartels. The amateur video shows him speaking candidly about his arrangements with Anti-Narcotics Cell policemen, including Senior Inspector Ashish Shirodkar. He was arrested immediately. So were six policemen, including Shirodkar. Twenty-four kilos of hashish had disappeared from the anti-narcotics warehouse on their watch. Atala confessed that the police had sold the drugs back to him. Goa's Home Minister Ravi Naik explained that the vanished drugs were 'eaten by white ants'. In the wake of the Atala scandal, skeletons tumbled out of Goa's political closet. The Opposition alleges that Naik and son Roy are linked to the drug mafia - a charge both deny. Amori claims she possesses a tape of her lover bribing a powerful Goan politician's son. The state is yet to send an investigator to Sweden to interrogate her and is resisting all opposition demands for a CBI enquiry. Atala was convicted of drug possession in , but managed to avoid deportation by going underground. The side effect of Atala's arrest was the first gang-related murder in Goa. The police say a local bar owner at Anjuna, Sanprit Malvankar, was killed by a gun-for-hire for helping them trap the Israeli gangster. Things got murkier when police later caught a criminal who was allegedly given a 'supari' by a south Goa politician to kill Roy. More than the politics of drugs, it is the economics that is mind-boggling. Goa has become a principal hub of the international drug trade, apart from being a known centre of consumption. The happy-drug addict-syndrome that has made it a haven for tourists is a minute part of the story. Those in this lucrative trade estimate that drugs flowing out of AfPak are worth over Rs 5, crore. Most of it now lands on the comparatively unprotected Goa coastline. As a result, Goa has turned into the favoured transhipment point for drug markets in South-east Asia, Africa and Europe. The police say that a large number of foreigners - mostly Russians arriving on chartered flights - bring in the drugs to Goa. However, 70 per cent of the drugs still arrive by sea. Foreigners who stay back manufacture synthetic drugs locally. The heady party drug, the CK1 pill, has become a craze in Goa. It is a combination of cocaine and Ketamine. These synthetic drugs are also exported back to India at higher rates; the traffic controlled by drug dons like Atala who enjoy political patronage. The Opposition accuses the state police of being hand in glove with drug dealers. Compared to the size of the drug trade, drug hauls by law enforcement agencies are infinestimal in volume. Last year marked the biggest haul ever - This year 46 kg of hallucinogens, including charas, ganja, cocaine and Ecstasy tablets, worth Rs 76 lakh was apprehended. Political sources in Panjim say that the insignificant size of drug busts is because gangsters like Atala have powerful political links. The residents of Goa whisper that the real scandal is the political mafia they vote for. Edwin Nunes, a local political heavyweight is one example of the politics-drugs network. He owns Curlies, a flourishing restaurant on south Anjuna beach. The double-storied shack restaurant-bar-hookah joint played a part in the sordid Scarlett Keeling rape and murder saga. Keeling had e-mailed a Spanish friend that boys at Curlies had showed her porn on their cellphones and tried to rape her. A few days later, her body was found near another shack Luis, which was later shut down as it was unable to face the heat. Curlies, however, continues to hold rave parties, play loud music late into the night and people openly peddle and consume drugs inside - activities legally banned in Goa. Owner Nunes was the sarpanch of Anjuna panchayat when the Keeling tragedy happened. He is still a powerful panchayat member. In this tiny state of 13 lakh people, panchayats exercise considerable clout over local police and politicians. It is next to impossible to isolate the politicians from the drug scene in Goa. In some cases, they are semi-owners of illegal nightclubs. Questions have been raised in the Goa Assembly many times, but Paradiso continues to party on. The court passed an eviction order on the club for not having paid rent arrears of Rs 25 lakh to GTDC to no effect. Yet foreigners play a significant role in Goa's politician-drug cartel nexus. Until the first part of this decade, British and Israelis controlled Goa's drug trade. Nigerians are minor players, mainly as couriers with local connections. According to drug dealer Tony name changed , the Russians have taken over the trade in a big way in the past five years. Tony admits the Russians have changed the rules of the game. Russia is now the narcotic superpower of the world and the Russian mafia Russkaya Mafiya rules Goa. The Israelis are not organised enough to face the Russian narcotic juggernaut. This tourist season, more than 55, Russians are expected on chartered flights - even from small cities like Yekaterinburg and Novosibirsk. This month, Aeroflot starts its first direct flight to Goa expecting custom from well-heeled Russian tourists. Hundreds of tourists from Kazakhstan are also coming to Goa. Last year, there was only one chartered flight from Astana, the Kazak capital. This time, the number will go up to The scale of the drug trade in the state is evident by the watch being kept on passengers and crew of chartered tourist flights that land in Goa during the October to March tourist surge. Many of them stay back and are either peddlers or users. The police say a major reason why Russian criminals flourish in the state is due to a favourable narcotic ecosystem that combines lax law enforcement and corrupt authorities. Russian druglords also lose themselves in the anonymity of the crowds of Russian tourists thronging Goa. In Morjim and Palolem, nearly 10, Russians live in small enclaves that are dubbed 'Little Russia' by the locals. Real estate is the front behind which the Russian mafia hides in Goa. They try to legalise their presence by setting up companies in partnerships with locals. Their four holdings totalling 22 lakh sq m - the size of football fields - were seized and the buildings sealed. A senior ED official discloses that they routinely track huge amounts of money moved by Russian-backed real estate companies to Goa from tax havens like Cyprus, Mauritius and Cayman Islands in order to purchase realty in coastal villages. ED investigations found that these companies had conducted no stated business or filed income tax returns. Tasha, a Russian pimp and drug dealer in Goa, confides that he has invested 'a lot of money' in real estate along the northern coastal belt, particularly near Arambol. Locals are angry that foreigners occupy large tracts of Goa. But why aren't these Russians getting caught? An African drug dealer explains that it is because Russians guard their privacy fiercely; avoid mingling with others and supply only to their own kind. Again, these are not the only reasons why Russians favour Goa. In the past four years, Russian gangs have virtually sewn up the Goan market for high-quality drugs like cocaine. He says Indian and Nigerians adulterate their stuff with boric acid and talcum powder, but Russians offer pure coke. Drugs are not the only high on offer in Goa. Sex is an organised market run by the mafia and women traffickers from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan. The state Government shut down Baina - Goa's original redlight area that catered to locals - five years ago. The trade is now taken over by girls from Russia and the 'Stans'. On Anjuna beach, Valentina, a slender year-old Russian 'tourist' is willing to play white girlfriend. And a 2-by-2 inch tattoo free for a two-day stay. Get a friend, too, if you want. There is a price tag for everything. Even if it's a cuddly photograph of you with a wet bikini-clad blonde on the beach. She is here with her sister to party - 'lot of drugs and sex'. Tall, with broad cheekbones, Galina says she is in Goa to make some serious money. It is her first week and she is already booked for five nights by an Italian man in his late thirties. The rate for sex goes up depending on the duration, quality and requirements. To avoid the complex currency conversions, all prices are in dollars. Curly haired Hami, a Russian girl wearing a tight short outfit that shows off her toned figure, is ready to mingle. Hami is in Goa on a tourist visa and is expecting her cousins and friends from Moscow and Almaty to join her soon. All of them plan to take rooms in Morjim. She says she can deal with five clients on a good day. The Israelis haven't completely given up. In Anjuna, a year-old Israeli pimp and drug peddler named Marques hawks girls from his country with a unique sales pitch. But the Israeli pales in comparison to flamboyant Russians like Sergei. He claims to be a former KGB operative and a one stop shop for drugs and girls. An unbuttoned half-sleeved jacket reveals a spider web of tattoos, including a Griffin on his chest. At a beach shack, he guides a group of five boys to an open party in near Vagator beach where 'girls are waiting to get pampered'. Afandee, an Israeli tourist in her late twenties, has been a regular visitor to Goa for five years. Sinful pleasures are available at Goa's raves and dusk-to-dawn beach parties. These are the retail haven for drug pushers. Most such big parties take place at the beach shacks on a three-km sandy stretch of north Goa. Many who overdose on drugs are rushed to Dr Jawaharlal Henriques' rehab clinic in Siolim, not far from the Anjuna beach. He gets around 80 to 90 cases every tourist season. Once, three tourists - a Swede, an Italian and a British woman - were brought in dead. The latest arrival was a young Mumbai businessman who snorted too much coke and was brought to the clinic frothing at the mouth. Unable to cope with the steady flow of patients, the year-old psychiatrist has added another wing with 70 beds to his clinic. Once a drug-addled Russian, who happened to be built like a boxer, flew into a paranoid rage in his clinic. It took 20 policemen to subdue him. Along with violence, Goa is also laden with irony. Seventy-seven-year-old British national Paul and his year-old wife Janet hold ration cards that introduce them as the children of their landlords, Jose and Albertina Periera. The Perieras are in their early thirties. The British couple continues to live in a village in Bardez as bona fide ration holders but with UK passports, untroubled by the administration. They are the least of the worries for a state firmly in the grip of drugs and organised crime. Subscribe to India Today Magazine. Live TV Primetime. Latest Edition Insight Best Colleges. All Sports. Sports Today Cricket Football Tennis. Short Videos. Fact Check. Other News. Download App. Follow Us On:. From the India Today archives Goa: Sex and mafia on the cocaine coast Sonali Phogat's death and allegations that she had been forcibly drugged bring the spotlight back on Goa and its thriving narcotics networks. Listen to Story. Foreign tourists at a shack in Goa; Police sources say the state has become a favoured transhipment point for the international drug trade in South-east Asia, Africa and Europe. Bhavna Vij Aurora. Sandeep Unnithan. Mihir Shrivastava. Published By:. Watch Live TV.
we walk down titos lane to the beach and back regularly and have never been offered or noticed anyone offering drugs of any sort. bladesboy.
The Narcotic Control Bureau (NCB) Goa zone has seized multiple illegal drugs including LSD, cocaine and marijuana, in an operation that lasted.
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As per the NCB, narcotics such as LSD, cocaine and ganja were recovered after the arrests in an operation that lasted two weeks.
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Cocaine seizures, particularly from the northern coastal State, show cocaine is becoming the main draw. Moreover, Nigerians are by and large involved in sourcing cocaine and heroin from Latin and South America for local distribution. Easy access to drugs has thrived and police records substantiate this. The State has in the recent past recorded quite a few arrests of peddlers, most of whom are non-Goans. The seized contraband was estimated at Rs 15 crore. In the same month, a student from Andhra Pradesh Devineni Trilok Chaudhary was fortunate to have survived a drug overdose. The teen tourist -- who came on a vacation with two of his friends -- had also consumed cocaine, which was supplied to him by a taxi driver,. The top law enforcement officer revealed that dealers import a significant quantity of Ganja from AOB Andhra Pradesh-Odisha Border where the NCB and Local police had just recently destroyed cannabis cultivation spread across 10, acres of land. Consignments also reach their destination by way of couriers and small envelopes. Crackdown down on strong African links at Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, and Goa airports is on the priority list of the central agencies. Goa News view all. Why no action against fast food carts opposite KTC bus stand, old Bus stand? No action on demand by Raiturkar-led team to curb illegal activities in Margao. Questions on non-removal of encroachments from pavements return to haunt authorities in Margao. Now, thermocol waste found in low-lying Seraulim fields. Thermocol waste lingers on at wholesale fish market. All eyes on alternative to Borim bridge alignment.
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