Union Home Minister and Minister of Cooperation Shri Amit Shah chairs 10th Apex Level Meeting of the Narco-Coordination Centre (NCORD) in New Delhi, unveils ‘Vision Document on Drug Control (2026-2029)’

I have sufficient facts from Tier 1 sources to compile the study note.


UPSC Study Note — 10th Apex-Level Meeting of NCORD & Vision Document on Drug Control (2026–2029)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Origin

Chronological Milestones

Year Milestone
1985 NDPS Act enacted — principal legislation; established NCB
2016 (approx.) NCORD constituted as 4-tier inter-agency mechanism
2022 3rd Apex-Level NCORD Meeting held — early-stage institutionalisation [S4]
18 Jul 2024 7th Apex-Level NCORD Meeting — Amit Shah chairs [S5]
2025 9th Apex-Level NCORD Meeting held [S6]
26 Jun 2026 10th Apex-Level NCORD Meeting — Vision Document 2026–2029 unveiled [S1]

Predecessor / Related Initiatives


4. Core Static Facts

NCORD Structure

Vision Document 2026–2029

Key Numbers

Indicator Value
Drugs targeted for disposal (Online Fortnight Campaign) 2,09,500 kg / >₹6,000 crore
Drug seizure value 2024 ₹25,330 crore
Drug seizure value 2023 ₹16,100 crore (55%+ lower)
Darknet/crypto drug cases (2020–2024) 92 cases (NCB)
Parcel/courier drug cases (2020–2024, all DLEAs) 1,025 cases
Op. Sagar Manthan-1 (Feb 2024) seizure ~3,300 kg offshore

Enabling Legal Framework


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Security / Geopolitical

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Economic

Social

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. NCORD stands for Narco-Coordination Centre — a 4-tier mechanism under the Ministry of Home Affairs. [S2]
  2. The 10th Apex-Level NCORD Meeting was held on 26 June 2026 in New Delhi, chaired by Amit Shah. [S1]
  3. Vision Document on Drug Control covers the period 2026–2029 and addresses supply reduction, demand reduction, and harm reduction. [S1]
  4. The Online Drugs Disposal Fortnight Campaign targets destruction of narcotics weighing 2,09,500 kg valued at >₹6,000 crore. [S1]
  5. Participants at the 10th NCORD Meeting: 44 Central Ministries/Departments and 108 State/UT representatives. [S1]
  6. The Anti-Narcotics Task Force (ANTF) in each State/UT is headed by an ADG/IG-level officer and serves as the State NCORD Secretariat. [S2]
  7. India's principal drug control statute is the NDPS Act, 1985; the NCB was established in 1986 under it. [S2]
  8. Railway Protection Force (RPF) and Indian Coast Guard are both empowered under the NDPS Act for drug interdiction. [S2]
  9. Drug seizures in 2024 were valued at ₹25,330 crore — over 55% higher than the ₹16,100 crore seized in 2023. [S3]
  10. NCB booked 92 cases involving Darknet and Cryptocurrencies during 2020–2024. [S3]
  11. Operation Sagar Manthan-1 (February 2024): joint NCB + Navy + ATS Gujarat operation; seized ~3,300 kg of drugs in the Indian Ocean. [S3]
  12. The three strategic pillars of the Vision Document 2026–2029 are Detect, Disrupt, and Destroy. [user excerpt]
  13. The National Narcotics Coordination Portal (NARCO-INDIA) serves as the digital intelligence-sharing backbone of the NCORD system. [S2]
  14. NCB Zonal Offices in Jammu and Guwahati were inaugurated at the 10th NCORD Meeting. [S1]
  15. Narcotics offences fall under the Concurrent List (List III, 7th Schedule) of the Indian Constitution — enabling both Centre and States to legislate.

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers

Specific Syllabus Headings

Plausible Mains Questions

  1. "India's narcotics challenge has evolved from border-centric smuggling to a hydra-headed threat involving synthetic drugs, darknet markets, and cryptocurrency payments." Analyse the adequacy of India's institutional response, with special reference to the NCORD mechanism and the Vision Document 2026–2029. (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "The Vision Document on Drug Control (2026–2029) signals a shift from reactive enforcement to proactive ecosystem disruption." Critically examine the opportunities and limitations of this approach in India's federal polity. (GS-II/GS-III, 15 marks)
  3. Discuss the role of the Narco-Coordination Centre (NCORD) in operationalising cooperative federalism in internal security. What structural reforms can further strengthen it? (GS-II, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
NDPS Act, 1985 & proposed amendments Direct statutory backbone of all NCORD/NCB actions; amendment signals are examinable
Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 Drug money is predicate offence under PMLA; FIU-IND interfaces with NCB
Golden Crescent / Golden Triangle Geopolitical source regions of India's drug supply; geography + security nexus
Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyan Demand-reduction pillar complement to NCORD's supply-reduction focus
UN Drug Control Conventions (1961, 1971, 1988) India's treaty obligations that underpin domestic NDPS framework
Darknet, Cryptocurrency & Cybercrime frameworks (IT Act, 2000) Emerging enforcement gap; Special Task Force on Darknet links to cyber-security syllabus
Organised Crime & MCOCA Drug cartels often operate as organised crime syndicates; Maharashtra's MCOCA as state-level model
Indian Coast Guard & Maritime Security Op. Sagar Manthan-1 connects drug interdiction to blue-water security

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. NCB vs. NCORD confusion: NCB is the implementing agency (statutory body under NDPS Act 1986). NCORD is the coordination mechanism (4-tier, set up separately by MHA). NCB organises NCORD meetings but is not synonymous with it. [S1][S2]
  2. Ministry confusion: NCB/NCORD both fall under Ministry of Home Affairs — not Ministry of Health (which handles rehabilitation/demand side separately). [S2]
  3. NDPS Act year: Enacted in 1985; NCB was constituted in 1986. Mixing the two years is a common trap.
  4. Tier count: NCORD is a 4-tier mechanism (Apex → State → District → Sub-district). Candidates often state "3-tier" by omitting the sub-district level. [S2]
  5. Vision Document scope: It is not a UN/international document — it is NCB's internal policy roadmap (2026–2029), covering all three reduction pillars; do not conflate with any UNODC strategy. [S1]

11. Sources