In a startling breach of religious sanctity, authorities in India’s Telangana state have uncovered a sophisticated marijuana cultivation operation operating within a temple’s sacred grounds. Avuti Nagaiah, a 48-year-old priest serving at Panchagam village temple, has been taken into custody following a coordinated raid by local police and excise officials.
The investigation revealed that Nagaiah had transformed the temple garden into an elaborate camouflage for illicit activities. Among legitimate marigold plants—chosen specifically for their visual and olfactory similarity to cannabis—the priest cultivated nearly 700 marijuana plants with an estimated street value of Rs7 million (approximately Dh285,000).
The discovery has sent shockwaves through the local community, with villagers expressing profound dismay at the exploitation of their place of worship. Law enforcement officials are now conducting an expanded investigation to identify potential accomplices and determine the distribution network that supported this operation.
This incident coincides with heightened drug enforcement activities across Telangana, where police recently apprehended three additional suspects and confiscated over 16 kilograms of cannabis in operations throughout Hyderabad, the state capital. The case highlights growing concerns about innovative drug cultivation methods being employed in unexpected locations across India.
