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India-Myanmar Border: Travel Without a Passport?
Usually, crossing international borders requires a passport and visa.
But along the India-Myanmar border, people can travel without these documents under a special agreement called the Free Movement Regime (FMR).
This system allows indigenous communities on both sides of the border to visit each other easily, maintain family and cultural ties, and carry out small-scale trade.
What is the Free Movement Regime?
India and Myanmar share an open, unfenced border.
Indigenous communities living nearby have strong family, cultural, and ethnic connections.
To support this, the FMR was introduced, letting people cross the border without visas or passports.
Previously, locals could move freely up to 16 kilometers on either side.
But in December 2024, the Union Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) updated the rules.
Now, free movement is limited to 10 kilometers to enhance security.
States Sharing the Border and New Restrictions
Four northeastern states in India share borders with Myanmar:
Arunachal Pradesh – 520 km
Mizoram – 510 km
Manipur – 398 km
Nagaland – 215 km
The government reduced the FMR zone because of increased security threats, including illegal infiltration, arms and drug trafficking, and militant activities.
Border surveillance has been strengthened, and intelligence is being used to monitor movement more closely.
In short, while the Free Movement Regime still exists, locals can now travel only within 10 kilometers without documents.
The change balances traditional cross-border ties with the need for stronger security.
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