South India Unites Under Operation Toofan as Five States Build Permanent Anti-Narcotics Alliance
South India's leading police chiefs and central intelligence officials have launched a permanent interstate anti-narcotics coordination framework under Operation Toofan. The initiative strengthens intelligence sharing, joint enforcement, specialised courts, border security, and regional cooperation, resulting in immediate arrests and a comprehensive strategy against organised drug trafficking.
Officially inaugurated by Chief Minister V.D. Satheesan at the beginning of the current academic year, Operation Toofan is now entering its next phase with a unified operational framework designed to strengthen interstate cooperation, enhance intelligence exchange, and intensify action against organised drug syndicates operating across state borders.
The Operation Toofan High-Level Summit, chaired by Home Minister Ramesh Chennithala, brought together Kerala Director General of Police Ravada Azad Chandrasekhar IPS, Tamil Nadu Director General of Police Mahesh Kumar Aggarwal IPS, Puducherry Director General of Police Shalini Singh IPS, and Karnataka Additional Director General of Police R. Hitendra IPS. Senior representatives from key central enforcement agencies also participated, including Narcotics Control Bureau Deputy Director General R. Sudhakar, Directorate of Revenue Intelligence Additional Director General K. Padmavathi, Customs Preventive Commissioner T. Tiju, and Special Intelligence Branch Joint Director Don K. Jose. The summit concluded with a detailed presentation by Inspector General and Operation Toofan Nodal Officer Putta Vimaladithya IPS, who outlined the operational strategies, implementation framework, and timelines for the newly established interstate alliance.
As part of the coordinated strategy, every participating state will appoint a nodal officer of Superintendent of Police rank or above to oversee joint anti-narcotics operations targeting road, rail, air, and maritime smuggling routes. Special emphasis will be placed on dismantling courier-based trafficking networks and preventing "mid-route train drops," a method used by traffickers to evade security checks at railway stations. Within Kerala, the government will further strengthen the Dedicated Anti-Narcotic Special Action Force by expanding its operational capacity while establishing 12 new specialised Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances courts to accelerate the prosecution and conviction of narcotics offenders.
"The drug mafia operates without borders—and from this day forward, so will our response," Home Minister Ramesh Chennithala declared while outlining the mission's expanded interstate strategy. He recently held direct discussions with Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister D.K. Shivakumar to integrate Kerala's enforcement framework with Karnataka's campaign against organised drug networks. As the next major step, Karnataka Home Minister Priyank Kharge is scheduled to arrive in Kerala on July 15 for crucial bilateral discussions with Chennithala to finalise joint border-control protocols between the two states.
Operation Toofan has been structured around four human-centric pillars to address every aspect of the narcotics challenge. Toofan Strikes focuses on aggressive law enforcement operations, Toofan Warriors promotes large-scale public participation, Toofan Care concentrates on rehabilitation and recovery, while the newly integrated Toofan Jagaran serves as a comprehensive public awareness initiative designed to keep communities vigilant against the spread of organised narcotics networks operating across state boundaries.
The mission will now expand through high-level meetings with the Chief Ministers and Home Ministers of neighbouring southern states to formalise bilateral security agreements. Administratively, Operation Toofan is receiving widespread recognition as a practical regional model for zero-tolerance narcotics enforcement. Its collaborative multi-state framework aligns with the multi-agency strategy consistently advocated by the Union Home Ministry through National Coordination Centre forums for dismantling interstate and cross-border drug cartels. The mission will also engage directly with Union Home Minister Amit Shah in New Delhi to seek key statutory amendments to federal anti-narcotics laws aimed at closing existing legal loopholes.
The operational momentum was reflected immediately after the summit. Within 24 hours, coordinated enforcement drives conducted under Operation Toofan led to the registration of 57 narcotics cases and the arrest of 58 individuals across participating jurisdictions.
Drawing on his experience as a four-time Member of Parliament and former Kerala Minister for Home and Rural Development, senior Indian National Congress leader Ramesh Chennithala is using his administrative expertise to strengthen interstate coordination against organised narcotics trafficking. With a permanent regional coordination framework now taking shape, Operation Toofan is emerging as a unified anti-drug platform for South India and a significant model for integrated law enforcement against organised narcotics networks.

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