The Army has finalised plans to
construct a new type of fence on the Line of Control (LoC) in Kashmir,
which will not collapse due to heavy snowfall every winter.
Nearly 350 km of the 400 km-long
fence in the Kashmir region gets damaged every winter and has to be fixed in
the summer. This, officials say, makes it easier for terrorists from
Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir to infiltrate from across the LoC.
“We have arrived at this new design after winter trials and are going to put
it in place in the Kashmir region. The new fence will be of great help in
improving our counter-infiltration posture and minimise infiltration from
across the LoC,” Northern Army Commander Lt General D S Hooda told The Indian Express.
Funds for the project have been allocated and work on the fence will start this
year. The Army hopes to finish construction in the next three years.
Top sources in the Udhampur-based
Northern Command said the new design will have night-vision cameras, alarms and
visual map displays integrated with the fence. All these will be linked to the
nearby monitor room, giving the local military commanders real-time data so
they can react promptly if an attempt is made to tamper with the fence.
The Army has also decided — in places
where it is feasible — to light up the new fence in Kashmir using LEDs. The
existing fence in Jammu has already been lit up.
Senior Army officers concede the new
fence will not lead to zero infiltration. “No fence can guarantee zero
infiltration, but this new design will definitely bring the numbers
substantially down,” a brigadier serving on the LoC said.
Official government figures show that till June this year, there was no
successful infiltration from across the LoC. This year saw an unusually late
snowfall, which melted only in May, thereby making it difficult for terrorists
to infiltrate across the mountain passes in May and June. As per official data,
97 militants infiltrated in 2013, while the number came down to 65 in 2014. The
fence on the LoC, called the Anti-Infiltration Obstacle System or AIOS in Army
parlance, was completed in 2005 and has proved reasonably successful in
checking infiltration into J&K. While the fence in the Jammu-Rajauri-Poonch
region under the Army’s 16 Corps doesn’t get damaged during winters, the fence
in the Kashmir region does.
Repairing it takes from April to
August, which means the fence is effectively in place only for three months —
from September to November — before the snowfall resumes again in December.
Before the onset of winters last
year, the Army tried three new designs of the fence. One of the designs was
provided by DRDO’s Chandigarh-based Snow and Avalanche Study Establishment
(SASE), while the other two were prepared in-house by the Northern Command.
The three designs were tested by
constructing one-km long sample fences in Kupwara sector. According to sources
in the Northern Command, when they checked the sample fences at the end of
winters, they were satisfied with the outcome.
A final
design, which is structurally much stronger, has been firmed up by using the
best features of the three sample fences. The two major changes from the old
fence are in the use of a strong, circular pole instead of traditional iron
picket and a different type of concertina coil, which has a double-twisted
galvanised mesh added to either side. The method of fixing the concertina coils
to the posts has also been modified. The design is modular, which makes it
easier to carry the stores, and to construct and repair the fence. For construction and maintenance of
the fence, the government has sanctioned three new Territorial Army Engineer
battalions for the Northern Command. Soldiers for these units have already been
recruited and the first lot, which is currently undergoing training, will be
available by March next year to start construction on the new fence.
indianexpress
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