
In a historic first, 7 BSF women defended two border posts in Jammu and Kashmir’s Akhnoor sector for three straight days and nights during Operation Sindoor.
They did it under constant enemy shelling, led by Assistant Commandant Neha Bhandari, who took full command of the situation—deploying weapons, coordinating reinforcements, and turning down offers to retreat.

This wasn’t just another patrol gone tense. It was active combat. And this team of young women, many of whom had joined the force barely a year ago, refused to fall back. Bhandari’s decision? Stand ground. Fire back. Hold the line.
It’s about Indian women fighting like soldiers—because that’s what they are. Not token faces. Not behind-the-scenes support. Frontline fighters. And now, proof that gender doesn’t decide courage—training and grit do.
Also Read Operation Sindoor: How Agniveers Became India’s First Line of Defence
Let’s break it down:
Four of the women had joined the BSF in 2023. Two others brought in 17 years of experience. Alongside Bhandari, they formed a fierce seven. While most would’ve chosen safety, these seven chose to face fire. Literally.
Who were these 7 BSF women?
- Neha Bhandari (Assistant Commandant, from a CRPF family, 3 years in service)
- Manjit Kour and Malkit Kour (veterans from Punjab)
- Swapna Rath and Shampa Basak (fresh recruits from West Bengal)
- Sumi Xess (Jharkhand)
- Jyoti Banian (Odisha)
According to Times of India, Bhandari not only held command of the BSF troops but also coordinated Army reinforcements during the critical hours. That’s not just bravery—that’s battlefield leadership.
Even BSF DIG Varindar Dutta acknowledged it: “This is the first time a woman officer commanded in active combat.” On Friday, Army Chief General Upendra Dwivedi awarded Neha Bhandari the Commendation Disc for her leadership.
These women were asked if they wanted to step back. They said no. They could have avoided history. Instead, they wrote it.
It’s a reminder that when India trains women like warriors, they fight like warriors. And when we stop doubting them, we start winning bigger—not just battles, but beliefs.