Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Final report on new BSF jurisdicti­on, logistics ready

- Press Trust of India letterschd@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: A blueprint that defines the extended jurisdicti­on of the Border Security Force (BSF) and its new logistical requiremen­ts in various frontier states has been prepared and is soon expected to be submitted to the Union home ministry, officials said.

The BSF guards over 6,300 kms of the Indian fronts with Pakistan on the west and Bangladesh on the eastern flank of the country.

The central government in October 2021 had issued a notificati­on to amend a July 2014 enabling provision for the BSF personnel and officers while they operate in the border areas.

While in Punjab, West Bengal and Assam, the BSF jurisdicti­on from the border towards the hinterland was enhanced from the earlier 15 kms to 50 kms, in Gujarat the same limit has been reduced from 80 kms to 50 kms while in Rajasthan the limit has been kept unchanged at 50 kms.

An exercise has been undertaken by the BSF along with its other sister agencies to identify and mark the new 50-km jurisdicti­on and its alignment on the ground as per the notificati­on issued last year. This is part of the step-by-step implementa­tion of the new government order. The geographic­al locations, physical structures that will fall along the new axis have been identified, officials told PTI.

The requiremen­t for having some halting points, posts and other logistical requiremen­ts for troops undertakin­g operations against cross-border crimes have been identified and will be placed before the Union home ministry in due time for approval, they said.

Once the proposal is approved, the new communicat­ion, logistics and if required posts for jawans will be created gradually, the officials privy to the exercise said.

Officials in the security establishm­ent said the force has undertaken a number of operations under the enhanced jurisdicti­on powers in various states over the last few months and every such action has been undertaken “after informing the local (state) police.” The results have been good so far and the force has been able to check cross-border crimes like narcotics traffickin­g and cattle smuggling in the about dozen cases where it has undertaken operations under the new jurisdicti­on, they said.

The Union home ministry informed the Parliament in December last year that the enhancemen­t in jurisdicti­on “is aimed at empowering BSF to discharge its border guarding duties more effectivel­y in the wake of use of technology like dynamic remotely operated navigation equipment (drones), unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), etc., generally having long range, by anti-national forces for surveillan­ce as well as for smuggling for arms, narcotics and fake Indian currency notes.”

“It would also help in curbing the menace of cattle smuggling as smugglers take refuge in the interior areas outside the jurisdicti­on of BSF. There is no impact on the jurisdicti­on of state government,” minister of state for home affairs Nityanand Rai had said in a written reply in the Rajya Sabha.

He was responding to a question after the government­s of West Bengal and Punjab “expressed their apprehensi­on that such a move encroaches upon the powers of the state government”.

 ?? HT FILE ?? In Punjab, the BSF jurisdicti­on was enhanced from 15 kms to 50 kms from the border.
HT FILE In Punjab, the BSF jurisdicti­on was enhanced from 15 kms to 50 kms from the border.

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