Bengal hands over land to BSF for border fencing; Suvendu rolls out 'detect, delete, deport' push

West Bengal Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari unveiled a twin-pronged border security push, including land transfer to the BSF and a "detect, delete and deport" mechanism targeting infiltrators.

Bengal hands over land to BSF for border fencing; Suvendu rolls out 'detect, delete, deport' push
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West Bengal Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari on Wednesday unveiled a twin-pronged border security push, initiating the transfer of a 27-km stretch of land to the BSF for long-pending fencing projects and implementation of a broader ''detect, delete and deport'' mechanism targeting infiltrators.

Addressing a press conference at Nabanna alongside BSF officials, Adhikari said land covering an initial 27-km stretch would be transferred to the force within two weeks and asserted that it marked only the beginning of a larger border security architecture and transfer of required land for securing the borders.

At the same event, he also announced the implementation of a mechanism for direct handover of 'infiltrators' to the BSF by the state police, asserting that communities not covered under the Citizenship (Amendment) Act (CAA) would be detained and deported under a process coming into force with immediate effect.

Adhikari described the framework as ''detect, delete and deport'' of infiltrators, while explaining the mechanism.

The twin announcements marked one of the BJP government's earliest high-impact policy interventions, bringing together two issues that have long sat at the centre of the party's political messaging in Bengal -- border security and infiltration.

''As a beginning, the land required to secure the 27-km stretch is being provided to the BSF. Our patriotic citizens and efficient officials will complete the process and extend all cooperation in the coming days,'' he added.

The chief minister said his cabinet had approved the land transfer proposal and tasked the chief secretary and the land and land reforms secretary with completing the process within 45 days.

Projecting the decision as a course correction, Adhikari alleged that the previous government had withheld land sought by the BSF due to ''appeasement politics'' and vote bank calculations.

Referring to the long and porous India-Bangladesh border, Adhikari said substantial fencing gaps had left the state vulnerable.

''India shares a 4,000-km border with Bangladesh, of which nearly 2,200 km falls in West Bengal. Around 1,600 km has already been fenced, while nearly 600 km still remains unfenced,'' he said.

He alleged that out of the unfenced portion, land for nearly 555 km could have been handed over earlier, but it was not done because of political reasons and appeasement politics of the previous government.

''Wherever land is needed for fencing and border security, we will hand it over to the BSF,'' he added.

The chief minister also sought to frame infiltration as not merely a border issue but a wider law-and-order challenge.

''In issues related to law and order, love jihad, forced religious conversion and crimes concerning women's safety, a large section of those arrested are infiltrators from Bangladesh,'' he claimed.

He also announced what he described as a stricter implementation of mechanisms to deal with illegal immigration.

''A letter had been sent by the Centre to the state on May 14 last year regarding the direct handover of infiltrators to the BSF, but the previous government failed to implement this important provision or law. We are now enforcing it with immediate effect,'' he said.

''On one hand, the previous government had opposed the CAA and had also not implemented this law or didn't use this opportunity. We are implementing it from now,'' he said.

Referring to provisions under the Citizenship (Amendment) Act, Adhikari said seven communities covered under the law and entering India before the cut-off date would not face action.

''Under the CAA, seven communities have been named, and those who came till December 31, 2024, are protected, and police cannot detain them,'' he said.

''Those who are not covered under the CAA will be treated as infiltrators. State police will detain and hand them over to the BSF,'' Adhikari said.

The BSF would then coordinate with BGB, the Bangladesh border authorities, for initiating the deportation process, he said.

''The BSF will speak to the Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB) and take necessary steps to deport them,'' Adhikari said.

He said instructions had already been communicated to the state's top administrative and police officials.

''We have informed the DGP and the home secretary that this law will be implemented in all police stations in border areas for the sake of West Bengal and India's security,'' he said.

Adhikari also alleged that institutional coordination along the border had weakened over the years.

''For the last several years, coordination meetings between the BSF, state police and administration in bordering areas did not happen,'' he said.

He claimed such meetings had resumed after the BJP assumed office and would now be held regularly.

For the BJP government, the announcements appeared to signal more than an administrative shift. Border security, citizenship and migration have long occupied a central place in the party's Bengal politics; on Wednesday, those themes moved from campaign rhetoric to policy execution.

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