BSF caught 3,204 illegal intruders in past year, BGB claims no infiltrations in India

 


 

 

 

 

The Border Security Force (BSF) on Friday claimed that as many as 3,204 illegal entrants, including criminals, were apprehended in the Indian territory during the past one year while the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) claimed that there was no infiltration into India from their side.

After the 51st DG level talks (DLT) in Guwahati with the BGB, BSF Director General Rakesh Asthana said that since September this year, the BSF has handed over 60 Bangladeshi nationals to its counterpart.

“When the nationalities were established and illegal entrants were found with no criminal background or activity, the BSF handed over those nationals to the BGB. Where the nationalities of the intruders with criminal record could not be established, they were handed over to the state police for further course of action,” the BSF chief told the media.

BGB Director General Maj Gen Md Shafeenul Islam said: “No illegal infiltrations is going on from Bangladesh to India. The GDP growth of Bangladesh is on a rising trend and it has increased close to $2,300 dollars. Therefore, there is no reason to cross the border, be it for the job or any other reason.

“Recently, 25 fishermen from Bangladesh crossed over to Assam and subsequently the validity of their visa expired and the Indian authority sent them back to Bangladesh. The BSF Chief said that smuggling of various narcotics and cattle is a serious concern as various sysndicates are operating on both sides of the borders.

“Talking of narcotics, cough syrup, which is banned in Bangladesh, and methamphetamine tablets (also called Yaba tablets or party tablets containing a mix of methamphetamine and caffeine), which are smuggled from Myanmar, are the main contraband items along the borders,” the BSF DG said.

He said that in the DG level Border Coordination Conference (BCC), the issue was discussed in depth and with all seriousness and it has been decided to intensify the vigil along the borders.

“Coordinated border patrolling along the borders would be further strengthened. Joint patrolling in the vulnerable areas in the night time would be conducted. We have also identified certain vulnerable areas where smuggling and cross-border activities took place,” Asthana said.

The BGB DG claimed that from 2018 till December 18 this year, 86 Bangladeshi nationals were killed, and killings along the frontier are a major concern for the two border guarding forces.

Asthana said that 10 people, including three civilians, were killed along the border in the recent past while 87 per cent of the killings took place dead in the night.

“Our forces are mostly using non-lethal weapons. When there are attacks or firing, then the BSF uses lethal weapons in self-defence. We are trying to minimise border killings. The police of the northeastern states are also being sensitised as the criminals are taking shelter in the hinterland of the country’s territories,” the BSF chief said.

Regarding cattle smuggling, BGB DG Islam said that due to the smuggling of cattle, Bangladeshi cattle farmers are being greatly affected.

“Infact, Bangladesh is now self-sufficient in cattle. We are even producing more than the actual requirements. Smuggling of cattle from India is illegal. Legally, 400-600 cattle are coming from Myanmar every day,” the BGB chief said.

The BSF DG said that they have proposed to the BGB to celebrate the yearlong programme to commemorate the 50th years of Bangladesh’s Liberation War and they (BGB) have agreed to cooperate.

“During the yearlong commemoration, ex-BSF officers and personnel, Bangladeshi Mukti Yoddha (freedom fighters) and important personalities would be felicitated and the celebration would culminate on December 16 next year,” he said.

Asthana said that besides the professional coordinations, various social and civic action programmes would be undertaken to further strengthen the tie between the forces and the people of the two countries.

The professional programmes include organising medical camps for people in the bordering areas and visits of young people and students to both the countries.

The meeting between the BSF and the BGB, according to an official, also reviewed the ongoing strategies for better coordination between both the border guarding forces deployed along the 4,096 km frontiers, including 1,116 km of riverine boundary, between the two neighbours.

Five Indian states – West Bengal (2,216 km), Tripura (856 km), Meghalaya (443 km), Mizoram (318 km) and Assam (263 km) – share 4,096 km borders with Bangladesh.

The DG level meeting between the BSF and BGB was held for the first time outside the national capital. Since 1975, the meetings between the DGs of BSF and BGB have been held annually, alternately in India and Bangladesh, till 1993.

Since then, the DGs of BSF and BGB have been holding BCC twice a year alternatively at Delhi and Dhaka and the joint record of discussions of these meetings are forwarded to the home ministries of the two countries after each such meeting. The last BSF-BGB meeting was held from September 16-19 this year in Dhaka.

The problem of Rohingya refugees is a big one and unless they return to Myanmar, the problem will remain for India and other countries, Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) Director General Maj Gen Shafeenul Islam said here on Friday after the five-day meeting with his Border Security Force (BSF) counterpart Rakesh Asthana.

Islam said that Rohingyas are not only found in India, they are found across the world including countries like Thailand, Indonesia and Malaysia.

“The Rohingya refugee problem would be solved when they would go back to their country, Myanmar, at the earliest otherwise the problem would remain for India and other countries,” the BGB DG said.

He said: “We are regularly nabbing the Rohingyas at the border, escaping from the Cox’s Bazar camps. There are Rohingya settlements as well. They also have UNHCR cards. They always try to get inside… To meet their relatives in the Bangladesh camps.”

Asthana said that Rohingya  are being occasionally caught in different parts of the country by the state security forces.

“Both BSF and BGB are committed to stop their infiltration and exfiltration and we are taking action not only against the Rohingyas, but also against all illegal trespassers,” the BSF head said.

A senior BSF officer said that in the all important five-day Border Coordination Conference (BCC), BSF chief Asthana led the 12-member delegation while the 11-member BGB team was headed by Islam. The DG level meeting or the BCC between the BSF and BGB was held first time outside the national capital.

Rohingyas from refugee camps in southeastern Bangladesh often enter into the northeastern states of India illegally in search of jobs or get trapped in human trafficking.

According to the security officials, at least 35 Rohingya from Myanmar, including women and children, have been detained in the past one month for illegally entering into northeast India.

Over 7,38,000 Rohingyas from Rakhine in western Myanmar have taken shelter in the camps in Cox’s Bazar since the beginning of the ethinic troubles on August 25, 2017, following a wave of violence and persecution, which has been described by the United Nations as attempted ethnic cleansing.

Four northeastern states – Arunachal Pradesh (520 km), Manipur (398 km), Nagaland (215 km) and Mizoram (510 km) – share 1,643 km unfenced borders with Myanmar while Tripura (856 km), Meghalaya (443 km), Mizoram (318 km) and Assam (263 km) share 1,880 km borders with Bangladesh.

 

 

IANS

COMMENTS