HomeCityWhere history once flowed in, it now flows out: Bengal's Hakimpur sees rare reverse migration

Where history once flowed in, it now flows out: Bengal's Hakimpur sees rare reverse migration

Over the past few days, undocumented Bangladeshi nationals have been walking back toward the same border gate through which their parents and grandparents once came in.

November 24, 2025 / 12:54 IST
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In view of the SIR, a large numbers of Bangladeshi nationals, who had been living in Bengal for over 13 years are now lining up at Hakimpur, a border region between India and Bangladesh in West Bengal, waiting to return to their home country.
In view of the SIR, a large numbers of Bangladeshi nationals, who had been living in Bengal for over 13 years are now lining up at Hakimpur, a border region between India and Bangladesh in West Bengal, waiting to return to their home country.

Along the muddy lane leading to the Hakimpur border outpost, once a passage for refugees in 1947 and again in 1971, waves of people had moved inward over decades, turning the village here into an improvised sanctuary for those escaping violence across the frontier.

This November, elders of Hakimpur in West Bengal's North 24 Parganas district bordering Bangladesh, say it feels as if history is replaying itself with the frames flipped. The movement looks familiar, only the direction has changed.

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Over the past few days, undocumented Bangladeshi nationals have been walking back toward the same border gate through which their parents and grandparents once came in.

The reason, according to security officials, villagers and the migrants themselves, is clear: the Special Intensive Revision (SIR) of electoral rolls underway across West Bengal.