Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
India

Symbolic Retreat ceremony at Attari-Wagah, BSF on high alert

Darpan News Desk IANS, 03 Nov, 2014 08:20 AM
    A symbolic Retreat ceremony for the lowering of national flags and closing of border gates took place Monday at the Attari-Wagah joint check post between India and Pakistan following a deadly suicide bombing near Wagah Sunday which left over 60 people dead.
     
    Senior Border Security Force officials said border guards on both sides had agreed, on a request from Pakistan Rangers, that the Retreat ceremony will not be held for three days. However, the Pakistani side disregarded its own request and allowed visitors on their side Monday.
     
    "A brief, truncated version of the ceremony was held today (Monday) evening. No visitors were allowed on the Indian side though a few hundred spectators were strangely present on the Pakistan side," a BSF officer here told IANS.
     
    The visitors on the Pakistan side could be heard shouting pro-Pakistan slogans. On the Indian side, only a few BSF troopers were there to watch the ceremony.
     
    "We are very disappointed to miss the ceremony here. The BSF did not allow people to go near the border gates. We travelled hundreds of kilometres to see this ceremony," said Santosh Kumari, who had come here with her family from Odisha.
     
    Following the blast near Wagah, just 500 metres from the border gates Sunday, the BSF here has been on high alert.
     
    "Our side is completely secure. We are monitoring the situation closely," BSF's Punjab frontier Inspector General Ashok Kumar said Monday.
     
    The BSF has increased vigil at the joint check post and also along the barbed wire fenced international border in Punjab, especially in the Amritsar sector.
     
    "There was a big bang followed by a lot of smoke on the Pakistani side. From our watch towers, we could see a lot of movement there with sirens and flashlights. There was panic all around," a BSF trooper along the border gates said.
     
    "Activity on the Pakistan side of the border gates was normal today (Monday) in the daytime. BSF and Pakistan Rangers commandant-level officers also had a meeting," a BSF official said.
     
    Land border trade between both countries did not take place Monday.
     
    "We will review the situation on Nov 6," Commissioner for Customs Sunil Kumar said.
     
    Scores of trucks from both countries transport products for trade every day.
     
    However, the Samjhauta Express peace train between both the countries arrived here from Lahore.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Punjab chemists to lose licence for selling banned drugs

    Punjab chemists to lose licence for selling banned drugs
    Tightening the noose around medical practitioners and chemist shop owners who prescribe and sell illegal and banned drugs, the Punjab...

    Punjab chemists to lose licence for selling banned drugs

    No plans for Modi-Sharif meeting at SAARC: India

    No plans for Modi-Sharif meeting at SAARC: India
    India Friday denied any plans for a meeting between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif during the....

    No plans for Modi-Sharif meeting at SAARC: India

    India Gets Its 'Spook' On To Celebrate Halloween

    India Gets Its 'Spook' On To Celebrate Halloween
     "Double, double toil and trouble, fire burn and cauldronbubble," said the three witches in William Shakespeare's Macbeth. The day of the dead, better known as Halloween, will be celebrated all across the world Friday and Indian restaurants, cafes and nightclubs are in full swing to get their "spook" on.

    India Gets Its 'Spook' On To Celebrate Halloween

    Parkash Singh Badal Lauds Modi's Move For Compensation To 1984 Riot Victims

    Parkash Singh Badal Lauds Modi's Move For Compensation To 1984 Riot Victims
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal Thursday lauded the Narendra Modi-led central government for announcing relief for victims of the anti-Sikh riots.

    Parkash Singh Badal Lauds Modi's Move For Compensation To 1984 Riot Victims

    Indira Gandhi Sidelined, Government To Promote Sardar Patel

    Indira Gandhi Sidelined, Government To Promote Sardar Patel
    The government is all set to celebrate in a big way the birth anniversary of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Friday, inviting criticism from the Congress that the legacy of late prime minister Indira Gandhi - who was assassinated 30 years ago on Oct 31 - was being stifled.

    Indira Gandhi Sidelined, Government To Promote Sardar Patel

    India Highlights Challenge Of Fighting Terror And Preserving Human Rights

    India Highlights Challenge Of Fighting Terror And Preserving Human Rights
    Calling terrorism an attack on democracy and human rights, India Wednesday highlighted the challenge of balancing the fight against terrorism with preserving human rights.

    India Highlights Challenge Of Fighting Terror And Preserving Human Rights