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Arrest this drift in ties with Bangladesh.

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http://www.thehindubusinessline.com...fra-projects-in-bangaldesh/article9277340.ece
Arrest this drift in ties with Bangladesh
PRATIM RANJAN BOSE
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REUTERS Spread in style: Takes care and attention to detail

India should overcome its lethargy in developing infra projects, releasing aid and addressing Bangladesh’s concerns

The story goes that in 2012, when World Bank pulled out of the $3 billion Padma Bridge project, the Sheikh Hasina government in Bangladesh expected India to cash in on the opportunity. Bilateral relations were on a roll since 2010. India had already offered $1 billion assistance including $200 million aid to kickstart the bridge construction, and promised more assistance.

Naturally, Hasina was hopeful of Indian support in fulfilling her key electoral promise. But Delhi dragged its feet on Bangladeshi proposal.

China lapped up the opportunity by agreeing to complete the project on BOT basis with 70 per cent ($2 billion) supplier’s credit.

What happened next is history. With China in, India extended another $2 billion fresh line of credit and nearly $1.6 billion cheap suppliers’ credit at to a joint venture electricity generation project in 2015. Asian Development Bank (ADB) recently granted $8 billion for infrastructure creation in Bangladesh to promote sub-regional cooperation.

Japan that sides with the US and India on South Asian geopolitics offered $6 billion. World Bank is back in Dhaka with fresh offers.

And to up the stake, Chinese President Chinese President Xi Jinping in a stopover in Dhaka, on the way to BRICS summit in Goa last week, offered $24 billion fresh assistance in 27 projects.

Opportunity loss
With competition hotting up, availability of funds is no longer an issue with Bangladesh. Good for them, unless they make a mess in fund utilisation. But India has lost a major competitive edge in Bangladesh.

Hasina’s hands are now tied. She cannot offer India control over key projects, like a deep-sea port that is of geo-strategic importance to us, on quid pro quo basis. Bangladesh is a crucial piece in the geopolitical jigsaw and, it is important for India to keep it in good humour.

Not that we are unaware of it or the Hasina government had fallen out with India. But our fumbling and mumblings had cost us opportunity to create a wider political space in Bangladesh to step up cooperation.

Take a look at Bangladeshi media and social media; allegations are common that Indian assistance is to too little or too slow to come by — compared to China — and, Bangladesh is playing a good neighbour without getting much in return.

No doubt that part of such criticism is driven by common anti-India sentiments, nurtured and curated by Bangladeshi rulers for greater part of the country’s 45-year history.

But it is also true that Hasina is trying to change the domestic political narrative from one built on non-cooperation and hate, to collaborative growth. And, we are probably failing her.

No mechanism
As a democracy India is at a disadvantage when compared to a single-party ruled China, in decision making. But we cannot use it as an excuse any more.

We are yet to invest enough in creating a robust mechanism to cash in on the evolving opportunities in the neighbourhood. Pity we don’t even have adequate officers at the ministry of external affairs to handle such responsibilities.

It is beyond comprehension why India cannot create a transparent visa system in Bangladesh and keep earning public wrath. India grants visas for free. But, intermediaries charge ₹5,000 for generating the e-token for appointment with the visa officer.

India may not match China in money-bag politics; but can’t it be tidier in delivering promises? Take the case of $1 billion assistance, announced in 2010, that took five long years to be utilised.

Top Bangladeshi policy makers do not hide their share of inabilities. But they also point out that the UPA government took nearly a year since its announcement to finalise the guidelines for utilisation. Ideally, guidelines should be ready before announcement.

This is just one example. The UPA-II rule that took much credit in improving ties with Bangladesh is full with such instances.

It failed to take West Bengal on its side and over-promised on Teesta water sharing that continues to be a sore point.

It started the electricity trade through the West Bengal border in 2013, but delayed allowing similar trade through Tripura despite a strong recommendation from the State government.

The issue was touchy because Bangladesh went out of its way in allowing transport of equipment for setting up a large power station in Tripura in the hope of getting a share of the electricity.

This allowed anti-India sentiments to gain ground, blocking Hasina’s way to grant India transit to its North East through Bangladesh till last year, when the Prime Minister Narendra Modi started taking prompt measures.

It is a pity that we even dragged our feet on developing the 86 km road link from Tripura to Chittagong port that costs a fraction of Padma Bridge but is crucial for the prosperity of our North Eastern region.

Transit issues
The Modi government is surely doing a better job. But it should be more careful in not repeating the mistakes of the UPA.

A case in point is the raging debate in Dhaka about the proposed sub-regional transit treaty. Bangladeshis fear that it will clog their road infrastructure without much economic gain. The treaty will allow India key access to its North East through Bangladesh.

The source of the criticism is a recently concluded bilateral deal for inland water transit to reach Tripura through Asugunj in Bangladesh. The transit fee is set at $2.5 a tonne against the Hasina government’s proposal of $4.4 a tonne.

According to Asjadul Haque, an editor of the Dhaka based The Financial Express, Dhaka agreed to the reduced fees at the insistence of Delhi.

The business-minded would say, it’s a sham argument. Lower transit fee ensures competitiveness of the river transport facility vis-à-vis India’s broad-gauge rail connectivity to Tripura. Also, every rupee earned through transit is a gain to Bangladesh.

Right indeed. But what stopped us from being more magnanimous? We could have routed the dialogue through a multilateral forum to add to the transparency or offered developing a related project — may be Ashuguj terminal — at our cost, to send home the right messages.

Let’s not forget that the region has little history of putting business ahead of politics. It’s a painstakingly slow process in reversing the trend.

(This article was published on October 27, 2016)
 
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Bharat only offer peanut when China make a move.We should show middle finger to this kanjoos banya in future.
 
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Bharat only offer peanut when China make a move.We should show middle finger to this kanjoos banya in future.
India doesn't have the kind of money china has. We can't give you 24 billion. But if you people try to act too smart, we will round up your arm with the finger and put it in ur @$$.
Beware of kanjoos baniya.
 
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Bharat only offer peanut when China make a move.We should show middle finger to this kanjoos banya in future.

the only issue is that there is nothing china will offer you. they will offer you loans to buy their products. they will not open their markets to you. you will be still reliant upon exports to Europe and USA.
 
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Simply speaking, India remains an underdeveloped poor country, although there are developments in many of its heavy industry sectors. India itself borrows money from the west and eagerly wait for FDI.

BD geographical location requires Delhi's concentrated attention on Dhaka. But, being a poor country itself, India is unable to extend a hand filled with money to help BD develop its physical infrastructures when it itself needs money to do similar jobs in its own country.
 
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the only issue is that there is nothing china will offer you. they will offer you loans to buy their products. they will not open their markets to you. you will be still reliant upon exports to Europe and USA.
Who told you we want dole money from China?We only want Chinese loan,investment and expertise and preferably technology transfer,apart from these nobody is expecting anything from anyone.

China already opened their market for us. It is we who can't compete with Chinese products in China's market.Actually very few can.
 
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Dafuq, how can we expect loans from India? India is a poor country with tiny people and itself is in need of more loans than us.
61.8 Million Children In India, A Whopping 39 %, Are Stunted

Their economy is also in decline,

Exports fall 6.74% in April; down 17th month in a row

India's Industrial Growth So Far This Fiscal Is Lowest In 10 Years, Even Worse Than The 2008 Financial Crisis

India is too large a country specially for its half educated administrators and politicians. For a proper doing of administration and development, India should divide itself into may independent countries. If not, it should allow home rule for its Provinces. To avoid being stunted, Indians should get away with its religious taboo to discuss on eating protein-rich foods.
 
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India is too large a country specially for its half educated administrators and politicians. For a proper doing of administration and development, India should divide itself into may independent countries. If not, it should allow home rule for its Provinces. To avoid being stunted, Indians should get away with its religious taboo to discuss on eating protein-rich foods.

Considering "home-rule" Bangladesh stunting rate is very marginally better at 36% and is falling slower than India's... no thank you.

Its part of the reason why India in 4 years time will outrank BD in hunger index at the current rate of improvement in both.

You can check for yourself:

http://ghi.ifpri.org/countries/BGD/

http://ghi.ifpri.org/countries/IND/

For the tradeoff in having much better education, income (with actual diverse industry base and much more massive potential) and overall HDI than BD...its well worth it given the improvement is being sustained in health.

India has plenty of states that are magnitude times more socio-economically developed than BD which poor performing Indian states in ganges valley can emulate to bring overall Indian average much better. This is already starting to happen in a big way actually.

There is enough decentralisation in Indian administrative framework to allow for states that implement good programs and reforms to benefit and then for these ideas to permeate in developmentally-challenged states.

Its a major reason why there wasnt a 3 million dead holocaust, X00,000 mass rapes and subsequent almost 50 years of not shutting up about it within India....unlike some others. We respect diversity and federal structure....and definitely only ridicule ignorant comments coming from a LDC junk-grade status "country" with much higher poverty than us.
 
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Dafuq, how can we expect loans from India? India is a poor country with tiny people and itself is in need of more loans than us.
61.8 Million Children In India, A Whopping 39 %, Are Stunted

Their economy is also in decline,

Exports fall 6.74% in April; down 17th month in a row

India's Industrial Growth So Far This Fiscal Is Lowest In 10 Years, Even Worse Than The 2008 Financial Crisis
So we are discussing about financing projects in BD and some stunted brains leads the discussion to some other unrelated topic.
 
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Who told you we want dole money from China?We only want Chinese loan,investment and expertise and preferably technology transfer,apart from these nobody is expecting anything from anyone.

China already opened their market for us. It is we who can't compete with Chinese products in China's market.Actually very few can.

Did I say Bangladesh wanted dole money ? It is not like the Chinese are giving anybody aid
 
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India is too large a country specially for its half educated administrators and politicians. For a proper doing of administration and development, India should divide itself into may independent countries. If not, it should allow home rule for its Provinces. To avoid being stunted, Indians should get away with its religious taboo to discuss on eating protein-rich foods.
What we seeing now is an anomaly historically speaking.Fragmentation is invitable for India.Only thing glued togather it is hindu identity and democratic tradition.But as with socio-economic development this religious identity is bound to weaken and democratic tradition will inhance idea of self determination. So sacrificing regional interest for the artificial union where every province differ from one another in every respect can't goes on forever.Pakistan and Bangladesh already broke away.I expect emergence of Scottish or Catalan type of separatism within the next 50 years in many region of India.First probably independent Dravida Nadu.
 
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এই আবালের বাচ্চা আবাল টা রে যেন কোন বাংলাদেশি রিপ্লাই না দেয়। হারামজাদা যত ইচ্ছা নিজের পোস্টে বাংলা ভাঙতে থাকুক।
 
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