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Saif

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India's border violence
Kallol Mustafa | Published: 00:00, Apr 02,2024 | Updated: 22:44, Apr 01,2024


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An image of a portion of Bangladesh-India border. —Web

INCIDENTS of shootings or killings on the border of two hostile neighbouring countries are not rare. But the case of one country regularly shooting and killing citizens of the other country on the border of two countries claiming officially to be 'friends' cannot be found anywhere else in the world except the Bangladesh-India border. Even on the Independence Day that India boasts of having helped Bangladesh achieve, two Bangladeshi citizens were shot dead by the Indian Border Security Force.

The BSF shot three Bangladeshi nationals dead in five days at the end of March alone. Earlier in January, two persons were shot dead by the BSF, including one Border Guard Bangladesh member. Killing along the Bangladesh-India border has been rising gradually over the last three years, despite repeated state-level commitments to bring such killings down to zero. According to human rights organisation Ain O Salish Kendra, 31 Bangladeshis were killed by BSF along the border in 2023, of whom 28 were shot dead. The numbers of Bangladeshi citizens killed by BSF in 2021 and 2022 were 18 and 23, respectively. According to the Ain O Salish Kendra, at least 522 Bangladeshis were killed by the BSF between 2009 and 2020.

When the issue of border killings came up, the BSF usually gave the excuse of firing in 'self-defense' under 'compulsion'. For example, in July 2022, the then director general of India's Border Security Force, Pankaj Kumar Singh, tried to justify the killing of Bangladeshi nationals, terming them as 'criminals'. He claimed that all those killed were involved in various crimes, including drug trade and cattle smuggling, as if the BSF could stamp any foreign citizen as a criminal without any trial and then kill the alleged criminal at will!

First, cattle smuggling, like all other commodity smuggling, is a joint venture involving both Indian and Bangladeshi sellers and buyers. The rules of a market economy dictate that any commercial transaction, whether legal or illegal, can only take place if both parties benefit. In this regard, Kirity Roy, secretary of Banglar Manabadhikar Suraksha Mancha, a rights organisation based in West Bengal, has rightly said, 'The story that is told to justify border killing is also not true. They say cattle are smuggled across the border, and those smugglers are killed. It seems as if cows are born at the border and smuggled into Bangladesh. In fact, these cows are brought from Haryana and Punjab, crossing 2,000 to 2,500 kilometres of distance in India. The cattle are brought on foot, by truck, or by train. Is it believable that no one sees these? Nobody stops these because everyone gets their share. The real issue here is corruption; the BSF kills when there is a dispute with the distribution of the spoils.'

Secondly, neither the Indian Penal Code nor any international law allows shooting or killing a smuggler at will. Anyone crossing the border illegally can be arrested and prosecuted. India ignores all internationally accepted border control protocols and bilateral border management instruments like the Joint India-Bangladesh Guidelines for Border Authorities of the Two Countries, 1975, and the India-Bangladesh Coordinated Border Management Plan, 2011. For example, to avoid the possibility of 'unpleasant incidents', according to Article 8(i) of the Joint India-Bangladesh Guidelines for Border Authorities of the Two Countries, 1975, if nationals of one country ingress the working boundary and enter illegally and commit or attempt to commit an offence, the border security forces would be at liberty to take appropriate action in the exercise of the 'right to private defence' preferably without resorting to fire (emphasis added). And according to Article 8(m), whenever any cattle are alleged to have been lifted across the border, a report will be lodged with the opposite post commander (emphasis added), to whom the details, such as the tracks of the cattle and the criminals involved, etc, will be handed over. The border post commander concerned will acknowledge receipt of the report and then inform the nearest police station in his own country, who will make all efforts to recover the cattle and apprehend the criminals.

But does the BSF follow this simple procedure to prevent smuggling while avoiding 'unpleasant incidents'? Evidence suggests otherwise. According to an investigation report by Human Rights Watch titled 'Trigger Happy': Excessive Use of Force by Indian Troops at the Bangladesh Border', all the victims of BSF killings were either unarmed or armed with only sickles, sticks, and knives, which suggests that in shooting victims, the BSF are likely to have used excessive force. In a number of cases, the victims were shot in the back, suggesting that they were running away. In others, injuries indicate the person was shot at close range, with witnesses often alleging that the person was tortured and killed in BSF custody. In none of the cases investigated by Human Rights Watch did the BSF show that it had recovered lethal weapons or explosives that could pose an imminent threat of death or serious injury that might justify killings in self-defence.

Thirdly, incidents like the Felani killings make it clear that the BSF's pretext of self-defence is bogus. How could an unarmed teenage girl like Felani Khatun, whose clothes were stuck in barbed wire, pose a threat to the heavily armed BSF? After the killing of Felani by the Indian BSF in the early hours of January 7, 2011, her body was hanging on the barbed wire fence for a long time. The image of the hanging body of the teenage girl on the barbed wire sparked outrage and protests at home and abroad.

But even after such an incident, the BSF member who killed Felani was not punished; rather, the BSF court acquitted him. Then the case was brought to the Supreme Court of India, but it has not been heard yet. Felani's mother, Jahanara Begum, who was angry and disappointed at not getting justice, said that no one should lose her child; not even a bird should die at the hands of the BSF on the border. Felani's mother wanted not a single bird to die in the hands of BSF, but alas, BSF is continuing to kill people like birds on the Bangladesh-India border!

It is clear from all these incidents that no matter how friendly it claims to be, India's behaviour in border management is that of an aggressive and dominating eighbor. It is noteworthy that the Indian BSF, which behaves as 'trigger happy' on the border of its 'friendly' neighbour Bangladesh, does not behave the same way on the borders with hostile neighbours like China or Pakistan. There may be a state of war and isolated shootings and killings on those borders, but there are no such one-sided border killings like on the Bangladesh-India border.

Although the Indian BSF has been carrying out serial killings on the border of Bangladesh, rarely is there any strong protest from the Bangladesh government. On the one hand, Bangladesh is unilaterally giving various favours and facilities to India, including transit, connectivity, ports and the business of power and energy. On the other hand, India is depriving Bangladesh of its fair share of trans-boundary river water while killing Bangladeshi citizens one after another on the border.

In this kind of scenario, the government of Bangladesh could take a strict and clear stand against the killings of the BSF on the border and demand a trial and investigation of every such incident, leveraging India's strategic dependence on Bangladesh for transit and connectivity. But no such attempt has been made by the Bangladesh government to turn the issue of border killings into a bilateral and international issue, which clearly indicates Bangladesh's weak foreign policy towards India.

In order to stop the border killings, it is necessary for the Bangladesh government to put effective pressure on India in bilateral and multilateral forums and be vocal about investigating and prosecuting every incident of border killings.

Kallol Mustafa is an engineer and writer who focuses on power, energy, environment and development economics.
 

Vikings

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Feb 13, 2024
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India should have let Pakistan finish it's job in 71.
Sir things aren't black and white as many people think! There are multiple stories in the market , let people decide which one they shall believe!

Also ,I suggest you to read the book "Dead reckoning" written by Sharmila Bose.

Also any war crime by Pakistan armed forces still isn't recognised internationally because of 3M propaganda!

So what Pakistani job was stopped by India is not clear! Thanks.
 
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Saif

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Bangladeshi farmer killed in BSF firing
Our Correspondent . Lalmonirhat 26 April, 2024, 13:14

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The Indian Border Security Force shot dead a Bangladeshi farmer along the Patgram border area of northern Lalmonirhat district on Friday, officials said.

The farmer, Abul Kalam Dakhu, 30, son of late Afar Uddin of Srirampur union under the Patgram upazila, was shot at along the border in the Srirampur union of Patgram and died on his way to the nearby Patgram Upazila Health Complex.

'One bullet has exited through his left chest,' said Patgram police station assistant sub-inspector Shahanur Rahman.

He was married and was a farmer.

With him, three Bangladeshis have been killed in BSF firing along the Lalmonirhat border in a month.

Police and Border Guard Bangladesh officials said that a group of Bangladeshis went to the bordering Patgram area in the predawn hours.

A team of the 169 Duradavari BSF camp that was on duty at the Indian border fired at them, leaving Abul Kalam injured.

Abul Kalam died on his way to a nearby health facility while he was being taken there by his associates.

The trend of killing Bangladeshi nationals along the Bangladesh-India border by the Indian Border Security Force is rising, with at least six Bangladeshis being killed in the first three months of this year, while four people were killed in the same period in the past year.

Rights group Ain O Salish Kendra documented that 30 Bangladeshis were killed at the hands of the Indian BSF alone in 2023, while the number was 23, including 16 shooting deaths, in 2022.

At least 1,236 Bangladeshis were killed and 1,145 injured in shootings by the Indian border force between 2000 and 2020, according to another rights organisation, Odhikar.

Bangladesh and India share a 4,100-kilometre-long international border, the fifth-longest land border in the world.​
 

Bilal9

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India should have let Pakistan finish it's job in 71.

The two topics are not related.

I know it feels good to get hate off your chest, but there is no relationship between the two.

One is a freedom issue that devolved into a civil war. The other is an undisciplined law and order entity in India that does not follow the diktat of its own commanders.

Even this week - BSF leaders promised sitting in Dhaka in a conference with the BGB (like they have for the last twenty years) that non-lethal force will be used at the border and that border killing will be reduced to zero. This was at the behest of senior AL leaders (home minister) who have been forced to take a stand.

BSF leaders' words cannot be relied upon, which has been proven time and again. Just lip service.

If this continues - bilateral relations (especially trade) will be affected. Solving this problem is not difficult for the Indian side.

Murder at the border cannot be a mantra of any civilized state.

One can already see a reaction to this in the popular "India Out" movement in Bangladesh - which has already snow-balled. It will only get worse.
 
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Saif

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Border killings by BSF rise despite repeated pledges
Muktadir Rashid 03 May, 2024, 23:53

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The increasing shooting deaths of Bangladeshi nationals at the hands of the Indian Border Security Force on the international border have left rights campaigners in both countries concerned and frustrated.

The recent incidents showed that the BSF bullets pierced the upper parts of the victims' bodies. Neither of the counties has carried out any joint or separate investigation into the incidents yet.

Rights group Ain O Salish Kendra said that the BSF killed six Bangladeshis in the first three months of the year, despite renewed promises from the top leadership of the Indian border force in Dhaka in early March.

On April 2, Saiful Islam, 30, of Gomastapur upazila under Chapainawabganj district, was shot dead.

Robiul Islam, brother of the deceased, told New Age that Saiful was shot once from behind, and the bullet pierced through his chest.

On Friday, the Indian border force shot dead another 30-year-old Bangladeshi farmer, Abul Kalam Dukhu, along the Patgram border area of northern Lalmonirhat district.

'One bullet has pierced through his left chest,' said Patgram police station assistant sub-inspector Shahanur Rahman.

BGB director general Major General Mohammad Ashrafuzzaman Siddiqui told New Age on Sunday that all the death incidents occurred within the Indian territory from the zero line—starting from a few hundred metres to even a few kilometres inside India.

'Despite the killing happening inside India, we send strong protest notes in every case and organise flag meetings,' he said.

In the 54th director general-level border conference in Dhaka in March, the BGB chief urged his Indian counterpart to adopt 'necessary measures' to reduce the border killings to zero, considering the 'sound bilateral relation' between the two neighbours.

In response, the Indian Border Security Force director general, Nitin Agrawal, has renewed his promise to bring down the number of shooting deaths or injuries of Bangladeshi civilians along their shared border to zero.

The data from the rights group ASK, however, shows that three more Bangladeshis were killed in April alone.

'The continuous reports of shooting incidents are frustrating us,' said Kamal Uddin Ahmed, the chairman of Bangladesh's National Human Rights Commission.

'We have not heard of such incidents with Pakistan or other borders of [India].'

Kirity Roy, secretary of Manabadhikar Surakkha Mancha, better known as MASUM, a West Bengal-based human rights organisation, vented his anger over the increasing number of border killings.

'It's a bloodied border between two countries. Often killings happen under the pretext of self-defence, which is not right,' he said, adding, 'In the Indian Constitution, Article 21 ensures the right to life, but it is systematically violated by the BSF with impunity.'

'Whatever the Indian government commits is disregarded by the government employees, and the government stands like deaf and blind.'

Kirity added that the Indian NHRC is also day by day becoming a 'stooge' and oblivious to its mandate.

Mizanur Rahman, a former chairman of the NHRC who used to teach law at Dhaka University, said on Monday that the border killings had been affecting people-to-people relations between the two countries. He said that the killing must be stopped.

The trend of killing Bangladeshis by the Indian Border Security Force is rising, with at least six Bangladeshis being killed in the first three months of this year, while four people were killed in the same period in 2023.

Rights group Ain O Salish Kendra documented that 30 Bangladeshis were killed in the hands of the Indian BSF alone in 2023, while the number was 23, including 16 shooting deaths, in 2022, and 17, including 16 shooting deaths, in 2021.

At least 1,236 Bangladeshis were killed and 1,145 injured in shootings by the Indian border force between 2000 and 2020, according to another rights organisation, Odhikar.

Home minister Asaduzzaman Khan could not be reached for his comment.

In March, the minister urged a BSF delegation led by Nitin Agrawal to bring civilian killings on the border to zero and use non-lethal weapons to this end.

Bangladesh and India share a 4,100-kilometre-long international border, the fifth-longest land border in the world.​
 

Saif

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Jan 24, 2024
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Bangladesh for use of non-lethal weapons by BSF
Staff Correspondent 10 May, 2024, 00:13

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Hasan Mahmud

Foreign minister Hasan Mahmud said on Wednesday that both the governments of India and Bangladesh had goodwill and sincerity to bring down the border killings.

'We have discussed the border killing issue in detail. We have put emphasis on the use of non-lethal weapons in the meeting with the Indian foreign secretary,' Hasan told reporters at his Segunbagicha office after a meeting with India's external affairs secretary Vinay Mohan Kwatra.

The Indian external affairs secretary, who arrived on a two-day visit to Bangladesh on Wednesday evening, paid a courtesy visit to the Bangladesh foreign minister at the foreign ministry.

The foreign minister said that the border forces of both countries were instructed to use non-lethal weapons, and they were 'following the instructions.'

He, however, said that non-lethal weapons act like lethal weapons when they are used in close proximity.

Hasan said they had also discussed people-to-people connectivity between the two neighbours.

'We have sought cooperation from India to import hydropower from Nepal and Bhutan through Indian territory,' he said.

Two Bangladeshi youths were shot dead by BSF at the Tetulia border in Panchagarh in the early hours of Wednesday.

The latest incident of border killings took place hours before the arrival of India's foreign secretary Kwatra.

Human Rights Support Society, in a statement on Wednesday, reported that the BSF killed at least 13 Bangladeshis and injured 10 others between January 1 and May 8.​
 

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