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India is planning to create a unified border agency, inspired by South Africa's Border Management Authority, granting it sweeping powers including arrest and seizure

India is planning to create a unified border agency, inspired by South Africa's Border Management Authority, granting it sweeping powers including arrest and seizure

Time of India6 hours ago

Rajya Sabha MP Ajeet Madhavarao Gochade has sent a proposal to the Home Ministry of creating all encompassing border agency that will look after the entire border. In his five page letter to the ministry he mentioned that India needs an integrated agency like
South African Border Management Authority
(BMA) which can take care off all the matters related to
border control
. In his letter he highlighted "the absence of unified command and tech-driven surveillance in the border areas." In reply to his proposal MoS(home) Nityanand Rao wrote that the ministry is examining his proposal.
The South African Border Management Authority (BMA) was officially launched by
President Cyril Ramaphosa
in 2023. It is considered South Africa's third law enforcement force, after the South African Police Service (SAPS) and the South African National Defence Force (SANDF). It was formed to address longstanding issues of fragmented border control, inefficiencies, and increasing threats such as
illegal migration
,
cross-border crime
, and smuggling.
The power exercised by South African Border Management Authority (BMA):
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It has power enter, search, seizure,
arrest
, and detention related to border activities.
Enforces South African immigration laws at ports of entry and border areas.
Facilitates and manages the legitimate entry and departure of persons in accordance with the Immigration Act.
Controls access to the country to prevent illegal migration and human smuggling
Manages and controls South Africa's borders, including land borders, seaports, and airports
Performs health inspections at ports of entry, including warehouses, to prevent the spread of harmful diseases and ensure compliance with health regulations
Conducts border law enforcement functions such as access control, patrols, and crime prevention at porous and informal crossing points
Conducts quarantine, confiscation, and destruction of non-compliant agricultural goods
Before the BMA, multiple government departments handled different aspects of border management, often leading to poor coordination. The BMA was created to bring all these functions under one authority and ensure integrated, efficient, and secure border control.
India's current border agencies
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According to Ministry of Home Affairs, India has 15,106.7 Km of land border and a coastline of 7,516.6 Km including island territories. Currently India has five agencies that look after its borders including the Indian army and four Central Armed Police Force.
Border Security Force
The Border Security Force (BSF) is tasked with guarding the western border with Pakistan (covering Rajasthan, Punjab, Gujarat, and Jammu & Kashmir) and the eastern border with Bangladesh which have have a combined length of approximately 7,000km. With a strength of over 2,65,000 personnel, the
BSF
plays a crucial role in preventing infiltration, smuggling, and cross-border terrorism. It also helps maintain peace at border outposts and jointly manages the Line of Control (LoC) alongside the Indian Army. BSF is the only security force in India who has camel regiment to patrol the Thar desert.
Indo-Tibetan Border Police
The Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) patrols the India–China border, stretching 3,488 km from Ladakh to Arunachal Pradesh. Comprising around 90,000 personnel, the
ITBP
is trained for high-altitude operations, surveillance, and disaster response in the Himalayas. It has advanced capabilities in mountain warfare, snow survival, and altitude endurance.
Sashastra Seema Bal
(SSB)
The Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) is responsible for the open borders with Nepal and Bhutan, with a force of approximately 95,000 personnel. It monitors cross-border movement, prevents trafficking and smuggling, and fosters friendly civilian relations in areas where borders are largely unfenced and porous. The border with Nepal is 1,751 Km and 699Km with Bhutan.
Assam Rifles
The Assam Rifles guards the India–Myanmar border (1,643 Km ) and also engages in counter-insurgency operations across the Northeast. With a strength of over 63,000 personnel, it operates in states such as Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, and Mizoram. Unique among the forces, the Assam Rifles functions under dual control—it is operationally commanded by the Indian Army, but administratively managed by the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Indian Army
The Indian Army plays a vital role in guarding India's most sensitive and high-conflict borders, particularly the Line of Control (LoC) with Pakistan and the Line of Actual Control (LAC) with China. As part of India's standing armed forces, which number over 1.2 million personnel, the Army is responsible for national defence in times of war and during heightened border tensions. It is deployed in forward combat zones, especially in volatile regions such as Jammu & Kashmir, Ladakh, and parts of Arunachal Pradesh. In peacetime, the Army works closely with paramilitary forces like the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) and the Border Security Force (BSF) to maintain stability and readiness along the country's most strategic and contested borders.

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