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Border Security Force, Border Guard Bangladesh agree on coordinated patrolling

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By PTI | 11 Jun, 2015, 11.01PM IST
Border Security Force, Border Guard Bangladesh agree on coordinated patrolling - The Economic Times

KOLKATA: The Border Security Force (BSF) and Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) today agreed to conduct simultaneous coordinated patrolling in vulnerable and smuggling-prone areas to counter gold smuggling and FICN racket.

The decision was taken after a four-day BSF- Region Commanders and BGB border conference here.

"Various issues related to attack on the BSF troops by Bangladeshi criminals, smuggling of FICN, gold, cattle, theft, dacoity and abduction by Bangladeshi criminals, joint patrolling in vulnerable areas and confidence building measures between both the forces were discussed," a statement by the BSF said.

"After due deliberations both forces agreed to conduct simultaneous co-ordination patrolling in vulnerable and smuggling-prone areas, educate border populations to respect the sanctity of International Boundary, organise games and sports on border by involving the troops and civilians. BGB also agreed to extend all cooperation in ops against FICN and gold racketeers," it stated.

The BSF statement also stated that both forces mutually agreed that field commanders of BSF and BGB will meet frequently in near future and work out details for implementation of land boundary agreements whenever called upon by respective commanders.
 
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Good decision to have coordinated patrolling
 
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Hopefully the remainder of the fence will be completed asap. india should also consider increasing its size, may be electrify it too....
 
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Last Updated: Friday, June 12, 2015 - 01:05
Bangladesh promises action against Indian insurgents | Zee News

Shillong: Bangladesh has promised firm action against insurgents from India`s northeastern states taking shelter in the country, an Indian official said here on Thursday.

"We have handed over a list of 39 Indian insurgent camps to the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB). They have assured us of taking firm action against the Indian insurgents operating from Bangladesh," Border Security Force (BSF) spokesman Sushil Kumar Singh said.

A four-day inspector general-level Border Coordination Conference between the BSF and the BGB concluded here at the BSF frontier headquarters on Thursday.

BSF Inspector General Sudesh Kumar, who led the Indian side, handed the fresh list to the BGB delegation led by Brig. Gen. Md. Latiful Haider.

"The list has been prepared based on specific intelligence inputs about the location of the insurgent camps in Bangladesh. Most of these insurgent camps are located at several areas in Bangladesh`s Mymensing, Moulvibazar, Netrakona, Khagrachari, Rangamati, Chittagong Hill Tract and the Kasalong Reserve Forest," the spokesman said.

The camps included those of the ULFA, NSCN-IM, NDFB, PLA, HNLC and other rebel groups active in the northeastern states with demands ranging from secession to greater autonomy and the right to self-determination.

"In the recent times, Bangladesh has acted against the Indian insurgents. This time too, we are hopeful that they would act against forces which are against India," he said.

Four northeastern states -- Tripura, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Assam -- share a 1,880-km border with Bangladesh. The dense forests, mountainous terrain, unfenced borders and other issues make the area porous and vulnerable.

Apart from the insurgent camps, the BSF expressed concern over the frequent crimes committed by Bangladeshi nationals inside Indian territory which include poaching, illegal migration and smuggling of fake Indian currency notes.

BGB`s Brig. Gen. Haider raised issues like killing, kidnapping and injuring of unarmed Bangladeshi nationals by Indian nationals in bordering areas, besides requested the logistic support from the BSF and use of Indian roads to maintain and construct the BOPs at hilly and remote areas in Bangladesh.
 
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Hopefully the remainder of the fence will be completed asap. india should also consider increasing its size, may be electrify it too....
It will be done once the border is demarcated on the ground and enclaves exchanged and both sides sign off on the ground on the final borders.

If it is done before that it would lead to problems for villages and villagers on both sides.

I believe exchange of enclaves is slated to happen on July 31 and after that some more border demarcation.

And ultimately the goal is to have a very good fence and border which can be crossed only at designated points by people on both sides or at the border haats. Would massively reduce smuggling and criminals crossing over once done.

What happened to the plans of constructing a tall boarder wall??? :coffee:
 
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so now BSF and BDR will shoot Bangladeshi Pole vaulters together
 
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so now BSF and BDR will shoot Bangladeshi Pole vaulters together

The BGB aim is not that great, most likely will shoot all the BSF, remember your 16 BSF that strayed over the border. The BGB must have been aiming at pole vaulter and shot the BSF instead, sorry.
 
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Updated: June 12, 2015 02:08 IST
Perspective: Fighting without equipment - The Hindu

(Rahul Bedi is a defence analyst.)

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The Army’s unconscionable delay in acquiring modern small arms severely compromises the infantry’s operational efficiency, especially in counter-insurgency warfare.
In the last five years, the small arms profile of India’s paramilitary forces has emerged as significantly superior to that of the Army, which continues to struggle to acquire even basic weapons for its infantry units. Since 2010, the Army has operated without a carbine, and has been battling seemingly intractable Ministry of Defence (MoD) bureaucratic processes to procure one. It is also struggling with similar self-defeating and hidebound acquisition procedures to acquire an assault rifle. It is still years away from selecting one, let alone inducting it into service.

Succeeding Army chiefs have declared the procurement of both weapon systems to be ‘top priority’, but years later, following extended trials and interminable evaluations, this priority remains unfulfilled.

On the other hand, the central paramilitary forces have, over the same time frame, inducted a range of modern carbines and assault rifles into service. Undoubtedly, their numbers are fewer than the Army’s, but there is a procedural lesson for the Army in the relative swiftness with which the central paramilitary forces have shortlisted, evaluated, tested, and finally acquired the weapon systems.

Interminable processes
Ironically, instead of the bigger and more battle-hardened Army setting an example in small arms acquisitions, the opposite has been true, due largely to the central paramilitary forces’ less encumbered acquisition procedures and swifter decision-making processes. Since 2010-2011, the Border Security Force (BSF) and Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) have acquired some 34,377 ‘Storm’ MX-4 sub-machine guns from Italy’s Beretta, with under barrel grenade launchers (UBGLs) and around 68,000 AK-47 variant assault rifles from Bulgaria’s Arsenal. A follow-on order by the CRPF for 60,000-odd AK-47s is under acquisition. Other central paramilitary forces purchases include 2,540 Tavor X-95 carbines from Israel and over 12, 000 9mm MP-5 sub-machine guns from Germany, some of which have been disbursed to special state police units deployed in counter insurgency operations against Naxalites.

In comparison, the Indian Army’s unending saga of small arms acquisitions makes dismal telling. This is due to utter confusion in determining their qualitative requirements (QRs) and the inherent systemic inefficiencies for which the Army has to assume ownership. This time around, it cannot complain that the MoD deprived its soldiers of basic weaponry.

In December 2010, the Army issued a tender for 44,618 5.56mm close quarter battle (CQB) carbines and 33.6 million rounds of ammunition to replace its World War II vintage submachine guns, which even the Ordnance Factory had stopped producing.
The trials featuring three vendors ended in end-2013. But the Army has yet to declare a winner, reportedly due to a handful of senior officers in the interminable procurement chain unduly favouring one carbine over the other for specious, almost laughable, reasons.

The tender requires a carbine weighing no more than 3kg to be capable of firing 600 rounds per minute, to a distance of 200 meters. It also requires the winning model to transfer technology to the Ordnance Factory to licence-build it in order to meet the Army’s requirement for over 2,00,000 CQB carbines. This number is expected to increase manifold.

However, the fear in military circles is that the petty differences in the Army’s selection team could well result in the tender being scrapped altogether. Retendering would take several more years, during which time the Army will have to operate without a carbine.

The assault rifles delay
The assault rifle procurement story is even more incomprehensible and alarming, as the Army is likely to scrap its 2011 tender for 66,000 multi-calibre assault rifles, after four overseas vendors failed to meet its requirements in trials that concluded last November.

The Army’s tender required the modular assault rifles to switch from 7.62x39mm to 5.56x45mm for employment in defensive and suppressive fire roles, merely by changing their barrels and magazines. The selected system was to have replaced the Defence Research and Development Organisation-designed assault rifle, which the Army had stated was ‘operationally inadequate’ in 2010, after using it on sufferance for years.

The shortlisted rifle, like the CQB carbine, was also to be licence-built by the OFB to meet the Army’s immediate operational requirement for over 2,20,000 assault rifles. Four models participated in trials at Bakloh cantonment near Dalhousie in Himachal Pradesh and at Hoshairpur in Punjab, from August 2014 onwards. All four rifles failed to meet the Army’s QRs for various reasons.

Official sources indicated that retrials were unlikely, and that after four years of wasted effort, the Army now plans to draw up fresh QRs for a single calibre rifle, in all likelihood a 7.62x39mm, which has a shorter range than its 5.56x45mm calibre equivalent that is in use with most of the world’s armies. It will then send out a request for information for the new rifle, before re-tendering several months later. Thereafter, it will navigate the time-consuming process of technical evaluation, user trials and shortlisting, followed by price negotiations, a process lasting three to four years.

Poor alternative
The MoD is also believed to be considering the alternative proposal of abandoning the import of both the carbine and assault rifle and manufacturing them locally under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ‘Make in India’ enterprise. But this will also entail time-consuming procedures, necessitating a private or public sector-led joint venture with an overseas original equipment manufacturer, again selected after extensive trials. Such an enterprise would, doubtless, necessitate the import of a certain number of weapon systems before their licensed production by the JV begins much later.

Army officers have warned that such delays severely compromise the operational efficiency of infantry units, especially those deployed in counter-insurgency operations, as they are forced to employ INSAS rifles against the superior weaponry of militants in Kashmir and the Northeast. Meanwhile, even the sniper rifles used in the paramilitary forces are more contemporary and advanced than the Army’s Soviet-era Dragunov SVD gas-operated, semi-automatic models acquired in the 80s.

Attempts to import around 1,000 sniper rifles for the Army’s Special Forces in 2010-11 under the Fast Track Procurement route proved fruitless and have been abandoned, even though the requirement remains a priority. An Army team led by a two-star officer conducted comparative trials in Israel (for IWI’s semi-automatic Galil sniper rifle), Finland (for Beretta’s SAKO TRG-22/24 bolt action model) and the U.S. (for Sig Sauers 3000 magazine-fed rifle), but with no results.

Unfortunately, even such specialist rifles, which can potentially alter not only the course of battles and politics but even history, remain victims of Army apathy.
 
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Last Updated: Saturday, June 13, 2015 - 00:47
Bangladesh flushing out NE militants from its soil: Border Security Force | Zee News

Shillong: Following inputs provided by Border Security Force, authorities in Bangladesh have begun flushing out northeast militants hiding in that country, a senior BSF official said here on Friday.

"We have been informed of operations taking place in Bangladesh to flush out militants from their makeshift camps which the BSF had from time to time shared with the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB)," a senior BSF official told PTI.

The BSF came to know about this during a Border Coordination meeting with BGB which concluded here yesterday.

During the conference, the BSF handed over BGB a list of 39 camps of various outfits in different parts of Bangladesh and sought their cooperation in raiding the camps and arrest the militants, the official said.

The BSF also raised the issue of violation of border by Bangladesh nationals and committing crimes like theft, dacoity, kidnapping and poaching.

The BGB, on the other hand, talked about killing of Bangladeshis at the border by the border residents besides requesting logistic support and use of Indian roads to maintain and construct border outposts at hilly and remote areas in Bangladesh, the official said.

The BSF delegation was led by BSF Meghalaya Frontier, Inspector General Sudesh Kumar, while the Bangladesh delegation was led by additional director-general (region commander Northeast region) Md Latiful Haider.

PTI
 
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India, Bangladesh vow to end border killings - The Hindu
Updated: November 17, 2015 23:15 IST
Delhi and Dhaka have agreed to bring border killings to an end and stressed greater awareness among citizens to avert such incidents in the future.

Delhi and Dhaka have agreed to bring border killings to an end and stressed greater awareness among citizens to avert such incidents in the future.

This was decided at the home secretary-level meeting between India and Bangladesh, when the issue of killing along the border came up prominently.

After the meeting with his Indian counterpart Rajiv Mehrishi here, Bangladesh Home Secretary Mozammel Haque Khan said: “We have agreed that the citizens of both countries should be taught not to create tension on the border, not to cross the border [illegally], and to follow international laws.”

The news of Bangladeshis being killed by Indian Border Security Force(BSF) was frequent in the local media. Official data shows at least 28 people, mostly illegal cattle traders, have been gunned down in the past seven months along the border.

According to Mr. Khan, eight Indian citizens were also killed while trying to smuggle in drugs during the past year.

India on earlier occasions announced plans to provide the BSF posted along the Bangladesh border with ‘non-lethal weapons’; but that has not happened yet. At the two-day meeting that ended on Tuesday, India assured Bangladesh of sharing intelligence on militancy.

The meeting, 17th after Bangladesh’s independence, also discussed the drug smuggling issue.

“Indian authorities have assured us of whole hearted cooperation in this regard,” said the Bangladesh home secretary.

On the first day of the meeting on Monday, India had raised the issues of the influx of fake Indian currency, cattle smuggling, and illegal infiltration, and sought Dhaka’s cooperation to completely stop these, while Bangladesh strongly spoke against the border killings.

Sources said the Indians assured Bangladesh of handing over the top Bangladeshi criminals hiding in India following examination of legal matters.
 
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http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ake-currency-inflows/articleshow/55444823.cms

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BSF sends team to Bangladesh to discuss prevention of fake currency inflows

By PTI | Nov 16, 2016, 12.08 AM IST


SHILLONG: The BSF today sent a delegation to the Border Coordination Conference with Bangladesh's BGB to discuss improving coordination at the border to prevent the inflow of Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICN) and also to iron out differences pertaining to cross-border criminal activities.

Led by BSF Meghalaya Frontier chief PK Dubey, the 18-member delegation will hold meetings with Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB) at Sylhet for four days from today, a BSF spokesperson said here.

Frontier chiefs from Mizoram, Cachar and Tripura were also part of the team, he added.

The BSF guards the international border with Bangladesh in at least four north-eastern states — Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Tripura — and a huge consignment of fake currencies has been seized by it over the last five years.

The BGB delegation will be led by its Additional Director General Qazi Masroor Ullah and is expected to discuss smuggling of fake currency notes, insurgency on both sides of the border, besides the issues of common concern related to crimes and violations of the international border, the spokesperson said.

The conference is aimed at improving the ties and understanding between the two border-guarding forces, the spokesperson said, adding that such exercises in the past had helped improve border management and acted as confidence building measures between the two forces.

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http://zeenews.india.com/news/india...-accused-from-west-bengals-malda_1950985.html
Last Updated: Friday, November 18, 2016 - 13:10

New Delhi: The NIA has arrested an accused in a case of fake Indian currency racket from West Bengal's Malda.

34-year-old Tahir Sk alias Tahir Sekh, a resident of Malda, had been absconding.

He was involved in the conspiracy for procurement of fake Indian currency notes (FICN) having face value of about Rs 65 lakh through the Indo-Bangladesh international border at Daulatpur area under the limits of Baishnabnagar in Malda district in May last year, the NIA alleged in a statement.

Sekh was intercepted by a team of BSF deployed in the border area, it said.

"Earlier, investigation into the case revealed that the arrested accused person was a member of the FICN network involved in the transnational procurement of high quality FICNs through smuggling and distribution and pumping the same into the Indian economy," the NIA said.

He was arrested recently on the basis of a non-bailable warrant issued against him by a local court in Kolkata.
The accused has been sent to police remand till Saturday.

PTI

First Published: Friday, November 18, 2016 - 13:10

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http://www.thehindu.com/news/nation...t-disputed-land-in-tripura/article9357954.ece

Updated: November 18, 2016 00:35 IST
Old impasse over Muhuri Char sought to be resolved before bilateral dialogue in Dhaka
A team from the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) on Thursday inspected the disputed Muhuri Char in south Tripura ahead of a bilateral dialogue at Dhaka to resolve an old impasse over the land. Joint Secretary in the MEA Sripriya Ranganathan also held a meeting with officials from Bangladesh at a camp of the Border Guards Bangladesh (BGB).

Ms. Ranganathan, Tripura Chief Secretary Y.P. Singh and other officials entered Bangladesh for a discussion with their Bangladesh counterparts at the BGB post in Parshuram. Sheikh Abdul Ahad, Director General of Land Records and Survey, a few senior officers of the Bangladesh Home and Foreign Affairs ministries, were present at the meeting.

The 140-acre Muhuri Char, 150 km south of Agartala, is a piece of land that surfaced due to a change in the course of the Muhuri river. Nearly 90 per cent of the land in India’s control, but Bangladesh has been staking claim over it for a long time. Border forces of both sides have even engaged in several skirmishes since 1978.

Officials of India and Bangladesh later inspected the area in speed boats. The Sripriya Ranganathan-led Indian team will leave for Dhaka on Friday morning through an integrated check-post in Agartala. Past dialogues between India and Bangladesh failed to solve the festering issue.

Uninhabited but fertile

Muhuri Char is not inhabited but fertile. Senior Tripura government Minister and Communist Party of India (Marxist) heavyweight from south Tripura said the country wanted a peaceful and meaningful resolution to the dispute.

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PARRIKARPTI

Manohar Parrikar is the first Defence Minister to visit Bangladesh in 45 years.

DHAKA: November 30, 2016 18:16 IST
Updated: November 30, 2016 18:17 IST
http://www.thehindu.com/news/intern...-Bangladesh/article16730549.ece?homepage=true


He held a meeting with Hasina’s Security Adviser Major General (Retd) Tariq Ahmed.

India and Bangladesh on Wednesday discussed military and security cooperation as Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar held talks with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s Security Adviser to strengthen bilateral strategic ties.

Mr. Parrikar, first Indian Defence Minister to visit Bangladesh in the last 45 years, held a meeting with Ms. Hasina’s Security Adviser Major General (Retd) Tariq Ahmed.

No official statement was issued after the meeting but officials familiar with the talks said they discussed security cooperation between the two countries.

Two-day visit

Mr. Parrikar, who arrived here on Wednesday on a two-day visit leading an 11-member high-powered delegation, will meet the top civil and military leadership to strengthen defence ties between the two countries.

Mr. Parrikar, who is accompanied by the Vice-Chiefs of the Army and Air Force, Deputy Chief of Navy besides Coast Guard chief, will meet Bangladesh President Abdul Hamid and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who holds the defence portfolio in the cabinet.

The Vice-Chiefs of India’s Army, Navy and Air Force, held talks with Bangladesh’s three services’ chiefs at their office in Dhaka cantonment, a Defence Ministry official said.

“During the meetings, they discussed issues related to the existing good relations and cooperation between the armed forces of the two countries,” an official statement said.

Hasina coming in December

Top Defence Ministry officials in New Delhi had said the focus of Mr. Parrikar’s trip was to deepen security ties and firm up a defence cooperation agreement that is likely to be signed when Ms. Hasina visits India next month.

Mr. Parrikar is scheduled to visit the Bangladesh Military Academy (BMA) near the southeastern port city of Chittagong on Thursday.

Alongside India, Bangladesh has strong defence cooperation with China especially in military hardware.

Chinese U-boats for it

The Bangladesh Navy this month acquired its first submarines from China, as Dhaka sought to boost its naval power in the resource-rich Bay of Bengal.

Bangladesh Navy chief Admiral Muhammad Farid Habib during his recent visit to India had said Dhaka wanted to work with the Indian Navy as there are many “non-traditional threats” in sea, a reference to piracy, floating armouries among others.
 
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