*CISF is keeping vigil on lawbreakers at railway stations, trains, and serving passengers for their safe journey across India

In a major step towards strengthening the Centre’s  "Zero Coal Leakage" mission, the Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) has intensified enforcement against illegal coal mining, theft, unauthorised storage and transportation under the provisions of the Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 (MMDR Act).

Following the empowerment of designated CISF officers under Sections 22, 23B and 24 of the MMDR Act, the Force has launched intelligence-driven operations in coordination with Coal India subsidiaries, local police and district administration to safeguard national mineral resources and strengthen transparency in the coal sector.

Between 04 and 08 July 2026, CISF conducted coordinated operations across the coalfields of Bharat Coking Coal Limited (BCCL), Eastern Coalfields Limited (ECL) and Central Coalfields Limited (CCL) in Jharkhand and West Bengal. 

The operations resulted in the recovery of 428.34 metric tonnes of illegally mined, stored or transported coal, registration of 04 FIRs, seizure of one Hyva truck and more than 13 motorcycles and other equipment used in illegal mining and transportation, besides apprehension of offenders and initiation of legal proceedings under the MMDR Act.


The enforcement drive covered several vulnerable mining belts and coal transportation corridors -

i. At BCCL, Dhanbad, CISF carried out intelligence-based raids in Katras, Block-II, Basantimata (Kargil), Kustore, Sijua, Jealgora, Barora, Govindpur and NTST Areas. Acting on specific intelligence inputs, drone surveillance and field verification, CISF recovered 319.54 metric tonnes of illegally stored coal, seized a coal-laden truck and multiple motorcycles used for illegal transportation, and initiated legal action under the MMDR Act.

ii. At ECL Sheetalpur, operations were conducted in Rajmahal, Salanpur, Chitra, Chapapur-II OCP (Mugma Area), Sonepur-Bazari and Kunustoria Areas. Besides intelligence-based search and seizure operations, CISF undertook inspections of coal depots, weighbridges, transportation documents and statutory production and dispatch records. These actions resulted in the recovery of 85.93 metric tonnes of illegally mined and stocked coal, seizure of vehicles used in illegal transportation and apprehension of trespassers. Preventive inspections also confirmed compliance at several operational locations, reinforcing transparency and accountability in coal movement.

iii. At CCL Piparwar, CISF intercepted a Hyva truck carrying concealed illegal coal during routine checking and subsequently recovered a total of 13.62 metric tonnes of illegally transported coal. The vehicle and recovered coal were handed over to the local police for legal action.

iv. At CCL Kargali, special operations resulted in the recovery of 9.25 metric tonnes of illegally extracted coal and seizure of seven motorcycles allegedly used in illegal mining activities.

The operations employed a combination of human intelligence, drone surveillance, transit-route monitoring, surprise inspections, verification of transportation documents, inspection of coal depots and weighbridges and GPS-enabled documentation.

CISF remains committed to working closely with the Ministry of Coal, Coal India Limited, its subsidiaries, State Governments and State Police to eliminate illegal mining and coal theft. 

The ongoing enforcement drive will continue with renewed vigour, and stringent legal action will be taken against all persons involved in illegal mining, unauthorized storage and illegal transportation of coal in accordance with the provisions of law. 

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