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Economy & MarketsSaturday, June 13, 2026

Gold smuggling and forgery rings disrupted across India, Algeria and Kuwait

Indian customs and revenue agents seized concealed gold worth over ₹29 crore, while Algerian and Kuwaiti authorities dismantled counterfeit stamp operations, exposing the widening geography of illicit trade.

In a single day of coordinated action, Indian enforcement agencies dealt a sharp blow to organised gold smuggling, intercepting high-value hauls at an international airport and along the porous eastern border. At Ahmedabad’s Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, customs officers, aided by aircraft engineers, discovered 24 foreign-origin gold biscuits of 999 purity weighing nearly 2.8 kilograms hidden inside a speaker box in the front lavatory of an IndiGo flight arriving from Dubai. The unclaimed gold, valued at approximately ₹4.26 crore, had been wrapped in black plastic tape and stashed with what officials described as a clear intent to evade the Customs Act. Simultaneously, the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) struck in Kolkata and Agartala, seizing roughly 17 kilograms of smuggled gold worth around ₹25 crore and arresting ten individuals. The finance ministry in New Delhi characterised the twin operations as a major blow to networks exploiting both air passenger routes and the Indo-Bangladesh land border.

Far from the Indian subcontinent, parallel crackdowns on document fraud underscored the diverse methods of transnational criminal enterprise. In the Algerian port city of Oran, urban security forces raided a private residence that had been converted into a clandestine forgery workshop. A man in his sixties with a prior criminal record was arrested, and investigators recovered 21 counterfeit seals and stamps mimicking state institutions and public administrations, alongside three central processing units, three monitors, two scanner-printers, six flash drives, and a trove of pre-prepared official documents. Authorities in Algiers noted the suspect had been using the forged instruments to produce fake administrative, banking and commercial records. Meanwhile, Kuwait’s Ministry of Interior announced the arrest of five Bangladeshi nationals accused of manufacturing and distributing counterfeit government stamps at below-market prices, specifically targeting expatriates and businesses seeking document verification. The Gulf state’s Residence Affairs Investigation Department described a sophisticated network that generated illicit profits by undermining official authentication systems.

Viewed from London, these geographically dispersed cases illustrate a convergence of old and new criminal techniques. The Indian gold seizures reflect enduring demand for physical bullion as a parallel currency and store of value, with smugglers resorting to ever more inventive concealment inside aircraft interiors. The forgery rings in Algeria and Kuwait, by contrast, reveal how counterfeit state seals remain a low-tech but potent tool for enabling identity fraud, illegal employment, and financial crime. Analysts note that the Oran suspect’s arsenal of digital equipment suggests a hybrid operation capable of mass-producing high-quality fakes, while the Kuwaiti network’s focus on expatriate communities points to the exploitation of migrant populations’ administrative vulnerabilities.

Looking ahead, enforcement agencies are likely to deepen technical inspections of commercial aircraft and cross-border cargo, while intensifying scrutiny of document authentication processes. The Ahmedabad seizure, in which the gold was left unclaimed, hints at a deliberate decoupling of courier and consignment to frustrate prosecution, a tactic that will require greater international intelligence sharing. In North Africa and the Gulf, the dismantled forgery workshops may represent only the visible tip of networks that supply counterfeit documents across multiple jurisdictions. As one senior European security analyst observed, the simultaneous disruption of such varied operations in a single week is less a coincidence than a reflection of the globalised underworld’s resilience — and the growing determination of states to counter it through precision raids and cross-agency coordination.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

38%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa indiana e sudasiaticaStampa arabo levante-Maghreb
Stampa indiana e sudasiatica
pragmatismodistacco

Customs officials at Ahmedabad airport seized 24 gold biscuits worth over Rs 4.26 crore, concealed inside a speaker box in the lavatory of an IndiGo flight from Dubai. The foreign-origin gold was wrapped in black tape and unclaimed, indicating a smuggling attempt. The seizure underscores the vigilance of customs in intercepting illicit gold inflows.

Stampa arabo levante-Maghreb
indignazioneurgenza

Police in Oran dismantled a clandestine forgery workshop, arresting a man with a criminal record who produced fake official documents. They seized 21 counterfeit stamps and equipment used to forge administrative, banking, and commercial papers. The operation deals a significant blow to document fraud networks in the area.

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Upd. 06:45 PM3 languages · 5 outlets
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5 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Saturday, June 13, 2026

Gold smuggling and forgery rings disrupted across India, Algeria and Kuwait

Indian customs and revenue agents seized concealed gold worth over ₹29 crore, while Algerian and Kuwaiti authorities dismantled counterfeit stamp operations, exposing the widening geography of illicit trade.

In a single day of coordinated action, Indian enforcement agencies dealt a sharp blow to organised gold smuggling, intercepting high-value hauls at an international airport and along the porous eastern border. At Ahmedabad’s Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel International Airport, customs officers, aided by aircraft engineers, discovered 24 foreign-origin gold biscuits of 999 purity weighing nearly 2.8 kilograms hidden inside a speaker box in the front lavatory of an IndiGo flight arriving from Dubai. The unclaimed gold, valued at approximately ₹4.26 crore, had been wrapped in black plastic tape and stashed with what officials described as a clear intent to evade the Customs Act. Simultaneously, the Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI) struck in Kolkata and Agartala, seizing roughly 17 kilograms of smuggled gold worth around ₹25 crore and arresting ten individuals. The finance ministry in New Delhi characterised the twin operations as a major blow to networks exploiting both air passenger routes and the Indo-Bangladesh land border.

Far from the Indian subcontinent, parallel crackdowns on document fraud underscored the diverse methods of transnational criminal enterprise. In the Algerian port city of Oran, urban security forces raided a private residence that had been converted into a clandestine forgery workshop. A man in his sixties with a prior criminal record was arrested, and investigators recovered 21 counterfeit seals and stamps mimicking state institutions and public administrations, alongside three central processing units, three monitors, two scanner-printers, six flash drives, and a trove of pre-prepared official documents. Authorities in Algiers noted the suspect had been using the forged instruments to produce fake administrative, banking and commercial records. Meanwhile, Kuwait’s Ministry of Interior announced the arrest of five Bangladeshi nationals accused of manufacturing and distributing counterfeit government stamps at below-market prices, specifically targeting expatriates and businesses seeking document verification. The Gulf state’s Residence Affairs Investigation Department described a sophisticated network that generated illicit profits by undermining official authentication systems.

Viewed from London, these geographically dispersed cases illustrate a convergence of old and new criminal techniques. The Indian gold seizures reflect enduring demand for physical bullion as a parallel currency and store of value, with smugglers resorting to ever more inventive concealment inside aircraft interiors. The forgery rings in Algeria and Kuwait, by contrast, reveal how counterfeit state seals remain a low-tech but potent tool for enabling identity fraud, illegal employment, and financial crime. Analysts note that the Oran suspect’s arsenal of digital equipment suggests a hybrid operation capable of mass-producing high-quality fakes, while the Kuwaiti network’s focus on expatriate communities points to the exploitation of migrant populations’ administrative vulnerabilities.

Looking ahead, enforcement agencies are likely to deepen technical inspections of commercial aircraft and cross-border cargo, while intensifying scrutiny of document authentication processes. The Ahmedabad seizure, in which the gold was left unclaimed, hints at a deliberate decoupling of courier and consignment to frustrate prosecution, a tactic that will require greater international intelligence sharing. In North Africa and the Gulf, the dismantled forgery workshops may represent only the visible tip of networks that supply counterfeit documents across multiple jurisdictions. As one senior European security analyst observed, the simultaneous disruption of such varied operations in a single week is less a coincidence than a reflection of the globalised underworld’s resilience — and the growing determination of states to counter it through precision raids and cross-agency coordination.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 5 outlets · 3 languages

38%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable25%
Neutral75%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Stampa indiana e sudasiaticaStampa arabo levante-Maghreb
Stampa indiana e sudasiatica
pragmatismodistacco

Customs officials at Ahmedabad airport seized 24 gold biscuits worth over Rs 4.26 crore, concealed inside a speaker box in the lavatory of an IndiGo flight from Dubai. The foreign-origin gold was wrapped in black tape and unclaimed, indicating a smuggling attempt. The seizure underscores the vigilance of customs in intercepting illicit gold inflows.

Stampa arabo levante-Maghreb
indignazioneurgenza

Police in Oran dismantled a clandestine forgery workshop, arresting a man with a criminal record who produced fake official documents. They seized 21 counterfeit stamps and equipment used to forge administrative, banking, and commercial papers. The operation deals a significant blow to document fraud networks in the area.

This story appeared in

5 outlets · 3 languages

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