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West Bengal’s Reverse Migration Surge: Undocumented Bangladeshis Queue To Return Home As SIR Checks Trigger Exodus

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Hakimpur, Nov 23 (PTI) Beside a pitch road that opens into a narrow, dusty mud bylane at the Hakimpur BSF border outpost in West Bengal’s North 24 Parganas, a stretch has become an informal departure corridor for “illegal Bangladeshis”, who lived in the state for years.

Under a sprawling banyan tree, families with small cloth bags, children clutching plastic bottles, and men waiting on their haunches formed a silent queue on Saturday, repeating a single plea before BSF personnel: “Let us go home.” Across the South Bengal border belt, security personnel and local residents say the number of undocumented Bangladeshi nationals attempting to return to their country has risen sharply since early November.

The movement has taken the shape of an unusual reverse migration, which officials and they themselves link directly to the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls underway in West Bengal.

Shahin Bibi, identifying herself as a resident of Khulna district who worked as a domestic help in New Town near Kolkata, waited with her toddler by the roadside.

“I came because we were poor. I have no proper documents. Now, I want to return to Khulna. That is why I am here,” she said.

She earned around Rs 20,000 a month, lived in a shared room with two women, and sent money home regularly.

Many in the queue admit they procured Aadhaar cards, ration cards or voter IDs through touts and middlemen during their stay in West Bengal.

With SIR demanding verification of older documents, several said they preferred leaving rather than risking questioning and possible detention.

“No more staying here,” said a young waiter, who lived in Kolkata for eight years. “If they check old papers, we cannot show anything. Better to leave before they ask questions.” The concern is echoed across the queue of men, women and families who arrived from areas such as New Town, Birati, Dhulagori, Bamangachi, Ghusuri and parts of Howrah’s industrial belt.

A few had been in the state for over a decade; others arrived only a few years ago.

Border officials confirm the surge.

They say 150-200 people a day are being detained and pushed back after verification. The queues began swelling from November 4, the day the SIR exercise began.

“We cannot assume everyone here is simply returning home,” a BSF officer said.

“Verification is mandatory. Biometric details are sent to district authorities and the state police. That takes time.” Because of the volume, delays of two to three days are common. People wait outside the outpost gate on plastic sheets, newspapers or under halted trucks.

BSF personnel provide meals to those inside the camp, but people waiting outside depend on roadside stalls or occasional food distribution by local youth and shopkeepers. A plate of rice with egg costs Rs 40; rice with fish Rs 60.

A group of men from Satkhira said they paid between Rs 5,000 and Rs 7,000 to enter West Bengal earlier. Others spent significantly more.

“I paid nearly Rs 20,000 to get documents,” said 29-year-old Manirul Sheikh, who worked in garment units in Dhulagori and collected scrap iron.

“Everyone knew which middleman to approach. But, SIR changed everything. Now, people want to leave before the checking catches up.” Another man, Imran Gazi, said softly: “I voted in 2016, 2019, 2021 and 2024. But, I have no papers from 2002. Hence, I am leaving.” The surge has also strained local policing.

“We had 95 detainees in two days. No station has the space or facilities to hold so many. We stopped taking custody after that,” an officer said.

On Saturday afternoon, a six-year-old girl tugged at her mother’s scarf and whispered, “I will miss my friends in New Town.” Her mother, carrying a newborn, said they paid 25,000 Bangladeshi taka last year to cross into West Bengal.

Her husband, a rickshaw puller, added, “We came because we were poor. Now, we have to go because we are afraid.” Local shopkeepers and traders say they want the situation to stabilise soon.

“Let Delhi, Dhaka and Kolkata fight their political battles. These people should not be suffering on the road,” said a member of the Hakimpur Traders’ Association, who supervised volunteers distributing khichri.

The SIR exercise has also sharpened political confrontation in the state ahead of the 2026 assembly elections.

The BJP alleges the ruling TMC allowed “large-scale infiltration for electoral gains”, while the state government accuses the Centre of “weaponising” the process to target vulnerable communities and create panic.

At Hakimpur, this debate seems distant.

A semi-blind man who came 18 years ago for medical treatment and later earned his living singing in local trains, sat quietly near the fence.

“I want to go back and sing again in Bangladesh,” he said. “But, I do not know if they will accept us after so long.” Officials said around 1,200 people have returned to Bangladesh after undergoing official procedures in the past six days. Nearly 60 people were still waiting on Saturday.

As the sun dipped behind the barbed fence, a BSF jawan watched the line snake down the mud road.

“They came in the dark,” he said, referring to years of night crossings. “Now they leave in daylight, through the proper channel. That is the difference.” For the families waiting under a banyan tree, clutching small bags, wrapping children against the cold, and waiting for their turn, SIR is no longer an administrative exercise.

It has become the push toward an uncertain return after years spent on borrowed names, documents and soil.

 

(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)

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