BSF digs trenches to check cattle smuggling along Indo-Bangla border
Angrail has a unique topography of being a thumb-shaped land mass surrounded from three sides by the Icchamati river.

The border guarding force, over the last five months, has plugged some of the most vulnerable patches of this 4,096-km border by not only increasing troop strength but also providing them with more weapons, vehicles and a fresh fleet of fast attack motorboats to patrol riverine areas.
BSF officers deployed in this "most notorious and vulnerable" frontier area for cattle smuggling under the South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal say after the new measures were initiated early this year, the instances and threat of smugglers attacking patrol parties has increased.
"We have put some innovative techniques to control cattle smuggling menace in these areas. While about 20 metre wide trenches have been dug just for almost 21-kms just behind the international border, GI pipes have been welded to existing metal fence as its barbed wire had already been cut by smugglers," BSF commanding officer of the area Barjender Singh said.
The village of Angrail made news in April this year after Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh complimented BSF troops at this border post for cracking down on smugglers. The minister had asked them to further choke and bring a complete halt on this activity.
Angrail has a unique topography of being a thumb-shaped land mass surrounded from three sides by the Icchamati river which flows into both the countries.
The new measures to check cattle smuggling have brought good results, officers say.
"Cattle smuggling instances have gone down by over 90 per cent this year in our frontier. This frontier constitutes for 80 per cent of this illegal activity comprising districts of North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, Nadia, Murshidabad and Malda," BSF Inspector General (South Bengal Frontier) Sandeep Salunke told a visiting group of journalists at his headquarters in Kolkata.
These innovative and low cost solutions like digging ditches and improvising fence security by welding GI pipes about 2-feet above the ground, Salunke said, has "shown very good results" in checking the illegal activity.
BSF officials cited local intelligence and Bangladesh media reports to say that prices of beef in the neighbouring country has shot up by double in the last few months.
"The earnings in Bangladesh through this illegal trade was about Rs 30 crore during the first five months of 2014 and in the corresponding period this year, the figures are just Rs 5 crore," officials said citing latest data.
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