Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 29th January 2026, 11:26 PM
The Calcutta High Court has issued a stern mandate to the Government of West Bengal, ordering the immediate transfer of acquired land to the Border Security Force (BSF) to facilitate the completion of fencing along the Indo-Bangladesh border. The division bench, comprising Chief Justice Sujoy Paul and Justice Parthasarathi Sen, has set a definitive deadline of 31 March 2026 for the state to hand over all parcels of land across nine border districts.
The court’s intervention comes at a sensitive time, just ahead of the West Bengal Legislative Assembly elections. The state government had previously sought extensions, citing administrative pressures related to the revision of electoral rolls and upcoming election logistics. However, the High Court summarily dismissed these justifications.
In a sharp rebuke, the bench stated that “national security cannot be held hostage to administrative or electoral excuses.” While acknowledging the state’s right to appeal the decision in the Supreme Court, the bench emphasised that the physical securing of the international boundary is a paramount sovereign duty that transcends local political cycles.
The ruling stems from a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) filed by Lieutenant General Subrata Saha, a retired senior army officer. The petition highlighted a dangerous security vacuum: approximately 26% of West Bengal’s 2,216 km border with Bangladesh remains unfenced. This “porous” nature of the boundary has been linked to a surge in illegal infiltration, cattle rustling, gold smuggling, and the trafficking of Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICN).
The petition further revealed a bureaucratic bottleneck: although the Central Government had already disbursed the funds required for land acquisition, the state had only handed over 71 km of the required 235 km of land to the BSF.
| Category | Status/Metric |
|---|---|
| Total Border Length (WB) | 2,216 km |
| Current Unfenced Portion | ~26% |
| Pending Land Acquisition | 235 km |
| Land Handed Over to BSF | 71 km |
| Judicial Deadline | 31 March 2026 |
| Affected Regions | 9 Border Districts |
To ensure compliance, the court categorised the land into three distinct phases:
Completed Acquisitions: Land where compensation has already been paid must be transferred to the BSF by 31 March.
Ongoing Acquisitions: The state must expedite the process and provide a progress report to the court.
Direct Occupation: The court suggested that for the sake of national interest, the state should consider special legal provisions for the direct occupation of land where standard acquisition processes are stalled.
The ruling has ignited a political firestorm in West Bengal. The BJP has hailed the verdict as a “victory for national security,” accusing the ruling Trinamool Congress (TMC) of deliberate negligence. Conversely, the TMC has stated that while it supports border security, it remains committed to ensuring that landowners receive “fair compensation and adequate rehabilitation” before any displacement occurs.
The state government is required to submit an affidavit detailing its progress during the next hearing, scheduled for April.
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