India and Singapore have agreed to step up joint action against terrorism, including cross-border movement, radicalisation and financing. The pledge was made during a Joint Working Group meeting in New Delhi, where officials discussed stronger anti-terror cooperation, information sharing and capacity building to tackle both traditional and emerging threats under a zero-tolerance approach.
SIA Kashmir has attached the property of a Lashkar-e-Taiba operative reportedly based in Pakistan-occupied Jammu and Kashmir, signaling an aggressive crackdown on cross-border terror financing. The action follows broader efforts to disrupt narco-terror networks by choking their financial lifelines, using legal measures tied to investigations into funding channels and assets linked to militants.
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The Enforcement Directorate says it is widening its crackdown to cryptocurrency frauds, terror financing, cybercrimes, and drug trafficking. It notes that bank and real estate fraud cases have dropped after new laws, while it has nearly doubled chargesheets filed in the last fiscal year. The ED cites a 94% conviction rate and returning over Rs 63,000 crore in assets to victims.
Jammu and Kashmir Police have intensified anti-narco-terrorism operations, bulldozing alleged traffickers’ homes, uprooting opium fields, and stripping offenders. Officials say the campaign targets drug networks that allegedly bankroll terrorism through cross-border links. The crackdown is framed as both disrupting supply chains and cutting off financing, with police expanding actions beyond raids to seize the infrastructure and crops tied to trafficking.
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