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Tamil Nadu Cracks Down on Mineral Smuggling; 3,741 Vehicles Seized

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The crack of the whip against illegal mineral extraction and transport has grown louder in the Tamil Nadu Mineral Resources Department, which plans to launch criminal cases against 3,741 vehicles engaged in transporting minerals without permission all over the state.

Seizures, made till February end this year, were made in Madurai, Trichy, Villupuram, and Salem zones involving heavy vehicles, including lorries, which officials say were used in transporting various resources like black stone, gravel, sand, silt, and others, without a proper permit or over the licensed limits.

Tamil Nadu hosts several private land quarries where black stone gravel is extracted. It has become evident as complaints mount against contractors who extract much more than what is approved. A further complaint of much concern is the illegal removal of river sand, since it is depleting natural resources while damaging river ecosystems.

In this context, authorities warned that those involved in river sand smuggling will now face strict criminal action according to applicable laws. “In most cases, earlier, only the overload violations were recorded. Now, we have decided to investigate specifically on mineral-smuggling and book cases under criminal law,” said the senior official of the Mineral Resources Department.

This state action comes as attention increases on possibly negative consequences of mine impacts on the environment and the economy. High quantities of unregulated production do not merely degrade land and water bodies; they also lead to considerable government losses. Franchise again feeling: the toughest way by which prosecution rights will discourage organized networks working in the trade.

The crackdown also highlights the increasing use of technology in policing. Countless numbers of mineral transports are being monitored by checkpoints and GPS systems. Verification across loads and permits is being sourced. Officials say that these measures would go a long way in thwarting these sophisticated smuggling routes that operate across and sometimes even beyond state borders.

The renewed enforcement drive from the government will be indicative of a no-nonsense policy towards infractions in the mineral resources and would, thus, ensure joining up where the state’s mineral wealth can be legally and sustainably managed without interfering in the marginal balance of Tamil Nadu’s environment.

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