Bangladesh and India will hold their semiannual DG-level line talks in Dhaka one month from now to examine issues connected with controling an assortment of cross-boondocks violations and measures to make better coordination between their security powers and organizations, official sources said on Thursday.
A designation drove by Line Security Power (BSF) Chief General Nitin Agrawal is scheduled to venture out to Bangladesh for the gathering to be held between Walk 5-9, the sources told PTI. This will be the 54th release of the discussions between the BSF and the Line Gatekeeper Bangladesh (BGB).
The conversations will be held at the BGB base camp in Dhaka's Pilkhana. BGB DG Maj Gen Mohammad Ashrafuzzaman Siddiqui will lead the Bangladeshi designation. The discussions will incorporate authorities from home and outer issues services, and enemies of opiates and different organizations of the two nations, they said.
The two sides are supposed to think on various issues connected with line the executives like doing whatever it may take to stop episodes of attack and goes after on BSF faculty and regular people by Bangladeshi lawbreakers, mutually checking wrongdoings like sneaking of merchandise and phony Indian cash along this front, further developing the organized boundary the board plan (CBMP) and checking unlawful development exercises along the boundary wall, in addition to other things, a senior Association home service official said.
The BSF monitors the 4,096-km-long Indian front with Bangladesh on the country's eastern side. The DG-level line talks were held yearly somewhere in the range of 1975 and 1992 however they were made half-yearly in 1993 with either side on the other hand venturing out to the public capitals of New Delhi and Dhaka. The last discussions were held in Delhi in June 2023. The official said the relations between the two nations and the powers are excellent and this gathering is pointed toward improving these ties.
As per official information, in excess of 3,342 Bangladeshi nationals were caught by the BSF along the line in 2023, the biggest number in throughout the course of recent years.A sum of 77 BSF staff were harmed in assaults by Bangladeshi and Indian scoundrels last year when contrasted with 43 and 64 such episodes in 2022 and 2021 separately, the information showed.