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Bangladesh, India ties: A new neighbourhood model

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Bangladesh, India ties: A new neighbourhood model
By Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty| Published: 27th October 2019 04:00 AM

www.newindianexpress.com/opinions/2019/oct/27/bangladesh-india-ties-a-new-neighbourhood-model-2053432.amp
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Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s India visit, during the first week of this month, reinforced bilateral ties to an extent that the Official Joint Statement described it as “a bond transcending strategic relationship”. This was her first visit to India during her third consecutive term in office as PM, after her electoral success in December last year. Undeniably, the transformation in bilateral ties has been impressive, thanks to the visionary leadership of Sheikh Hasina who stormed back to power in 2008, riding on a huge electoral wave that gave her party, the Awami League (AL), three-fourths majority in the Jatiyo Sangsad (Parliament).

Both during the UPA-2 government and PM Modi’s first tenure, mutual trust and confidence was reciprocated fully by India’s leadership, resulting in strengthening and expanding bilateral ties substantially. The key to this was PM Hasina’s firm action in uprooting Indian insurgent groups and stern steps against jihadi extremists. It would not be an exaggeration to call bilateral ties a model for South Asia or any other region. She has guided her country’s policy wisely and adroitly, making Bangladesh the best performing economy in Asia.

Speaking at the India Economic Forum meeting in Delhi, PM Hasina highlighted the economic boom, with GDP growth of over 8% per annum, fuelled by, what is arguably a liberal investment regime, with attractive fiscal incentives. Like India and several other countries with youth bulges in their demographic profiles, Bangladesh, too, has built an aspirational middle-class of around 30 million. There is rapid urbanisation and the manufacturing base is diversifying. Over 100 Special Economic Zones (SEZs) are being built to attract manufacturing companies from home and abroad, with 2 SEZs specially earmarked for India. PM Hasina is aiming high. She wants Bangladesh to be a developed nation by 2041.

Predictable and less dependent on subsistence agriculture, production has added to food security, an important concern for Bangladesh. PM Hasina, underscored this aspect of food security by pointedly bringing up the issue of India’s export ban on onions. She quipped that she had instructed her cook not to use onions. In a price sensitive market, where onions are an essential ingredient of daily meals in South Asia, the ban has led to skyrocketing of prices creating a wave of popular disgruntlement. India has reacted by making a special provision of export of onions to Bangladesh which depends on meeting 30% of its onion consumption on Indian supplies.

By 2021, Bangladesh will graduate to a developing country, from her less developed country status, with per capita GDP touching USD 2000. Bangladesh is also moving up the value chain of manufacturing in certain areas, like ship building, white goods and IT services, though apparel exports still amount to over 70% of exports. Bangladesh’s exports to India have crossed USD 1 billion, a record 52% growth over last year. Though total bilateral merchandise trade is just over USD 10 billion, Bangladesh faces an adverse balance of trade.

While this was an irritant in the bilateral trade agenda earlier, the growth of exports owes much to the duty-free entry provided by India to Bangladeshi exports. India, too, struggles with a huge adverse trade balance viz-a-viz China, owing to China’s restrictive trade practices. There is scope for reducing non-tariff and para-tariff barriers to ease the flow of goods across the border. Bangladesh has concerns on anti-dumping provisions on export of certain products like jute.

Impediments to movement of transit goods through Bangladesh remain and need to be removed, particularly movement of Indian goods via Mongla and Chittagong ports. Infrastructural bottlenecks on the border are being tackled via building of Integrated Check Posts. India’s Lines of Credit (LOC) and grants of over USD 8 billion, offsets the adverse balance of trade to some extent. Cumulative Indian FDI in Bangladesh is a bit over USD 3 billion.

This is likely to grow once the SEZs are fully operational. There are infrastructure deficits, bureaucratic red tape and corruption which continue to impede FDI. Bangladesh’s growing economic success is laying the foundation of future prosperity that is likely to propel the country to surpass India’s GDP per capita by 2030 and make it the 26th largest economy in the world.

While economic linkages have emerged as an important pivot of this relationship, multi-dimensional connectivity, energy cooperation, security, defence, human resource development and people-to-people ties are growing in tandem. Modernisation of Bangladesh Railways, better road, rail and air links are being implemented. An agreement to import bulk LPG from Bangladesh has also been inked as well as one on the second electricity grid connectivity.

Border management agreements will facilitate completion of the border fencing and visa liberalisation will ease travel across borders, while tackling crimes like smuggling of fake Indian currency, banned goods narcotic drugs, infiltration of radical extremists, terrorists and trans-border criminal activity. The new maritime surveillance agreement will enable Bangladesh to deploy shore-based radars provided by India to monitor the Bay of Bengal, in pursuit of a more secure and integrated region.

The politically sensitive issue of sharing of river waters will be taken up by the Joint Rivers Commission, for six trans-boundary rivers and Bangladesh has agreed to allow India to draw more water from the Feni river, to supply the needs of Sabroom town in Tripura. India has to do more to deliver on the pending agreement on the Teesta river that remains embroiled in Centre-State politics.

There are challenges in bilateral ties over issues like location of power plants, the NRC and Rohingyas. There are sections in Bangladesh who are unhappy with closer bilateral ties between the two countries. Advocate Sultana Kamal, a well known activist for human rights and a civil society leader, has expressed the view that India is giving favours to manipulate Bangladesh for its selfish interests and has turned the country into a “business district”.

Civil society and NGOs in Bangladesh have been agitating against the building of power plants near the Sunderbans, a heritage UNESCO-recognised site and home to the world’s largest Mangrove forest. These lobbies are also against the use of coal for power generation, given the effects of greenhouse gases on Climate Change. It is perhaps, time for the two governments, to start a joint effort urgently to protect and preserve the shared Sunderbans region, in a public-private partnership mode.

While there is no political challenge to PM Hasina, there has been domestic carping against agreements that the two countries have signed during the recent visit, particularly on giving water from the Feni river, supply of LPG, supply of Hilsa fish and the coastal surveillance radar system. A student in BUET, Bangladesh’s equivalent of an India’s IIT, was allegedly beaten to death by members of the Chattra League, the youth wing of the AL, for Facebook posts critical of these agreements.

While PM Hasina has promised strict action against those who killed the student, there is a growing feeling that she is giving away too much to India. This is nothing new, since such charges have been made before by anti-Indian political parties in Bangladesh. PM Hasina has weathered such criticism before and knows how to deal with it. Both countries have invested heavily in bilateral ties and the momentum generated is unlikely to dissipate.
 
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Bangladesh, India ties: A new neighbourhood model
By Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty| Published: 27th October 2019 04:00 AM
It may be a good model, but the Indians regularly enter BD to seek jobs and their fisherman thieves steal our fish in the sea and rivers.

From the very beginning, India does not like a militarily strong BD. A time is coming when BD will become strong militarily as well. That will cause India to get nervous.
 
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It may be a good model, but the Indians regularly enter BD to seek jobs and their fisherman thieves steal our fish in the sea and rivers.

From the very beginning, India does not like a militarily strong BD. A time is coming when BD will become strong militarily as well. That will cause India to get nervous.

I didn’t really appreciate that until I noticed the crying by Indian media when Bangladesh bought their two rusty old Mings.

It was pathetic to see.
 
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It's best relationship in world BD is wife and Bharat is husband.
 
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Bengaluru: Police arrest 30 illegal Bangladeshi immigrants; initiate deportation process

Those imaginary Indians stealing jobs from rich and wealthy BD's is a nice touch.

We weren't the ones to proclaim that our land is blessed with 'milk and honey'. :-)

https://scroll.in/article/664305/dh...t-the-illegal-indian-immigrants-in-bangladesh

Dhaka has a question: what about the illegal Indian immigrants in Bangladesh?
The Bangladeshi government estimates there are 500,000 Indians working in the country.

fd3bc245-5024-46ba-b07a-1e1e3ab3a2e3.jpg

Syeda Samira Sadeque

Dhaka has not forgotten Felani Khatun. On January 7, 2011, the 15-year-old girl was shot dead by India’s Border Security Force on the India-Bangladesh border in Cooch Behar, West Bengal. She was attempting to return to Bangladesh with her father by illegally crossing the fence. Her clothes had got entangled in the barbed wires. She screamed for help, but got bullets instead.

Felani Khatun’s body was left in the open for hours as an example for others with the same idea. Photographs of the outrageous incident made it to the international media and India was forced to set up an inquiry. An internal tribunal of the Border Security Force found constable Amiya Ghosh not guilty. The BSF ordered a retrial.

Felani was one of the many Bangladeshi immigrants who had gone to India with hopes of a better standard of living. She was one of the estimated 1,000 Bangladeshis who have been killed by India’s BSF over the decade.

Bangladeshis understand that India shouldn’t allow illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, in a way that no country allows illegal immigration. They accept that India should deport illegal immigrants when it finds them. But they are unable to understand the brutality shown to Khatun. Sadly, hers is not an isolated case. Indiscriminate killing and abuse at the hands of the BSF is rampant at the border.

It is in this light that Narendra Modi’s comments about “illegal Bangladeshi immigrants” are being seen in Dhaka. Along with Modi, his fellow Bharatiya Janata Party leader Subramanian Swamy’s comments about Bangladeshi migrants have also caused alarm.

The barbed-wire fence Felani Khatun was killed at, is a 2,880-km stretch across India’s border with Bangladesh, built by the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government in the early 2000s. Many Bangladeshis tend to illegally cross the border for a variety of reasons – reasons ranging from the cattle trade to simply looking for better work conditions.

While Bangladeshis acknowledge that neither illegal immigration nor unauthorized cattle trading is justified, they fail to grasp the point of killing these immigrants on the border. Felani Khatun’s killing has become a symbol of Bangladesh’s loss of trust in India’s commitment to justice. The comments of Modi and Subramanian Swamy, one a veteran BJP leader, the other a former cabinet minister, about deporting infiltrators have only added salt to this wound.

On April 18, Swamy had claimed that “one-third of Bangladesh’s population” lives illegally in India, and demanded that Bangladesh should compensate for this by giving India one-third of its land. A few days later, Modi warned that come May 16, illegal Bangladeshis should be packing their bags to be sent back.

Few Indians realise that there are illegal and legal Indian immigrants in Bangladesh too – that is inevitable when you share a border as difficult as the India-Bangladesh one. India’s longest border is not with China or Pakistan but with Bangladesh, and right from 1947 it has been a difficult line to seal off. There are too many people whose lives and livelihoods are scattered on both sides. The Bangladeshi government estimates there are 500,000 Indians working in the country.

When it comes to remittances from other countries to India, Bangladesh ranks fifth on the list, according to Silicon India. That $3.7 billion a year comes from Indians working in non-profit organisations, the garment and textiles industries.

Yet, the Indians in Bangladesh are not a matter of election speeches here. It is a valid concern if there are Indians who worry about illegal immigrants being a drain on India’s income and resources. But Subramanian Swamy said that allowing these “infiltrators” to live in India would threaten India’s secularism. Narendra Modi and his party’s manifesto have said that India would be a home for Hindus from other countries. “Where will they go? India is the only place for them. We will have to accommodate them here,” Modi has asked.

India, as any independent nation, has the right to deny “illegal immigrants” from anywhere, Bangladesh or Bhutan. But it is clear that the issue here is less illegal immigrants and more the religion they practice. It seems that the bigger threat to India’s secularism is not the Bangladeshi migrants, but Narendra Modi.

The BJP’s rhetoric is bad news for those who champion secularism in Bangladesh. An editorial in New Age, a daily newspaper, read: “What the Indian political establishments do not realise is that such election-time political rhetoric by people like Subramanian could give rise to communalistic reaction on this side of the border. If it so happens, and especially given the general displeasure of the Muslim population in India, such sentiment could even spread in some Indian areas bordering Bangladesh like wildfire.”

There have already been attacks reported on the Hindu community since these comments were made. While attacks on temples, looting of houses, vandalism and arson on Hindu property are sadly not rare, it is now feared that there may be a further backlash from the Islamists against the Hindu minority.

Academics and intellectuals have also expressed concern regarding the future of India-Bangladesh relations. The Dhaka Tribune said in an editorial: “To raise valid concerns about illegal immigrants is one thing. To threaten purge-type policies is quite another, and ill befits the putative leader of the world’s largest democracy.”

Mahbub Hassan Saleh, deputy high commissioner of Bangladesh in New Delhi, has reportedly said he does not worry about Modi coming to power. Yet the country’s commerce minister, Tofail Ahmed, has indicated that the “illegal immigrants” row may put a strain on India-Bangladesh ties. The future does not look promising.

(Syeda Samira Sadeque is a journalist with the Dhaka Tribune in Dhaka, Bangladesh.)
 
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I didn’t really appreciate that until I noticed the crying by Indian media when Bangladesh bought their two rusty old Mings.

It was pathetic to see.
And all the Indian military Chiefs visited BD to sound out why BD should purchase Chinese Submarines when the Indian Navy is at its service. Then came the proposal of training our submarine crews in India. They pretend the big DADA of the region when its people sleep hungry.

In terms of training, India remains in 1971 when the Mukti Bahini was trained on Indian soils. But, even at that time, the elaborate training was done by the Bengali troops of Pakistan Army though it was in India. Yes, India gave us weapons and shelter.
 
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We weren't the ones to proclaim that our land is blessed with 'milk and honey'. :-)
Guess many Bongs believe it's all milk and honey. That's why they are pole vaulting here.
And bullshit like these don't fly without numbers. 500k Indians? You don't even have any data other than imaginary numbers pulled out by media, even your news don't mention anything of them living 'illegally' in BD.
 
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Nope Sir,your minister said otherwise.

India is Bharat mata, Bangladesh is the father as the originator of the idea Pakistan and it was born out of India. So minister is not wrong when he said it is a husband (Bangladesh) and wife (India) relationship where Pakistan is the by product.
 
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India is Bharat mata, Bangladesh is the father as the originator of the idea Pakistan and it was born out of India. So minister is not wrong when he said it is a husband (Bangladesh) and wife (India) relationship where Pakistan is the by product.
Well Bangladesh has nothing to do with idea of Pakistan,it was from East Bengal which became East Pakistan and breathed his last when ethno fascist bengalis took over that state with the help of Bharat.
Bangladesh is an entity entirely made and endrosed by Bharat only.
By the way even by looking at size one can say,who is hubby and who is wify in this relationship:omghaha:
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/indi...sband-and-wife-foreign-minister-momen.638230/
 
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