Pakistan bid to fuel separatism in Kashmir keeps border hot: BSF
Pakistan bid to fuel separatism in Kashmir keeps border hot: BSF
Pakistan's "implicit bid" to fuel separatism in Kashmir is keeping the India's border with the neighbouring country "alive and dangerous", the top commander of Border Security Force (BSF) said.

New Delhi: Pakistan's "implicit bid" to fuel separatism in Kashmir is keeping the India's border with the neighbouring country "alive and dangerous", the top commander of Border Security Force (BSF) said in New Delhi on Thursday.

"Pakistan's strategy of waging proxy wars, neighbouring areas flourishing as markets for arms and drugs, systematic use of fake Indian currency notes for funding terrorism and an implicit bid to fuel separatism in Kashmir has kept this (Indo -Pakistan) border alive and dangerous," BSF Director General DK Pathak said.

At a BSF conference organised on, 'Border Management in India-Challenges and Options', he added that the "slow withdrawal of NATO forces, increasing interest of China in both Pakistan and Afghanistan and the ever-changing jihadi landscape of this region and beyond has challenged us to review our strategies".

BSF guards the International Border (IB) along Pakistan as a fully-independent unit but works under the operational command of the Army at the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir.

Pathak said that similar challenges, but of a different nature, were facing the country's largest border-guarding force in the eastern theatre, where it is responsible for securing the 4,096-km-long Indo-Bangladesh border entirely on its own.

"The dimensions of challenges on India-Bangladesh and India-Pakistan borders are dynamic and diverse in an attempt to curb cattle smuggling (along Bangladesh frontier), our jawans sustain injuries almost every other day.

"We exercise utmost restraint in using firearms. If the situation so warrants, our troops first resort to the use of non-lethal weapons. But the problems are so intricately linked that we have to constantly renew our strategies," he said.

That, Pathak said, requires BSF to update "not only its training and skills but also its attitude".

The DG of the about 2.5 lakh-strong force said his personnel, both men and women, are deployed in some of the most inhospitable terrain since the time it was raised in 1965.

The force is celebrating 50 years of its establishment this year.

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