Near the Punjab border, Border Force Discovers 5 kg of Heroin in a Drone.

Police said a hexacopter drone equipped with modern technology and packets carrying heroin weighing 5 kg were discovered in a field near the India-Pakistan border in Tarn Taran district of Punjab . The force has so far shot down 16 drones this year and implemented an anti-drone system and in-depth patrolling to combat the threat .

Police said on Friday that a hexacopter drone equipped with modern technology and packets carrying heroin weighing 5 kg were discovered in a field near the India-Pakistan border in Tarn Taran district of Punjab, according to Punjab Director General of Police (DGP).The force has so far shot down 16 drones this year and has implemented an anti-drone system and in-depth patrolling to combat the threat, which is a security risk, according to BSF Director General Pan According to the BSF DG, we have tried three-four methods and it is yielding very promising results.The BSF DG reported that they had installed some anti-drone devices on several specific locations (long the India-Pakistan border).Since the boundary is incredibly wide, an anti-drone device can't be installed at any one place.Singh said that the scheme will be implemented at more locations one by one, and that BSF has begun three-four kilometers of in-depth patrolling so that anyone who wishes to pick the illegal items dropped by these drones can be caught.We have also given our jawans some very generous rewards.We've shot down 16 drones this year until November, compared to just one drone last year, due to these efforts.

When the force opened its Indian territories from Pakistan, women BSF workers shot down a 18.050 kg hexacopter drone near Chaharpur village in Amritsar (Rural) district in Punjab on November 28.According to Army officials, the Indian Army is using trained Kites with dogs to prey on enemy drones in Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, and this capability will help the security forces to counter the threat of drones flying from across the border.

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