[🇧🇩] Terrorist BSF is pushing Indian Nationals into Bangladesh

[🇧🇩] Terrorist BSF is pushing Indian Nationals into Bangladesh
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India forcibly pushing people into Bangladesh: HRW

Prothom Alo English Desk
Dhaka
Updated: 17 Jun 2026, 20: 01

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Recently, India's Border Security Force (BSF) attempted to push six people across the border at Roumari in Kurigram.Prothom Alo

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has expressed concern over reports that Indian authorities are forcibly pushing many ethnic Bengali residents, mostly Muslims living in West Bengal, toward Bangladesh without basic due process.

The rights group said that detaining or deporting individuals without due process constitutes a violation of fundamental human rights.

In a report released on Tuesday (16 June), HRW highlighted these concerns and called for greater adherence to legal safeguards.

“Indian authorities are cruelly dumping families into Bangladesh or leaving them stranded at the border, ignoring their basic human rights,” said Meenakshi Ganguly, Deputy Asia Director at HRW. “The government should stop unlawfully expelling people, ensure procedural safeguards, engage with Bangladeshi authorities to verify citizenship, and end this dismaying animosity toward Muslims.”

According to the report, the BGB has foiled 21 attempts by the BSF to push more than 200 people, including children, into Bangladesh’s border districts since 1 June 2026.

The rights group interviewed nine witnesses who described BSF members bringing groups of people to the border at night and pushing them through "cuts in the barbed wire fencing."

In Panchagarh, a 75-hour standoff ensued after the BSF attempted to push 10 people across on June 5. Rubel Hossen, 35, a local villager, told HRW that the group had advanced approximately 50 feet into Bangladesh before retreating to an ‘embankment in no man’s land’ after BGB forces arrived.

“What I witnessed appeared to be a war-like standoff with large deployments of BSF and BGB,” Hossen said, noting that the group was exposed to severe lightning and heavy rain during the first night.

The report documented similar incidents in Tetulbaria on June 6, involving six members of two families, and in Thakurgaon on June 8, where a pregnant mother and her child were among 11 people stranded at the zero line for nearly 48 hours.

West Bengal Chief Minister Suvendu Adhikari, following the BJP's election victory in March, stated that his government has detained hundreds of ‘Bangladeshi infiltrators’ and forced nearly 5,000 people ‘to go back’ under his ‘detect, delete and deport’ policy.

HRW highlighted that ahead of the elections, India’s election commission carried out a ‘hurried and controversial revision’ of voter lists that dropped over nine million names. An Indian activist told HRW that an estimated 400 people are currently held in holding centers at the West Bengal border, adding that the ‘exclusion from the rolls has become a trigger for arrest, detention, and expulsion.’

Assam Chief Minister Himanta Biswa Sarma has also targeted Bengali-speaking Muslims, recently stating: “We take them to a convenient location near the border, and literally push them across the border. Now, such an atmosphere has been created in Assam that several illegal Bangladeshis have started going back on their own.”

Hasibur Islam, a union council member from Panchagarh, told HRW he met a family from Siliguri who possessed Indian biometric identity documents (Aadhaar cards). Despite the oldest member having voted four times in the past, their names were dropped from the electoral rolls this year, leading to their detention and attempted expulsion.

Human Rights Watch emphasized that India is obligated under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to ensure the protection of everyone’s rights. The report stated that leaving people without food, water, or shelter may amount to ‘cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.’

The organization further noted that expelling or stranding children violates the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, which obligates states to respect children’s right to preserve their nationality.

“No one, whatever their nationality, should be left to spend nights in an open field between two lines of armed border guards,” Ganguly said. “India should end these brutal expulsions, and both governments should ensure that border management never again comes at the cost of basic human dignity.”​
 

India forcibly expels ethnic Bengalis to Bangladesh: HRW
BGB foils 36 push-in bids, Bangladesh minister tells JS

Staff Correspondent 17 June, 2026, 11:45

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Border Guard Bangladesh personnel stand guard in the Sadipur border area in Benapole, Jessore district, Bangladesh, June 3, 2026. | AP photo

Indian authorities have forcibly expelled ‘ethnic Bengali’ residents, mostly Muslims from West Bengal, to Bangladesh without due process, leaving many families stranded along the border, according to a report released by Human Rights Watch on Tuesday.

The rights watchdog has alleged that India’s Border Security Force has been pushing people across the border while Border Guard Bangladesh has refused entry to those whose Bangladeshi nationality could not be verified, leading to dozens of families being trapped in the ‘zero line’ between the two countries.

‘Indian authorities are cruelly dumping families into Bangladesh or leaving them stranded at the border, ignoring their basic human rights,’ HRW deputy Asia director Meenakshi Ganguly was quoted as saying in the report released from London.

She urged India to halt unlawful expulsions, ensure procedural safeguards and cooperate with Bangladeshi authorities to verify citizenship claims.

Bangladesh home minister Salahuddin Ahmed on Wednesday told the Jatiya Sangsad that the BGB had so far foiled 36 attempts by BSF to push people into Bangladesh following the political changeover in West Bengal in early May.

Meanwhile, nine people, including women and children, who became victims of an attempted push-in by the BSF at the Roumari border in Kurigram were still staying in no man’s land for the fourth consecutive day on Wednesday.

Citing Bangladeshi border authorities, HRW report said that since June 1, BGB had foiled 21 attempts by the BSF to push more than 200 people, including children, into various border districts of Bangladesh.

The report said the incidents occurred amid a crackdown in West Bengal under the newly elected Bharatiya Janata Party government.

West Bengal chief minister Suvendu Adhikari reportedly said authorities had detained hundreds of alleged ‘Bangladeshi infiltrators’ and compelled nearly 5,000 people to ‘go back’ under a policy described as ‘detect, delete and deport.’

HRW, a nonprofit organisation headquartered in New York City, said it interviewed nine witnesses, who described BSF personnel bringing groups of people to the border at night and forcing them through gaps in border fencing into Bangladeshi territory.

HRW linked the incidents to a controversial voter list revision ahead of West Bengal’s March elections, which reportedly removed more than nine million names from electoral rolls.

The organisation said exclusion from voter lists had become a basis for detention, arrest and expulsion in some cases.

The report also referred to Assam, where a citizenship verification exercise in 2019 left more than 1.9 million people without recognised citizenship status.

It further alleged that some detainees had been stripped of identity documents, money and personal belongings before being taken to the border.

Bangladeshi authorities have repeatedly stated that they will not accept individuals pushed across the border outside established legal procedures and insist that all returns must follow proper nationality verification mechanisms.

HRW said India was bound by international human rights treaties that prohibit arbitrary deprivation of citizenship and require due process before detention or expulsion.

The rights group called on both India and Bangladesh to ensure that border management practices respect human dignity and prevent people from being trapped between the two countries.

Responding to a query in parliament, home minister Salahuddin said that 2,369 people were pushed across the border by the BSF between August 5, 2024 and June 17, 2026.

Out of these individuals, 2,175 were handed over to local police stations, 11 were returned to the BSF, and 183 were pushed back.

He added that an additional 2,860 people were formally received through flag meetings between May and November 2025 and handed over to local police.

BGB 35 Battalion in Jamalpur commanding officer Lieutenant Colonel Hasanur Rahman on Wednesday said that the nine people were still in the zero line inside Indian Territory in uncertainty as no solution was reached even after a flag meeting between the BGB and BSF, New Age correspondent in Kurigram reported.​
 

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