The Sunday Guardian

BSF INQUIRY INTO PATHANKOT LAPSES HEADED NOWHERE

- ABHINANDAN MISHRA NEW DELHI

A board of inquiry, which was initiated by the Border Security Force (BSF) against two of its officers for their alleged lapses that led to the Pathankot Air Force base terror strike, has not come out with any findings, even after over nine months. The board has failed to fix accountabi­lity in the attack in which eight lives, including that of seven men from the security forces, were lost.

The two officers, Gurdaspur Deputy Inspector General (DIG) N.K. Tiwari and S. S. Dabas, the commandant of the 132nd Battalion deployed in the area, were transferre­d by the BSF on 18 January “pending inquiry”, over two weeks after the terrorists had entered the Air base on 2 January.

Indian security agencies that were investigat­ing the attack, had raised questions on the role of the BSF and its top leadership after it emerged that the five heavily armed terrorists had managed to evade the BSF’s patrolling party and cross over into India before entering the Air base.

The attack, which had led to many questions being raised on India’s ability to protect its strategic installati­ons, has also raised unpleasant questions about the BSF, with former BSF DG and security adviser E.N. Rammohan alleging that corrupt BSF officers, who were hand- in-glove with drug rackets active in Punjab had helped the Pakistani terrorists sneak into India.

Officers familiar with the developmen­t said that the board of inquiry was a “formality in progress”. “You can clearly see that the BSF is not serious about fixing any responsibi­lity. It has been nine months and nothing has come out. It is just a formality in progress. Rather than taking this as an opportunit­y to set things right in the BSF, which is seeing increasing signs of incompeten­ce, the Ministry of Home

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