Millennium Post

'1st smart fence operationa­lised along Bangla border'

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The first 'smart fence' pilot project to plug vulnerable gaps along India's borders has been rolled out in Assam on a riverine stretch with Bangladesh, the BSF chief has said.

The project is a part of the Modi government's ambitious plan to completely seal the India-pakistan and the Indiabangl­adesh borders in the next few years and is called the comprehens­ive integrated border management system (CIBMS).

Border Security Force Director General KK Sharma said that the maiden testing of technical surveillan­ce and alarm gadgetry was recently operationa­lised on the 55-kmlong stretch in Dhubri, across the Brahmaputr­a.

"The rolling out of the CIBMS pilot project has been initiated recently in Assam's Dhubri area. This is a riverine border area and hence no fence could be erected here," Sharma said.

At present, BSF troops use speed boats to guard this patch, which is highly prone to illegal migration and cattle smuggling due to the changing course of the mighty river.

No permanent structure - like border posts - can be erected in this area.

The DG said a similar project will be launched this month along the India-pakistan Internatio­nal Border, in two stretches of 5 km each, in Jammu.

The technology being tested in the Dhubri region is a mix of surveillan­ce and warning systems, he said, adding, he would not want to go into details about the devices being deployed.

The BSF chief said more than "2,000 kilometre of the border" along Pakistan and Bangladesh will be brought under the ambit of the 'smart fence project' - that uses infrared cameras and radars - out of the total of a little over 6,300 km of the two borders it is tasked to guard.

"In fact, on the Pakistan side, we may go in for CIBMS even at places where we have fencing because we would like to be doubly sure. Roughly, about 2,000-plus kilometre length on both the borders has been identified as being vulnerable or as being without fence where we need to implement the CIBMS in the days to come.

"This rolling out process for the entire distance of 2,000 km will take about 3-5 years time," he said. When asked if the force was not able to get the "required technology" to plug these vulnerable gaps on the two frontiers, prone to infiltrati­on and smuggling of arms and drugs, the DG said that was not the case.

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