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Police charge Amazon India executives in drug smuggling case

November 22, 2021
Amazon says it does not allow the listing and sale of illegal products.
Amazon says it does not allow the listing and sale of illegal products.

NEW DELHI — Senior executives at Amazon's business in India have been charged after two men allegedly used the website as part of a marijuana smuggling operation, BBC reported.

Last week, police in the central state of Madhya Pradesh arrested two men for allegedly trafficking 20kg of the drug to other Indian states.

Police say the men had traded cannabis on the site in the guise of selling stevia leaves, a natural sweetener.

Amazon says it does not allow the listing and sale of illegal products.

The company also said that it takes strict action against sellers found to be breaking its rules on illicit goods.

"The issue was notified to us and we are currently investigating it," Amazon added in a statement in response to the case.

State police said executive directors of Amazon India had been charged under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act.

This was due to "differences in answers in documents provided by the company in response to police questions and facts unearthed by discussion," police said in a statement.

Authorities did not say how many executives had been charged.

A total of 1,000kg of marijuana, worth about $148,000 (£110,000), was estimated to have allegedly been sold using the website.

The case is the latest legal issue being dealt with by Amazon's Indian business, which is also facing a competition investigation in the country.

Along with Flipkart, a subsidiary of US retail giant Walmart, Amazon India is being probed by regulators over claims that they gave preferential treatment to some sellers.

In September, Amazon also reportedly launched an internal probe after claims that one or more of its Indian employees had bribed officials.

In recent years, Indian authorities have significantly increased their efforts to crack down on both the trafficking and use of illegal drugs.

Many of the country's high-profile actors and television personalities have come under scrutiny from narcotics officials in the last year.


November 22, 2021
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