Punjab Police install 2,291 CCTV cameras along Pakistan border
Punjab Police have installed 2,291 CCTV cameras at 585 locations along the international border with Pakistan, creating a dense surveillance net across vulnerable villages and transit routes as part of a fortified second line of defence. The move, announced on Wednesday, 29 April, forms a critical pillar of the state's 'Gangstran Te Vaar' anti-gangster operation, designed to choke the logistical lifelines of organised crime networks with cross-border linkages.
The Surveillance Grid in Detail
Beyond the border installations, 41 police stations in border districts have been brought under CCTV coverage, feeding into a broader ecosystem of monitoring and rapid response. The cameras are positioned across high-risk transit routes and villages that have historically served as conduits for contraband movement. Officials say the grid is already producing actionable intelligence, with vehicle checks shifting from routine to targeted operations.
Anti-drone vigilance has also been intensified, particularly in districts that have witnessed repeated aerial drops of arms and narcotics — a tactic increasingly favoured by cross-border criminal networks to bypass ground-level interdiction.
What Senior Officers Said
Senior Superintendent of Police, Amritsar Rural, Suhail Qasim Mir, described the transformation on the ground: