Bangladesh Coast Guard Explained

Agencyname:Bangladesh Coast Guard
Nativenamea:বাংলাদেশ কোস্ট গার্ড
Abbreviation:BCG
Patchcaption:Bangladesh Coast Guard Logo
Badge:Bangladesh Coast Guard racing stripe.svg
Badgecaption:Racing stripe
Flag:Ensign of the Bangladesh Coast Guard.svg
Flagcaption:Bangladesh Coast Guard Flag
Employees:20,339
Country:Bangladesh
Constitution1:Coast Guard Act, 1994
Constitution2:Coast Guard Act, 2016 (Act No. 9 of 2016).[1]
Speciality1:coast
Headquarters:Agargaon, Dhaka, Bangladesh
Minister1name:M Sakhawat Hossain
Minister1pfo:Minister of Home Affairs
Chief1name:Rear admiral Mir Ershad Ali, OSP, NPP, ndc, psc
Chief1position:Director General
Parentagency:Ministry of Home Affairs
Boats1:257 vessels
Anniversary1:14 February
Footnotes:Color: Blue, white, red

The Bangladesh Coast Guard (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ কোস্ট গার্ড; BCG) is the maritime law enforcement force of Bangladesh. It is a paramilitary force which is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Home Affairs. Its officers and sailors are transferred from the Bangladesh Navy, and most of the medical officers are transferred from the Bangladesh Army. The Bangladesh Coast Guard also performs the duty of maritime border security of Bangladesh. The headquarters is located in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The coast guard has 3,339 personnel[2] and 63 ships. A modernisation plan named Coast Guard Goal 2030 was undertaken to enhance its capabilities.[3]

History

The Bangladesh Navy had been performing the duties of a coast guard in addition to its own duties of maritime defense since 1994. As time passed, the growing responsibility and workload became inconvenient for the Bangladesh Navy, with the increasing volume of policing duties at sea taking away from its primary role. The emergence of the Bangladesh Coast Guard was the result of the growing awareness in the government for the requirement of a separate service to enforce national laws in the waters under national jurisdiction and ensure safety of life and property at sea. Following this the Coast Guard Act 1994 was passed by the Parliament of Bangladesh in September 1994.Formally, the Bangladesh Coast Guard in its present shape came into being on 14 February 1995 and started operational activities with two patrol craft received from the Bangladesh Navy. The force is under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Home Affairs.

The Bangladesh Coast Guard motto is 'Guardian at Sea'.

The Bangladesh Coast Guard is a unique force that carries out an array of civil and military responsibilities touching almost every facet of the Bangladesh maritime environment. The headquarters of the Bangladesh Coast Guard in Agargaon, Sher-e-Bangla Nagar, Dhaka-1207 and four zones (Dhaka, Chittagong, Mongla and Bhola).[4]

Role and mission

Over 90% of Bangladesh's exports and imports pass through two seaports at Chittagong and Mongla. Sea-lines communication to these two seaports are the lifelines of the Bangladeshi economy. UNCLOS 1982 has made provision for sovereign rights for exploration and exploitation of living and non-living resources in the Bangladesh exclusive economic zone. The fishery sector contributes an important part of national export earnings. A significant quantity of gas has been discovered at Sangu in the Bay of Bengal, the extraction of which has already started. Apart from these, a vast number of ships and craft of various types and sizes operate at sea for trade, commerce, fishing, research, exploration and extraction of oil, gas and minerals and so on. To exercise effective control, to ensure safety and security and protect national and international maritime interest at sea, all these diverse activities are brought under various national and international laws and acts.

Mission

The coast guard's mission is to control piracy, illegal trafficking, protect the fishery, oil, gas, forest resources and environmental pollution in Bangladesh waters and coastal areas, ensure overall security and law and order through security assistance to seaports, conduct relief and rescue operation in the coastal areas during natural calamity.[5]

Role

Primary

Secondary

Area of jurisdiction

The area of jurisdiction of the Bangladesh Coast Guard is the sea territory of Bangladesh as declared under the Territorial and Maritime Zone Act, 1974. The Bangladesh Government being a signatory has ratified UNCLOS, 1982.

Areas of Jurisdiction in the Bay of Bengal are:

Apart from the sea territory of Bangladesh, the government has also placed the waterways of the mangrove forest of Sundarban and major rivers up to Dhaka under the jurisdiction of the coast guard.

The Bangladesh Coast Guard has the following zonal command: Dhaka, East, West and South zones .

Command and control

Headquarters

AppointmentRank and Name
Director GeneralRear Admiral Mir Ershad Ali OSP, NPP, ndc, psc
Deputy Director-General Commodore Md. Rashed Sattar, (N), NUP, psc, BN
Director (Operations) Captain Al Farooq Mahmud Hossain, (N), NUP, afwc, psc, BN
Director (Intelligence) Captain Al Farooq Mahmud Hossain, (N), NUP, afwc, psc, BN
Director (Personnel) Captain Mohammad Saiful Islam, (TAS), afwc, psc, BN
Director (Engineering) Captain Riyadh Ibne Jamal, (E), NGP, psc, BN
Director (Logistics) Captain Mohammad Habibul Billah, (s), psc, BN
Director (IT & Communications) Captain Mohammad Shahidul Haque, (H1), psc, BN
Director (Planning & Acquisitions) Captain Md Sohel Azam, (G), NUP, ncc, psc, BN
Judge Advocate General Commander Abu Sadik Mohammed Shafiq Uddin, (Edn), BCGMS, BN
Chief Inspector and Quality Controller Commander Md Abu Bakar, (L), PCGMS, BN

Zonal commands

AppointmentRank and Name
Zonal Commander (Dhaka Zone) Commander M Mostafijur Rahman, (ND), BCGM, psc, BN
Zonal Commander (East Zone) Captain Md Zahirul Haque, (C), BCGMS, psc, BN
Zonal Commander (West Zone) Captain Faiz Uddin Ahmed, (N), BCGM, psc, BN
Zonal Commander (South Zone) Captain Mohammed Shahin Mazid, (G), psc, BN

Rank structure

Commissioned officers
Other ranks

Medals

Source:[6]

List of Directors General

No Name Took office Left office
1Commodore Shafiq-ur-Rahman, (N), ncc, psc, BN 22 February 1995 6 August 1998
2Captain M A Motalib, (G), ndu, psc, BN7 August 1998 28 April 1999
3Commodore M Shahabuddin, (E), psc, BN 29 April 1999 29 January 2002
4Commodore Shah Iqbal Mujtaba, (D), ndc, psc, BN 29 January 2002 29 May 2002
5Captain S M H Kabir, ndu, psc, BN 29 May 20025 March 2005
6Rear Admiral Sarwar Jahan Nijam, (C), ndu, psc, BN 6 March 2005 8 February 2007
7Commodore M A K Azad, (G), ndc, psc, BN8 February 2007 5 January 2008
8Commodore Moqsum Ul Kader (C) ndc, afwc, psc, BN 6 January 2008 25 January 2009
9Rear Admiral Z U Ahmed, NBP, BCGM, ndc, psc, BN 26 January 2009 27 January 2009
10Commodore Moqsum Ul Kader, (C), ndc, afwc, psc, BN 27 January 2009 23 March 2009
11Commodore A S M A Abedin (E)ndc, psc, BN 23 March 2009 31 March 2011
12Rear Admiral Kazi Sarwar Hossain, (TAS), (CD), ncc, psc, BN 1 April 2011 16 December 2013
13Rear Admiral M Makbul Hossain, NBP, OSP, BCGMS, ndu, psc, BN 4 December 2013 15 February 2016
14Rear Admiral Aurangzeb Chowdhury, (G), NBP, OSP, BCGM, PCGM, BCGMS, ndc, psc, BN 16 February 2016 26 January 2019
15Rear Admiral M Ashraful Haq, (C), NUP, ndc, afwc, psc, BN 10 February 2019 24 August 2021
1624 August 2021 30 January 2024
17Rear Admiral Mir Ershad Ali30 January 2024Present

Ships

See main article: List of ships of the Bangladesh Coast Guard.

TypeQuantityNote
Offshore patrol vessel4
Inshore patrol vessel8
Fast attack craft (gun)4
Coastal patrol craft4
Riverine patrol craft5
Harbour patrol boat6
High speed patrol boat136

Future Modernization Plan

The Bangladesh Government has started a massive modernization plan named Coast Guard Goal 2030 to make Coast Guard a well-trained and well-equipped force to ensure the security of the coastal area. The expansion of the force manpower is also included in the plan.[3] [7] [8] [9]

Dockyard and Engineering Works Limited is constructing two inshore patrol vessels (IPV) for the Bangladesh Coast Guard. These vessels will be 52.8m (173.2feet) long, wide and have a draft of with a displacement of 315MT.

The coast guard ordered six X12 high-speed boats which are being built at Dockyard and Engineering Works Limited with technical assistance from Indonesia. These ships are made of carbon composite and have a length of 11.7m (38.4feet) and a speed of 35kn.

In October 2021, The Bangladesh Coast Guard has ordered undisclosed number of Turkish-made Ares 150 Hercules offshore patrol vessels.[10]

The formation of the coast guard's aviation wing is under process. The force has a plan to procure ten helicopters for patrolling and search and rescue (SAR) operations within 2025.[11]

The coast guard also wants to be a technologically advanced outfit in monitoring the sea. It has a long-term plan of installing long-range identification and tracking (LRIT) and vessel traffic management information systems (VTMIS) by 2025.[11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Coast Guard Act, 2016. 9. 2016.
  2. News: Khan . Mohammad Jamil . 14 February 2016 . 'Continue effort to trafficking of drugs and humans' . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160403101258/http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2016/feb/14/continue-effort-trafficking-drugs-and-humans . 3 April 2016 . 14 February 2016 . Dhaka Tribune.
  3. Web site: 10 March 2024 . Bangladesh Coast Guard to be transformed into three-dimensional force: PM . 2024-08-05 . The Daily Star.
  4. Web site: Govt committed to giving 'Blue Economy' concept into reality: PM . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402191832/https://www.albd.org/index.php/en/updates/news/2024-govt-committed-to-giving-blue-economy-concept-into-reality-pm . 2 April 2015 . 20 May 2015 . Bangladesh Awami League.
  5. Web site: Mission . coastguard.gov.bd . 30 October 2020.
  6. Web site: Bangladesh Coast Guard . Medal gallery of Bangladesh Coast Guard .
  7. Web site: 10 March 2024 . Coast Guard to be transformed into three dimensional force: PM Hasina . 2024-08-05 . The Business Standard.
  8. Web site: 21 June 2023 . PM Hasina: Coast Guard to be built as a modern force . 2024-08-05 . Dhaka Tribune.
  9. Web site: 10 March 2024 . Coast Guard to be transformed into three dimensional force, says PM . 2024-08-05 . The Financial Express.
  10. Web site: 17 October 2021. Bangladesh Coast Guard has ordered Turkish-made ARES 150 HERCULES OPVs Offshore Patrol Vessels. Navy Recognition.
  11. News: 30 June 2016 . Increasing the Coast Guard's capacity . 9 July 2017 . . Dhaka.