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New Israeli Tethered Drones to Combat Cattle Smuggling along Bangladesh Border

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New Israeli Tethered Drones to Combat Cattle Smuggling along Bangladesh Border

Besides the tethered drones, the BSF is also using thermal imaging cameras, EO/IR sensors, pan–tilt–zoom (PTZ) cameras, underwater sensors and underground sensors to detect movement of people, animals and other objects.

UPDATED ON: NOVEMBER 4, 2019, 11:38 PM IST
Karishma Hasnat , CNN-News18
Representative Image.
thailand-drones.jpg

Guwahati: At the Dhubri sector of Indo-Bangladesh border in western Assam, the Border Security Force (BSF) has started using drones as a vital tool against cattle smuggling and cross-border activities.

The border force has procured a number of Israeli tethered drones worth Rs 37 lakh each to keep a watch on cattle smugglers along the border. These drones are equipped with day-and-night vision cameras that can capture images within a range of 2 km from a maximum height of 150 metres.


“The tethered drones get continuous power supply from the base, and are not much affected by high wind conditions. The drones operating from such a height gives an advantage to aerial surveillance. We have bought several of this kind, specifically for Dhubri sector,” said Piyush Mordia, Inspector-General of BSF’s Guwahati Frontier.

Checking illegal cross-border activities and cracking down on cattle smugglers has been quite a challenge for security forces. The 61 km border area in Dhubri district, from where river Brahmaputra enters Bangladesh, consists of vast char lands (sand bars) and a number of river channels that make border patrolling a difficult task, especially during monsoon.

Besides the tethered drones, the BSF is also using thermal imaging cameras, EO/IR sensors, pan–tilt–zoom (PTZ) cameras, underwater sensors and underground sensors to detect movement of people, animals and other objects.

Though cattle smugglers can spot the drones, the BSF IG believes it can still act as a deterrence. “The idea is to send them the message that they are being constantly watched,” said Mordia.

Smugglers on the other side of the border have often tried to evade security forces by blending in with the local population and deploying local Indian villagers to carry out well-coordinated smuggling operations.


They also pay people to work as lookouts on both sides of the border. Smugglers have been arrested while trying to sneak cattle through Hume pipe culverts under border roads, or using plantain trunks where bovines are bound together and set afloat. They were also found using hollow papaya stems as snorkels to breathe underwater while guiding the cattle across the border.

While cattle smuggling in trucks has reduced, the smugglers have now taken to arterial roads and transport cattle in smaller vehicles. Sometimes, they even walk the cattle to a remote village near the international border from where they are collected and sneaked out at an opportune time.

India shares a 4,096km border with Bangladesh, and cattle smuggling takes place at various points along this boundary in the five border states of Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura and West Bengal.

Earlier in March 2018, the then Home Minister Rajnath Singh had inaugurated the smart-fencing Comprehensive Integrated Border Management System (CIBMS) project along the Indo-Bangla border in Dhubri district. Termed BOLD-QIT (border Electronically Dominated QRT Interception Technique), the project inspired by Israeli technology entailed installing technical systems along the unfenced riverine area in Lower Assam.

The CIBMS system now covers the riverine border with data network generated by microwave communication, optical fibre cables, DMR communication, day-and-night surveillance cameras, and radar system designed for border protection.

“Nobody in the world would do it in a better way,” said Mordia.

The BSF personnel have been seizing at least a dozen cattle every month in the Dhubri sector. These are then handed over to the police. Due to the lack of cattle pounds, the seized cattle is often kept at the police station for weeks before being auctioned.

Both BSF and Assam police, however, maintain proper description of the cattle seized and allow public auction under scrutiny to thwart any attempt by cattle smugglers to try reclaim the cows in auctions.

BSF has also written to the police in Bihar, Odisha and other hinterland states to check the movement of cattle for tighter checking across the border.

https://www.news18.com/amp/news/india/new-israeli-tethered-drones-to-combat-cattle-smuggling-along-bangladesh-border-2373827.html
 
BSF tracks earth, water and air on Bangladesh border
TH04BSF
Going high tech: The BSF has bought Israeli drones for use in Dhubri sector that stretches from Meghalaya to Cooch Behar.
Rahul KarmakarGUWAHATI 04 NOVEMBER 2019 00:13 IST
UPDATED: 04 NOVEMBER 2019 00:13 IST

Recently acquired Israeli tether drones & thermal imagers aid operations in challenging riverine terrain

The Border Security Force (BSF) has literally gone underground to keep a watch on trafficking in the Dhubri sector of the India-Bangladesh border. It has also placed eyes in the sky.

The border force has procured an unspecified number of Israeli tether drones for the Dhubri sector that stretches from Meghalaya to Cooch Behar in West Bengal. Tethered to a base for continuous supply of power, these drones — worth ₹37 lakh each — are equipped with day-and-night vision cameras that can capture images within a range of 2 km.

Five States — Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Tripura and West Bengal — share a 4,096-km border with Bangladesh. Of the 263 km that Assam shares, 119.1 km is riverine.

The 61-km border in western Assam’s Dhubri sector where the expansive Brahmaputra river flows into Bangladesh is arguably the toughest to man. Vast sandbars or river islands and innumerable water channels make surveillance a challenge, especially during the rainy season.

“Smuggling is usually done at night and through blind spots that are difficult to monitor. The tether drones are an extension of our physical and biological limitations with cameras constantly feeding images from a maximum height of 150 metres,” Inspector-General of BSF’s Guwahati Frontier Piyush Mordia told The Hindu.

The difference between a normal drone and a tether drone is that the former needs to be brought down after 30 minutes of flying for a battery change and can be blown away by strong winds. “The Dhubri sector is windy and frequent gusts do not impact the tether drones much,” he said.

Mr. Mordia admitted that cattle smugglers or human traffickers could detect the tether drones. “But the idea is to send them the message that they are being watched day and night,” he said.

Apart from the drones, the BSF has employed thermal-imagers — non-contact temperature measurement devices — and both underground and underwater sensors to detect movement of people, animals and other objects. “The underwater sensors are crucial given the topography of the area where our men cannot patrol without boats,” Mr. Mordia said.

Smugglers often use the Brahmaputra and its channels to smuggle drugs and cough syrups sealed in polythene and stuck to the bottom of boats or below a raft. Smugglers are also known to have used children using hollow papaya stems as snorkels to breathe underwater while guiding cattle across the border.

The BSF personnel have been seizing at least a dozen cattle every month in the Dhubri sector. These are handed over to the police who either entrust with authorised NGOs or auction them.

“We are maintaining proper description of the cattle seized so that the people who try buy them at the action and try to smuggle them again are caught,” Mr Mordia said, adding that the force has written to the police in Bihar, Odisha and other hinterland states to check the movement of cattle for tighter checking on the border.

The BSF’s use of gadgets is part of the Comprehensive Integrated Border Management System to ensure foolproof security.

www.thehindu.com/news/national/bsf-tracks-earth-water-and-air-on-bangladesh-border/article29872872.ece/amp/
 
BD needs aquire capability to knock out any drones that strays into BD territory.

Additionally we need to ensure we have our own drones to keep an eye on these aholes.
 
Lol..how sad getting monitored by Israeli tech. And then you see threads like Indo BD relationship model taken to new heights.

There is only one special word for the Bangladeshi Gov..Boitol
 
New Israeli Tethered Drones to Combat Cattle Smuggling along Bangladesh Border
However, is not it true that BD is more than self-sufficient in the production of BEEF, Chicken, Mutton, and Fish? This is what the newspapers were telling the other day at the behest of govt and our guys here were celebrating.

So, the truth is cows are still being smuggled out from India. And this is why India will use Israeli drones to watch over it.
 
However, is not it true that BD is more than self-sufficient in the production of BEEF, Chicken, Mutton, and Fish? This is what the newspapers were telling the other day at the behest of govt and our guys here were celebrating.

So, the truth is cows are still being smuggled out from India. And this is why India will use Israeli drones to watch over it.

This is true but in small number. Previously as high as 5 million cows used to be smuggled each year but now the number is between .2-.5 million.
 
This is true but in small number. Previously as high as 5 million cows used to be smuggled each year but now the number is between .2-.5 million.

Local animal husbandry activity has gone up several-fold to account for the local beef consumption.

Let Sanghis keep their go-mata and we need to tell 'em to eff-off if they try to tell us what to do with ours....
 
Local animal husbandry activity has gone up several-fold to account for the local beef consumption.

Let Sanghis keep their go-mata and we need to tell 'em to eff-off if they try to tell us what to do with ours....

Cow milk has gold as said by West Bengal BJP Leader Dilip Ghosh!! So it’s natural they will try to protect these precious metals!!

Gaumata's milk has gold, foreign cow breeds are aunties: BJP neta

Read more at:
http://m.timesofindia.com/articlesh...ofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst

Because of that a poor cow farmer went to bank for bank loan with his cow as it has gold in the cow :cheesy:


Bengal man wants gold loan against cows after Dilip Ghosh's 'gold in milk' theory

A man in West Bengal's Dankuni area reached a branch of Manappuram Finance Limited in the hope of securing a gold loan against two cows.


India Today Web Desk
Dankuni
November 7, 2019
UPDATED: November 7, 2019 10:22 IST

Goru_Sona-770x433.png


A screengrab from the report carried by the local news channel, (Photo: DNN Bangla)

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/bengal-man-gold-loan-cows-dilip-ghosh-1616488-2019-11-07
 
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