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Dhaka Seeks Transit to Pakistan via India

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Dhaka seeks Pak rail link via India[/b][/size][/color]
JAYANTA ROY CHOWDHURY

Dhaka, Aug. 14: Moves are afoot to link Bangladesh with Pakistan by rail through India, 63 years after the subcontinent was partitioned.

“We would like to have transit and be connected to all South Asian nations, including Pakistan,” Bangladesh foreign minister Dipu Moni told The Telegraph.

India had agreed last week to allow Bangladeshi truckers to pass through its territory on their way to Nepal and Bhutan, and promised Dhaka railway links with these land-locked nations.

Till the 1965 Indo-Pak war, goods trains used to travel between Lahore and Dhaka — then part of the same country — through India. Islamabad has already said it wants the rail link revived.

Last month, while allowing Afghan trucks transit to India, Pakistan had refused to grant Indians passage to Kabul, saying this would have to wait till Delhi gave it transit to Dhaka.

Top Indian railway officials said they were willing to run a Lahore-Delhi-Dhaka service — initially with goods trains and later, if politics allowed, with passenger trains.

This proposal was floated at a Saarc transport ministers’ conference earlier this year, the officials said. “We have talked to our Pakistani counterparts as well as to Iran on possible railway links,” an official said.

Bangladesh, which lost an estimated two million people in a genocide by the Pakistani army during its freedom struggle in 1971, had until now not been inclined towards any rail link with Pakistan.

Moni, who at 53 is Bangladesh’s second-youngest foreign minister, reflects new thinking that wants to go beyond past hostilities and suspicions. “We are in favour of the Asian Highway connectivity plans.… We want all countries on board in that project,” the minister said.

The Asian Highway is a co-operative project among countries in Asia and Europe, supported by the UN and global banks such as the Asian Development Bank. It seeks to link countries in Asia, including India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, China and Japan, with Europe through a 7,000km trans-continental highway and railway system.

The gaps in the railway and highway networks lie mostly in Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar.

Bangladesh’s ruling Awami League has long been a supporter of the trans-continental road and rail expressway, but the main Opposition, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), has consistently opposed it.

The BNP’s argument is that if Bangladesh joins the highway project, that would give mainland India easier access to its northeastern states.

However, the Sheikh Hasina government has recently signed treaties to give India land and sea transit to its Northeast, which could potentially fetch Dhaka up to $1 billion a year in transit and other fees.

Hassan Shahriar, political analyst and former editor of the widely circulated Bangladeshi newspaper Ittefaq, said: “Although (past) BNP governments have been close to Pakistan, domestic political imperatives could still lead to opposition to this idea.”

However, Moni struck a confident note on Bangladesh’s plans for the future: “We are not concerned with electoral imperatives, even though there will be an election in another four years. Our plans have a long-term timeline... we have planned till 2021 (when Bangladesh will turn 50).”

The Awami League government, which came to power with a landslide victory in 2008, has been working to normalise relations with India despite the Opposition crying “sellout” every time it signs an agreement with Delhi.

A $1-billion soft-loan treaty signed in the presence of finance minister Pranab Mukherjee last Saturday, which would give Bangladesh credit to build its road and rail infrastructure and to buy railway coaches and buses, was dubbed “a 20-year treaty of ghulami (slavery)” by BNP head Khaleda Zia at a massive rally.

But the Awami League believes that better infrastructure, freer trade with India and better living conditions for the common man will keep the public on its side.

“You have to remember that the 1971 spirit (of friendship and co-operation between India and Bangladesh) is back.… The aberration (of frozen relations) in between is over,” Moni said.

The Telegraph - Calcutta (Kolkata) | Frontpage | Dhaka seeks Pak rail link via India
 
It would be a very good move and would be mutually beneficial to the region.
And its the shortest route for BD too..

Hope it finalizes soon.
 
A trade route Bangladesh-India-Pakistan-Afghanistan would be welcome.

Later on, Myanmar and Iran may also join in.
 
Indian-Pakistan-Afghanistan transit was not accepted.... nor will india be given a route to the middle east or central asia.
 
Indian-Pakistan-Afghanistan transit was not accepted.... nor will india be given a route to the middle east or central asia.

It's not only about India or Pakistan, there are other stakeholders too.

Don't you think you are acting somewhat like a bully by trying to control who has access to a landlocked country and who doesn't?
 
Indian-Pakistan-Afghanistan transit was not accepted.... nor will india be given a route to the middle east or central asia.

It seems Pakistan govt is not going to play Kashmir politics when discussing a vital issue as transit facilities among all the SAARC countries. If what the article above says is correct, then Islamabad is waiting for the Indian nod of a Dhaka-Delhi-Lahore link before it opens its border for Indian goods to enter Afghanistan.

However, I do not think Pakistan will allow Indian goods to the central asia or Iran via Pakistan. While Afghanistan is a SAARC country, Central asian countries and Iran are not. So, these different issues may be dealt separately out of SAARC jurisdiction.

By the way, BD is giving something to India in one hand, but, at the same time, is asking for reciprocals in two hands. Note that a link will boost trade between BD and Pakistan by many folds. We need many Pakistani goods including your beautifully designed women's clothings and delicious fruits. I cannot wait longer.
 
It seems Pakistan govt is not going to play Kashmir politics when discussing a vital issue as transit facilities among all the SAARC countries. If what the article above says is correct, then Islamabad is waiting for the Indian nod of a Dhaka-Delhi-Lahore link before it opens its border for Indian goods to enter Afghanistan.

However, I do not think Pakistan will allow Indian goods to the central asia or Iran via Pakistan. While Afghanistan is a SAARC country, Central asian countries and Iran are not. So, these different issues may be dealt separately out of SAARC jurisdiction.

By the way, BD is giving something to India in one hand, but, at the same time, is asking for reciprocals in two hands. Note that a link will boost trade between BD and Pakistan by many folds. We need many Pakistani goods including your beautifully designed women's clothings and delicious fruits. I cannot wait longer.

I fully appreciate that the approach of the current BD govt. has been very positive vis a vis India and I firmly believe India should meet BD more than halfway.

India must now show that it can take care of concerns of those who take care of India's concerns.

I really look forward to the Indo-BD relationship in the near future.:cheers:
 
It seems Pakistan govt is not going to play Kashmir politics when discussing a vital issue as transit facilities among all the SAARC countries. If what the article above says is correct, then Islamabad is waiting for the Indian nod of a Dhaka-Delhi-Lahore link before it opens its border for Indian goods to enter Afghanistan.

However, I do not think Pakistan will allow Indian goods to the central asia or Iran via Pakistan. While Afghanistan is a SAARC country, Central asian countries and Iran are not. So, these different issues may be dealt separately out of SAARC jurisdiction.

By the way, BD is giving something to India in one hand, but, at the same time, is asking for reciprocals in two hands. Note that a link will boost trade between BD and Pakistan by many folds. We need many Pakistani goods including your beautifully designed women's clothings and delicious fruits. I cannot wait longer.

BD is welcome .....but i wonder if indians will allow tht.
 
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pakistanis want good relations with bangladesh as long as its government is good.

i met a bengali in my engineering university and he said me that basucally wewere one country before, and i was surprised to see those things coming from a bengali.. so...
 
Yes it is! Unless you do not believe in living in a peaceful enviorenment with your neighbours

Do u?Kashmir,creating mutki bhani,LTTE,supporting BLA?
Its pour country we will do watever we want..... u r happy to enforce ur hukam on nepal,bhutan etc.


No need to be arrogant lady. AlwaysRemember one thing.

"Ser ko Sawa sher hameshe mil hee jata hai!

Arrogance? r u allowing nepal,BD transit routes? NO.... while n case of Afghanistan which has no like with india ur sympathy comes alive?

Also ur quotation is wrong.
 
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