The committee, headed by former Union Home Secretary Madhukar Gupta, will suggest how to strengthen border protection and address the issue of gaps and vulnerability in border fencing along the India-Pakistan border, a Home Ministry spokesperson said.
It has been mandated to study all types of gaps in the fencing and all other vulnerabilities along the border and suggest a comprehensive approach to fix them on interim and permanent basis. It will submit its report in three months.
On July 27 last year, three terrorists in army fatigue had attacked Dinanagar police station in Punjab's Gurdaspur district and killed three civilians and four policemen, including a Superintendent of Police.
In this case too, it is widely suspected that the terrorists had entered India through a riverine stretch of the Indo-Pak border in Punjab.
On March 20 last year, two heavily armed terrorists in army uniform had stormed a police station on Jammu-Pathankote highway in Kathua, near the Indo-Pak border, killing five people.