Drone conveying 6 kg of medications crashes in Pakistan's Lahore
A "bigger than usual" estimated drone conveying drugs worth lakhs of rupees crashed in Halloki in Pakistan's Lahore.
A robot conveying six kilograms of heroin crashed in the Halloki region of Pakistan's Lahore, according to a report by neighborhood media. The region where the robot was found is near the India-Pakistan line.
The "bigger than expected" measured drone was recuperated from Rasoolpura town, Kahna Station House Official (SHO) Abdul Wahid told Sunrise.
"The robot, of size bigger than expected, was conveying six kilograms of heroin when it collided with the fields of a property manager recognized as Rozdar," Abdul Wahid said.
"They (heroin and robot) have been given over to the Counter Opiates Power for additional examination relating to where the robot was worked from and where it was going," Abdul said.
Remarkably, India has over and over hailed the carrying of medications and weapons from across its boundary with adjoining Pakistan.
Last year in May, India Today gained from knowledge sources that Pakistan's Between Administrations Insight (ISI) was preparing drone focuses to carry arms and medications into India.
Sources in the Boundary Security Power (BSF) had expressed that they had gotten knowledge that uplifted robot exercises were being seen at a few Pakistani line stations across the IB from Ferozepur and Amritsar.
"Pakistan is involving 'faker robots' for weapons, medications, and explosives. Across the boundary close to Khemkaran, bootleggers fly robots with the assistance of Pak Officers," the sources referenced.
A sum of 22 robots or automated elevated vehicles (UAVs) running over from Pakistan were shot somewhere near the BSF last year. This large number of downings occurred along the Worldwide Boundary (IB) in Punjab.