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Drug Trafficking In India: An Analysis




Dr. Kanchal Gupta, Associate Professor, SOL, UPES


1. INTRODUCTION


Drug trafficking is the cycle by which people manufacture and sale illegal drugs throughout the country. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime's World Drug Report 2005 appraisals the size of the global illicit drug market at US$321.6 billion out of 2003 alone1. With a world GDP of US$36 trillion around the same time, the illegal drug trade might be assessed as almost 1% of total global trade. The utilization of illegal drugs is widespread globally and it stays hard for neighbourhood authorities to impede its ubiquity.


An illustration of drug trafficking is somebody making hashish in his storm cellar. Another illustration of drug trafficking is that individual at that point going out and offering his natively constructed meth to the general population. All aspects of the interaction engaged with making and distributing illicit drugs falls under the banner that is drug trafficking. The illegal drug trade or drug trafficking is a global underground market devoted to the cultivation, manufacture, conveyance, and sale of drugs that are liable to drug prohibition. Most jurisdictions disallow trade, except under license, of numerous kinds of drugs using drug prohibition laws.

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Indian Journal of Law and Legal Research

Abbreviation: IJLLR

ISSN: 2582-8878

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