Over 2,000 Illegal Bangladeshi Immigrants Deported to Bangladesh After Operation Sindoor: Massive Crackdown Unfolds Across India

India deports 2,000+ illegal Bangladeshi immigrants following Operation Sindoor. States like Gujarat and Delhi lead the crackdown amid rising concerns over national security and fake document networks.
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Over 2,000 Illegal Bangladeshi Immigrants Deported to Bangladesh Amid Massive Crackdown After Operation Sindoor

In one of the largest coordinated actions against illegal immigration in recent years, Indian authorities have deported over 2,000 undocumented Bangladeshi immigrants since the launch of Operation Sindoor on May 7. The nationwide effort, driven by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs, has intensified in recent days, with Gujarat emerging as a major contributor to the deportation figures.


Gujarat Takes the Lead

India deports 2,000+ illegal Bangladeshi immigrants following Operation Sindoor. States like Gujarat and Delhi lead the crackdown amid rising concerns over national security and fake document networks.

While the initial focus of the operation was along the Bangladeshi-bordering states of Tripura, Meghalaya, and Assam, it is Gujarat that has now accounted for nearly half of all deportations. Officials say local police, in coordination with intelligence units, conducted extensive identity verification drives in migrant-dense areas.

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Other states such as Delhi, Haryana, Maharashtra, and Rajasthan have also stepped up enforcement, detaining and processing undocumented individuals.


🛂 Voluntary Returns Driven by Fear

Interestingly, an equal number of undocumented migrants are reported to have voluntarily approached checkpoints at border crossings, asking to be sent back home.
Most of these are daily wage labourers who entered India illegally in recent years and now fear arrest, detention, or prosecution.

“Many are simply trying to avoid trouble and return to their families,” said a BSF official from the Tripura sector.


🕵️ Delhi Police Busts Fake Documents Racket

In a parallel crackdown, Delhi Police arrested three individuals from the PHQ complex for allegedly running a fake documents racket to facilitate Bangladeshi immigrants. Authorities suspect these documents were being used to gain residency, jobs, and access to government welfare schemes.

The arrests highlight how organised document forgery networks have complicated efforts to identify and deport illegal immigrants.


✈️ How the Deportation Works

The deportation process involves:

  • Transporting immigrants to staging areas using Indian Air Force aircraft
  • Housing them in BSF-managed temporary camps at the border
  • Coordinating repatriation with Bangladeshi authorities for the final handover

The Ministry of External Affairs has officially requested citizenship verification for 2,369 undocumented individuals, some of whom have been in legal limbo for over five years.


🌐 Rising Concerns and Diplomatic Implications

If weekly deportation numbers rise to 10,000–20,000, senior officials warn of possible diplomatic tensions with Bangladesh, which may resist large-scale repatriation without robust identity verification.

A Home Ministry spokesperson said:

“The crackdown is necessary for national security, but we remain committed to lawful and humane enforcement.”

While there has been no public resistance, analysts point out that such efforts have historically led to short-term declines in migration, only to rebound when enforcement weakens.

#OperationSindoorDrive #IndiaNews #ImmigrationCrisis #DeportationDrive #OperationSindoor #Bangladesh

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