Three Bangladeshi Cattle Lifters Lynched In Tripura; India Reacts Strongly To Dhaka’s Accusations

Three Bangladeshi Cattle Lifters Lynched In Tripura; India Reacts Strongly To Dhaka’s Accusations

Oplus_131072

New Delhi: India has reacted strongly to Bangladesh’s allegations of human rights abuse in India after the lynching of three Bangladeshi cattle lifters in Tripura on October 15.

“This incident underscores the need for Bangladesh to undertake necessary measures to uphold the sanctity of the International Boundary and support the construction of fencing where needed to prevent cross-border crimes and smuggling,” Indian Minister of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal said on Friday.

Dhaka had earlier lodged a protest over the killings of the three Bangladeshi nationals who had crossed the Indian border illegally.

The three Bangladeshis were killed on Wednesday by an angry mob on suspicion of being cattle thieves in a border village called Bidyabil, in the Khowai district of Tripura.

“The Government of Bangladesh strongly protests and condemns the brutal beating and killing of three Bangladeshi citizens by a mob in Tripura, India, on 15 October 2025,” Bangladesh’s foreign ministry has said in a statement.

“This heinous act is an unacceptable and grave violation of human rights and the rule of law. The Government of Bangladesh expresses its serious concern over this deplorable incident and calls upon the Government of India to conduct an immediate, impartial and transparent investigation into the incident and take sincere efforts to stop the recurrence of such inhumane acts,” the statement added.

Locals said the incident was triggered after two villagers were working at a rubber plantation close to the India-Bangladesh border.

They spotted three suspicious individuals moving towards the international border with cattle from the area. They confronted the suspected thieves. The three Bangladeshis allegedly attacked the locals with daos (sharp-edged local weapons), injuring two Indians.

The injured duo informed others about the incident, following which angry locals rushed to the spot, confronted the suspected Bangladeshi thieves, and allegedly thrashed them to death.

Both the Border Security Force (BSF) and local police, led by the Superintendent of Police Ranaditya Da, have visited the spot and conducted a preliminary probe.

In a statement, Bangladesh added: “The perpetrators must be identified and brought to justice. The Government of Bangladesh underscores that all individuals, irrespective of their nationality, are entitled to the full protection of their human rights, regardless of which side of the border they may inadvertently find themselves in.”

Jaiswal pointed to the fact that the incident did not take place close to the border but three km inside Indian territory.

“They attacked and injured local villagers with iron dahs and knives, and killed one villager, even as other villagers arrived and resisted the attackers,” the spokesperson added.

Tripura shares an 856-km-long border with Bangladesh, and cross-border crimes such as cattle smuggling and illegal infiltration are a problem. While most parts of the border are fenced, infiltrators and cattle smugglers used the unfenced stretches to sneak in and out.

Exit mobile version