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Punjab Elections 2017: Villagers think out of the box, defy odds to smuggle drugs

The barbed-wire fencing along the village stretches for 1.5 kilometers and is guarded by the 87th battallion of BSF. A population of eight hundred-odd persons hold 350 acres of cultivable land in the village, almost all having some part across the border.

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Farmers at one of the last villages of India, with farmlands on the other side of the border
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A close look at the gates of the Border Security Force (BSF) alongside the farms of Theh Kalla village in the border district of Tarn Taran district of Punjab, reveals a check list. 

The BSF personnel along the border outpost of the Khalra Barrier are worried. Merely 13 kms from the barrier is Lahore. The route was earlier used by traders to transport goods and was closed after war of 1965, when Pakistan had briefly occupied Theh Kalla.

The barbed-wire fencing along the village stretches for 1.5 kilometers and is guarded by the 87th battallion of BSF. A population of eight hundred-odd persons hold 350 acres of farm land in the village, almost all having some part across the border fence on no man’s land. Pakistani farmers have land alongside. 

25-year-old Joginder Singh, a farmer in Theh Kalla owns five acres of land. Two acres fall on the no man’s land across the fence, he says. When Indian farmer s cross over the fence through BSF gates to farm, they have to go through extensive checking. “The BSF is wary of drug smuggling. Land owners and labourers are giving identity cards. Also, BSF conducts elaborate checks on tools and frisking to prevent smuggling of ‘chitta,’or heroin into India,” says Joginder. Even as the gates are opened, two BSF personnel accompany the farmers across the fence to their farmlands. Women are accompanied by lady personnel.

An elaborate list is painted in white which specifies under the head of Farmer/Labourer, a slew of things that need to be checked while entering and exiting farmlands on the other side of the fence. This include human body, lunch box, milk carrier, pipes, head loads and fertilizers. Another column has specifications for checking Tractor parts, including Air Cleaner, Diesel Tank, Filters, Tool Box, Clutch, Seat, Flywheel, Front Axle and Oil Filters.

Most villages in Tarn Taran are rife with deaths of youngsters who are killed by ‘Chitta.’ “Six months ago, a farmer in Theh Kalla was caught with heroin which was seized from his tractor,” said Harpreet Singh, an NGO worker with Fateh Foundation.

Inspite of stringent checkings, drugs find a way of getting into India, admit BSF officials. “There is smuggling of drugs across the border,” said a senior official at the Khalra Barrier outpost. Last year, a farmer from Gazal, another border village in Punjab, had asked for permission to cut a tree in his farmland across the fence. The forest department had given a nod. “He cut the tree into five logs and kept them in his farm. He returned back via the gate at sundown. Over night, the logs were changed, allegedly by Pakistani smugglers. They were replaced with logs stuffed with drugs. The stuffed logs were transported back by the farmer to Gazal the next day morning,” said the BSF official. “In a joint operation of BSF and police, 53 kilos of heroin were found stuffed inside the hollow logs of the tree which were recovered from his shed in Gazal on the later day.”

Innovative modus operandi are adopted to smuggle drugs. A few months back, 455 grams of heroin was recovered from another farmer’s axe. The wooden handle had been drilled from inside and filled with ‘Chitta.’ “On checking, it made a rattling noise. The handle was opened up and drugs were recovered.” the official said.

According to the data gathered by Election Commission appointed surveillance and expenditure monitoring teams,  Punjab tops the list of five poll-bound states in drug seizures. 2,632 kilos of drugs including heroin, charas, ganja and poppy husk popularly known as bhukki in local parlance, worth Rs 12.3 crores were seized until January 28 by various agencies including the BSF, since the code of conduct was imposed on January 11. 

Theh Kalla is one of the 212 villages along the 462 kilometer-long border that India shares with Pakistan along Punjab. 17,000 acres of farmland owned by Indian farmers lies on the other side of the fence. 

Farmers may have to walk 2 - 3 kilometers to reach their farmland sitting besides Pakistani farmlands. They also casually interact with Pakistani farmers as they cultivate lands. “At times, smugglers from Pakistan bury ‘Chitta,’ packets in Indian farmers’ land that lay across the fence. In absence of barricading, smugglers have easy access to that land. Even as BSF personnel are supervising the Indian farmers, the latter slowly digs out packet and approaching border fences buries it back in few meters.

This goes on for few days and when the drug reaches close to the fence, it is thrown over the fence onto the Indian side in the vast swathes of wheat fields,” said another official.

The drug smugglers are present on both sides of borders and use Pakistani Sim Cards to communicate. Sitting at Theh Kalla, signals to Indian telecom operators are lost and a message pops up. Mobile network then asks for selection of a roaming circle - either ‘Karachi,’ or ‘Islamabad.’

BSF officials admit that there is a distance of atleast one kilometer between two watch towers along the border fence. Certain area of farmland may go unmonitored at any given point of time, leading to smuggling. “It is a humane drawback. Our constables keep patrolling, however, visibility is reduced to a few meters during misty conditions which may lead to smuggling,” said the official.

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