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June 06, 2026

Shah vows zero tolerance on demographic shifts

By Pramod Kumar Singh
Shah vows zero tolerance on demographic shifts

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Friday said demographic changes in West Bengal, Tripura and Bihar will not be tolerated, as he addressed BSF personnel at the Lankamura Border Outpost along the India-Bangladesh frontier in Tripura. Shah said the Centre is accelerating efforts to secure the country’s 6,000-kilometre frontiers with Pakistan and Bangladesh.

The remarks come two weeks after the Government constituted a high-level committee headed by retired Supreme Court judge Prakash Prabhakar Naolekar to map demographic shifts caused by illegal immigration and “abnormal settlement patterns.” Shah said infiltration will be stopped, every infiltrator identified and deported, and the “conspiracy” to engineer artificial changes in India’s social fabric defeated.

The home minister used the occasion to announce that the government’s “smart border” project is now in its final stage. Seven to eight locations across the country will serve as pilot sites for a new security grid that integrates technology, local administration and frontline BSF sentinels. “The concept of ‘smart border’ will be implemented in seven to eight places in the country as a pilot project,” Shah said, urging the Union home secretary and BSF director-general to visit border areas and finalise the rollout personally.

The initiative, first outlined by Shah on May 22 during the BSF’s annual Rustamji Memorial Lecture in New Delhi, marks a technological overhaul in border management since the force’s raising in 1965.

It envisages a layered, AI-driven surveillance network, drones, radars, thermal imagers, smart cameras, sensors, and real-time data analytics to replace reliance on physical fencing alone. The goal is early detection and neutralisation of threats ranging from human trafficking and arms smuggling and the circulation of fake Indian currency notes.

Shah had assured BSF troops that the project would be launched within the force’s 60th year, making the Pakistan and Bangladesh borders more secure. In dense forests and unfenced pockets along the 4,096-km Bangladesh border, the announcement carries operational weight.

The Home Minister acknowledged the force’s daily challenges: “Every border has its own challenges, from human trafficking to arms smuggling to drug supply, but the BSF jawans do their best to face these challenges.” Yet he stressed that stopping these flows is necessary for realising Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s vision of a ‘Viksit Bharat’ (developed India) by 2047. “To make India a ‘viksit’ nation by 2047, we have to stop the entry of fake notes, human trafficking and drug smuggling from across the borders,” Shah declared.

The emphasis on West Bengal, Tripura, and Bihar is not accidental. These states, or those linked to them through migration corridors, have long been at the centre of debates over illegal immigration from Bangladesh. The smart border concept is designed to bridge these gaps through technology, intelligence from local administration and community networks.

 Shah’s directive for the Union Home Secretary and BSF chief to tour the frontiers underscores the hands-on approach the government intends to adopt. But it may not address root causes, including porous governance, political patronage in some pockets and economic pull factors across the border. Yet the Modi government’s strategy appears multi-pronged: complete the remaining fence, overlay it with AI surveillance, accelerate deportation of identified infiltrators and use the high-level demography panel to generate actionable data. The panel’s terms of reference include recommending a “permanent operational system” for identification, detention and deportation.

For the BSF, Friday’s address at Lankamura was both validation and a challenge. The force, stretched across difficult terrain, now stands on the cusp of a shift from boots-on-the-ground vigilance to a tech-augmented, intelligence-led model. Shah’s assurance that the Centre will “bridge the gaps in guarding international borders” signals political backing at the highest level. As India moves towards its 2047 centenary milestone, the battle on its eastern and western frontiers is no longer just about territory. It is about demographic integrity and national security. “Shah’s message from Tripura was clear: the era of tolerance for demographic engineering is over.

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Amit Shah Warns Against Demographic Changes, Pushes Smart Border Project Along India-Bangladesh Frontier | Daily Pioneer