"Many school girls and other women visited several border posts along the International Border and tied the rakhi to the BSF jawans deployed on the border there", a BSF official said.
He said that they also distributed sweets and exchanged good wishes with the BSF soldiers.
Many social organisations from across the country had also sent large number of rakhis for the army jawans and officers who are serving the country on the Line of Control and the hinterland in Jammu and Kashmir.
Meanwhile the festival in Jammu was marked with traditional fervour with sisters tying rakhis to their brothers' wrists and in return taking gifts from them.
"The auspicious time to start tying rakhis in Jammu started after 2 PM so the sisters had to wait till 2 PM to tie the sacred threat to their brothers", Pandit Anup Kumar a local priest said.
People were also seen flying kites to mark the festival.
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