Director General of Border Guard Bangladesh (BGB), Bangladesh's border guarding force, Major General Aziz Ahmed told a visiting group of Indian journalists here that his government has already approved a project to have a 282 km road along the border it shares with India and Myanmar.
While India borders Bangladesh from three sides (4,096 km), it shares a small 271 km border with Myamnar on its eastern flank.
He said it was "unfortunate" that these "two basic needs" of having a barbed wire fence and roads has not been developed on the Bangladeshi side till now. Ahmed said these projects are under "active consideration" of his government.
More From This Section
"You would understand that all these things require huge amounts of money...But the government has already approved a project for 282 km where roads along with barbed wire fence will be erected and possibly that will start from the Myanmarese side," Ahmed said.
He said as India has already raised fence along 79 per cent of the Indo-Bangla border, it "indirectly helps" his country in checking cross-border crimes.
"After all, Indian fencing helps us too," he reiterated.
(Reopens FGN 7)
The BGB chief, who will lead a delegation to New Delhi for the bi-annual DG-level talks with their counterparts Border Security Force (BSF) beginning October 30, also said he has given "clear instructions" to his men to crackdown on cross-border cattle smuggling incidents after the Indian establishment ordered a complete clampdown on this criminal activity sometime back.
"More than 95 per cent of border killing is due to cattle smuggling. This issue will surely be discussed during the DG level talks that will take place soon," he said.
The DG expressed his strong disapproval on the killing of Bangladeshi citizens in BSF firing and said such situations can be negated without killing a person.
A BGB data said while 21 Bangladeshis have been killed till September this year along the Indo-Bangla border, the figures for the previous years stood at 45 (2015) and 40 (2014).
Ahmed denied existence of any camps of Indian Insurgent Groups (IIGs) on their soil after BSF handed them over various dossiers in this regard in the past saying there has been "no signs of any hideouts or camps" after their forces conducted operations in areas identified by their counterparts.
These notes were being prepared outside Bangladesh and routed through its territory, he said.
"It is not only affecting Indian economy but also ours," he added.