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Ways of improving India-Bangladesh bilateral relations?

It is not India that immediately helped us after SIDR cyclone in 2007. It was American navy ships that promptly arrived and distributed many tons of bottled water from their own stock in the ship. I would say this has saved many thosand lives, because all the surface water was spoiled due to the intrusion of sea water. Americans always do humanitarian jobs throughout the world.

You cannot say, it was India that unilaterally helped us. It was the entire world in a situation like this. Close proximity does not result in quick delivery in emergency. India has not yet built an efficient system to tackle an emergency.

I think, even our own internal system to tackle emergency is better than India. It is because of many years of continuous onslaught by the cyclones and natural disasters. However, we have a long way to go. We must build concrete shelters along the coastal belt and also build food warehouses.

I think, you have been influnced by the Indian newspapers, who, naturally, printed only India's own story how it was helping BD after SIDR. I would like to add one more sentence. Prophet Muhammed (SAW) taught us that when your right hand gives away something to someone, even your own left hand is not be told about that.

Buddy why are you taking all wrong of what i am saying..I am not saying that India unilaterally helped you or anything..I am just pointed out that from all those countries we can reach your country faster than anyone in case you need help..
 
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@eastwatch
After the Asian tsunami India did not accept any aid from outside - the need was dire - many thousands were killed in Andamans and Tamil Nadu. India helped other Asian nations to a very large extent. Sri Lanka, Maldives and Indonesia can testify to this fact.
And India's disaster management is definitely very good these days - please worry about your own systems - we will worry about ours - Thank you very much.
We don't need outside support in case of disasters in India. WE have the requisite resources to deal with the problems ourselves. Aid from outside is normally a friendly gesture to show solidarity. Local aid is much more effective

My answer was to someone's claim that BD cannot remain without influence of India because it can extend quick assistance in a natural calamity due to its close proximity.

I must say our relief system is also good, because of our long experience. Our resource base is also becoming strong year after year due to production of surplus foods and clothings.

However, our fixed asset base such as shelters and food warehouses have to be enlarged. We also need additional motorized boats and helicopters to move the relief materials to the needy. Population themselves are very helpful, they donate and volunteer.

BD is becoming a little richer every year. A day is coming soon when we will refuse all foreign helps to face the after effects of natural calamities, but it may be difficult to refuse aids by foreign aid groups.

Sea is angry in the Bay of Bengal only because of carbon emission by the wealthy countries, and we are the only country suffering from that. But, this is a rather different subject which is being discussed in many international gatherings of Heads of States and Governments. One such meeting is now in session in Trinidad.

By the way, I must admit that BD needs a good relationship with India, and there are hundreds of avenue to do that.
 
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Who ever begs help from a poor India. You must be mistaken about cyclones. Every country helps other countries in a situation like that. It is a part of diplomacy. But, I find only small-hearted iNDIANS LIKE TO brag about that. You are really pitiful.

Hey get your head out of the sand buddy :disagree:

Even if you guys don't ask for help (for whatever reason it might be) Indians will do anything to help people of South Asia :agree:.. I don't know what you read to have so much hate for Indians and India in general :hang2:, but I would suggest you not to believe in any random blog you read. Analyze each piece of article you read cause every article has views of the writer/author and you don't know the writer personally to follow what he/she says blindly :) .. And I appreciate your thinking that BD needs to have a good relation with India and we do think on the same lines here in India as well. But the problem is that your society (like any other Islamic society) has left the moderate way of living for you guys everything starts and ends with Islam whereas us non-believers/infedels/kafirs bread and butter scores more points, no doubt religion is part of out lives but it's not the whole life itself. When society starts looking down on people who shave and don't wear the skull-cap, what can one expect illiterates in those countries to do other than blowing themselves up in the name of Allah.

Considering what your views on Hindus are I would not be comfortable to have open borders with BD. Untill you guys adapt the Turkey's style of Islam and tone down on the radical(Wahibi) thoughts that inhibit you heads day-in n day-out.

Adios amigo
:partay:
 
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Because of the attitude problem of many Indians I would like to say, 'India is a giant, but is inhabited by very small ant-like people.' Hi Indians, grow up and be big like your country.

Eastwatch no one is trying to take over any country in South Asia. If you can get over this India-centric phobia/superiority complex ('India is a giant, but is inhabited by very small ant-like people.')
that people in your country preach, things can look good in couple of decades.

:cheers:
 
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Deals likely on power, railway infrastructure

Bangladesh and India may sign two deals on the purchase of electricity from India and developing Bangladesh's railway and roads with Indian funding when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visits New Delhi this month.

Bangladesh foreign ministry officials said Dhaka would emphasise signing a deal on sharing the water of the Teesta during Hasina'a visit. Bangladesh is also expected to put forward a draft of the deal. But it is still not sure whether any deal will be inked during the visit since the matter is to be settled at the highest political level.

On Wednesday, the two countries at the end of home secretary-level talks in New Delhi finalised the drafts of three deals--Agreement on Mutual Legal Assistance on Criminal Matters, Transfer of Sentenced Persons and Combating International Terrorism, Organised Crime and Illicit Drug Trafficking.

"Two more deals are in the pipeline," Indian High Commissioner in Dhaka Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty told journalists after his meeting with Foreign Secretary Md Mijarul Quayes at the foreign ministry yesterday.

Asked about the deals, the Indian envoy declined to elaborate.

Meanwhile, a foreign ministry official, preferring anonymity, told The Daily Star that there is a possibility of the two countries signing a deal on the trade of electricity. The Indian government in September agreed to sell Bangladesh at least 100 megawatts of electricity.

Bangladesh and India need to sign agreements on purchase of power from India as the two countries must construct a common distribution line between them, the official said.

The foreign ministry official said the other deal would be on improving Bangladesh's railway and roads with Indian funding.

The previously agreed three deals are ready and expected to be signed during Hasina's visit.

Sheikh Hasina will leave for New Delhi on December 18 on a three-day visit. This will be her first trip to India since she assumed office for the second time in January this year.

The Bangladesh premier will meet top Indian leaders, including Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, and is likely to visit the information technology hubs Bangalore and Hyderabad.

She will also make a personal trip to Ajmer Sharif in Rajasthan and she will travel to Kolkata to pay a courtesy call on veteran leader Jyoti Basu who was chief minister of West Bengal till 2000 from 1977.

Hasina is expected to meet Indian National Congress leader Siddhartha Shankar Roy, who was chief minister of West Bengal during the Liberation War.

Meanwhile, a delegation of Indian water resources ministry arrived here in Dhaka to discuss river water sharing issues between the two countries.
 
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Mamata to take up immigration clearance issue with Bangladesh PM - dnaindia.com

Bongaon (WB): Railway minister Mamata Banerjee today said she would take up with Bangaldesh prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who is scheduled to visit India later this month, the issue of reducing the time taken for immigration clearance on both sides of the Indo-Bangladesh border.

"Hasina is coming possibly on December 19, when the issue of inordinate delay taken at land customs on both sides of the India-Bangladesh border will be taken up," Banerjee said, adding she had already spoken to finance minister Pranab Mukherjee about it.

Her statement came in the wake of complaints by passengers of the Kolkata-Dhaka train about excessive delay in immigration clearance both at Petrapole on Indian side and at Benapole in Bangladesh.

Banerjee was speaking at a function organised for laying the foundation of a new railway track between Bongaon, near here and Chandabazar which is close to India-Bangladesh border.
 
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Trying to be good neighbours

A poor country, surrounded on three sides by a rising economic power, Bangladesh has long hoped for closer economic integration with its neighbour. One big problem has been India’s worry that Bangladesh harbours anti-Indian terrorists. The year-old government of Sheikh Hasina Wajed and her Awami League has started to dismantle this obstacle.

This month it arrested and handed over to India Arabinda Rajkhowa, the chairman of the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), a militant group fighting for an independent homeland for ethnic Assamese in India’s north-east state of Assam. In the past two decades at least 10,000 people have died in the insurgency. Bangladesh had already handed over a number of other ULFA leaders in November.

For India the arrests are a big step towards defeating ULFA, which it has long accused of waging a proxy war in its north-eastern states on behalf of Pakistan’s and Bangladesh’s intelligence services. India hopes that Bangladesh will hand over other insurgents, as well as suspected members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based group accused of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November 2008.

Next month Sheikh Hasina is to make a state visit to India. Officials on both sides are confident that it will yield agreements on security co-operation, on Bangladesh’s purchase of electricity from India and on the creation—virtually from scratch—of transport links across a common 4,100km (2,500-mile) border, the world’s fifth-longest. Economic statistics belie the two countries’ shared history and geography. Bangladesh’s biggest trading partner is China. India is not even in the top ten of foreign investors in Bangladesh.

The benefits of co-operation could be huge. Full economic integration with India could raise Bangladesh’s average rate of economic growth from 6 per cent to 8 per cent, estimates Farooq Sobhan, the president of the Bangladesh Enterprise Institute, a Dhaka think-tank. Now, says Mr Sobhan, for the first time, there is agreement that “unresolved problems should not stand in the way of things that can be done.”

The biggest difficulty for the Awami League may be to explain its new policy of engaging India to voters, in a country with a strong tradition of anti-Indian sentiment. But like India’s ruling Congress party, with which it has long-standing friendly ties, the League has a thumping majority and four years until an election.

The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), whose “Look East” policy is now being overturned, is in a mess. This week its leader, Khaleda Zia, appointed her son, Tarique Rahman, for many the symbol of all that was wrong with the BNP’s last period of kleptocratic, vindictive rule, as the party’s deputy chairman. The other big political force, the army, is back in the barracks after its intervention and abortive interregnum in 2007-08.

For the League, re-election-something no elected government has ever achieved in Bangladesh-depends on faster poverty-reduction, reducing power shortages and maintaining law and order. If these aims could be met, a young electorate—nearly 80 per cent of people are under 40—might even tolerate better relations with India.
 
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Trying to be good neighbours

A poor country, surrounded on three sides by a rising economic power, Bangladesh has long hoped for closer economic integration with its neighbour. One big problem has been India’s worry that Bangladesh harbours anti-Indian terrorists. The year-old government of Sheikh Hasina Wajed and her Awami League has started to dismantle this obstacle.

This month it arrested and handed over to India Arabinda Rajkhowa, the chairman of the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA), a militant group fighting for an independent homeland for ethnic Assamese in India’s north-east state of Assam. In the past two decades at least 10,000 people have died in the insurgency. Bangladesh had already handed over a number of other ULFA leaders in November.

For India the arrests are a big step towards defeating ULFA, which it has long accused of waging a proxy war in its north-eastern states on behalf of Pakistan’s and Bangladesh’s intelligence services. India hopes that Bangladesh will hand over other insurgents, as well as suspected members of Lashkar-e-Taiba, the Pakistan-based group accused of the terrorist attacks in Mumbai in November 2008.

Next month Sheikh Hasina is to make a state visit to India. Officials on both sides are confident that it will yield agreements on security co-operation, on Bangladesh’s purchase of electricity from India and on the creation—virtually from scratch—of transport links across a common 4,100km (2,500-mile) border, the world’s fifth-longest. Economic statistics belie the two countries’ shared history and geography. Bangladesh’s biggest trading partner is China. India is not even in the top ten of foreign investors in Bangladesh.

The benefits of co-operation could be huge. Full economic integration with India could raise Bangladesh’s average rate of economic growth from 6 per cent to 8 per cent, estimates Farooq Sobhan, the president of the Bangladesh Enterprise Institute, a Dhaka think-tank. Now, says Mr Sobhan, for the first time, there is agreement that “unresolved problems should not stand in the way of things that can be done.”

The biggest difficulty for the Awami League may be to explain its new policy of engaging India to voters, in a country with a strong tradition of anti-Indian sentiment. But like India’s ruling Congress party, with which it has long-standing friendly ties, the League has a thumping majority and four years until an election.

The opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP), whose “Look East” policy is now being overturned, is in a mess. This week its leader, Khaleda Zia, appointed her son, Tarique Rahman, for many the symbol of all that was wrong with the BNP’s last period of kleptocratic, vindictive rule, as the party’s deputy chairman. The other big political force, the army, is back in the barracks after its intervention and abortive interregnum in 2007-08.

For the League, re-election-something no elected government has ever achieved in Bangladesh-depends on faster poverty-reduction, reducing power shortages and maintaining law and order. If these aims could be met, a young electorate—nearly 80 per cent of people are under 40—might even tolerate better relations with India.


Thank you for this wonderful articles. In return for all of this, we have to calculate what are we getting ? Are we only getting a gurantee that Awami League will come to power next time by any means with the help of india and we will have a very hostile population and armed
insurgent who will be happy to point there gun at us for betrying their
trust by donating their freedom father to india.

Is this govt. capable of even communicating BSF killing in Bangladesh or just for staying in power it will not bother to raised that in Prime minister level meeting. All 5 agreement which will be sign this time none of them will give us any benefit - So called terrorist agreement,
land passage etc.
 
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Misgivings, obduracy blight Dhaka-Delhi relations

Sunday December 13 2009 07:16:53 AM BDT


M. Shahidul Islam


Something weird is souring Dhaka- Delhi relations prior to the PM's scheduled visit to India. There seems more to the last minute deferral of the visit than what meets the eye. For, if one must believe the reason given by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) about the deferral of the visit, the blame must go to India, which, according to the Foreign Minister, "requested" for rescheduling the visit.

Teesta agreement

That, however, does not tally with the facts unearthed so far. Sources say Dhaka felt insulted, snubbed and betrayed in a number of pre-summit interactions, prompting the PM to pause and reflect further before making a desperate dash to sign agreements which could prove suicidal for the nation.

Dhaka is learnt to have taken offence when Delhi flatly rejected on December 5 a proposition to hold a meeting of the Joint River Commission (JRC) to finalize an agreement on the sharing of Teesta river waters during PM's upcoming visit. A different brand of chemistry thus intruded into the bilateral equations once that negative Indian decision was conveyed to Bangladesh officials at the conclusion of the second day's meeting of the JRC experts, which commenced in the state guest house Meghna on December 4.

A meeting source said, "India proposed to hold Secretary-level meeting first, prior to JRC," which they argued not being possible before PM's (now-postponed) visit from December 18-21.

Another source in the MOFA, however, regretted that the Indian proposal was unacceptable due to the Teesta water sharing agreement being pending since 2005 when Bangladesh first delivered to India the first draft of the agreement, with proposition that Bangladesh and India each would get 40 per cent water of the river and 20 per cent would go to Bay of Bengal for maintaining adequate flow in the channel. "That was why Dhaka decided to hand over the draft of the agreement to India prior to PM's visit so that the agreement could be finalized and signed during the scheduled summit of the two PMs," the source maintained.

Besides, Dhaka found it surprising that India failed to comply with its commitment to finalize the Teesta agreement 'sooner,' made during Foreign Minister Dipu Moni's Delhi visit in September.

Sources also say Dhaka had other reasons to feel insulted and snubbed. While Delhi failed to accept the Teesta water agreement, Dhaka had meanwhile complied in a hurry with the finalization of three other agreements that Delhi wanted desperately to get concluded during PM's visit. The concluded agreements include (1) Treaties on Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters, (2) Transfer of Prisoners, and, (3) Bilateral Agreement on Combating International Terrorism.

Signed during Home Secretary level meeting in Delhi on December 1, the three agreements are slated to obtain treaty status after the two PMs sign them during the upcoming Delhi summit. But, in return, Dhaka got nothing.

Threats from ULFA

There are also reports that the visit was postponed due to credible threats from the ULFA activists. That prospect borders on 'may be,' notwithstanding that, since coming to power, the AL-led regime has been doing for Delhi much more than what could be lawfully expected of any sovereign nation.

For instance, long before these legal instruments could become efficacious, Indian special force had already conducted a covert operation inside Bangladesh on November 1 and abducted two ULFA leaders - Chitrabon Hazarika and Sasha Choudhury - from a residence in Dhaka. The two leaders were later produced in a court in Assam the next day.

Ever since, other ULFA leaders have been making threats against Bangladesh and its PM in particular, the latest threat coming on December 5 following abduction of ULFA's founding chairman, Arabinda Rajkhowa, from Dhaka and his appearance before a judicial magistrate in Gawahati the next morning. The threat against the PM followed Rajkhowa's angry comment in the court premise that "Bangladesh had betrayed us."

ULFA threats often prove credible, and, other reports do indicate the ULFA leaders are tired of the theatrics and the mendacity of the regime in Dhaka.

Despite Indian Border Security Force (BSF) having admitted that they took possession of the ULFA leaders (Rajkhowa, his wife and their two children, his personal bodyguard Raja Bora, as well as the deputy commander-in-chief of ULFA's military wing, Raju Barua, among others) from Bangladesh authorities, the insistence by Home Minister Shahara Khatun that 'our security forces were not involved in the arrests of ULFA leaders' further indicated the recent raids in Dhaka having been conducted by Indian Special forces. And, these unlawful actions have startled legal communities and other observers due to Bangladesh and India not having any extradition treaty, although Indian intelligence agencies have hinted a number of times since the AL-led regime's coming to power that Dhaka has 'tacitly' agreed to track down Indian insurgents hiding in Bangladesh.

Meanwhile, these 'abduction' incidents have so elevated the mood of Indian officials that, following the latest abduction in Dhaka and possession of so many top ranking ULFA leaders by India, foreign secretary, Nirupama Rao, said on December 5 that cooperation between New Delhi and Dhaka had delivered "very positive results." Yet, that Delhi remains characteristically lax toward reciprocating on long-outstanding matter like the Teesta water sharing agreement is a matter of deeper concern.

Such concerns have prompted many observers to say in anger, "If the nation's sovereignty is trumped at will in the absence of legal instruments allowing intrusion into a third country of the special force of another, what consequence the new treaties will have on the territorial integrity of Bangladesh?" They further ask: "Will Indian forces enter Bangladesh in witch hunt of northeast insurgents (or alleged Islamic militants) if our own forces fail to comply with Indian requests?"

Fear of retribution

Make no mistake that they certainly will. That is why the evolving scenarios lead one to fear that Bangladesh faces one of the gravest dangers of being attacked by a number of Indian insurgent groups if the AL-led regime moves too aggressively to aid India in quelling their liberation struggles. At least 17 insurgent outfits of varied denominations are active and perilously armed all across Bangladesh borders.

Some experts fear, the fall out in Bangladesh from any immature Indo-Bangladesh collaborations against northeast insurgents could be unspecified and massive. When the AL-led government made a similar move in 1996, ULFA leader Poresh Borua had made it clear by saying: "Bangladesh will be targeted and get attacked if it assists India that goes against our Liberation movement."

Added to the ongoing China-India rivalry, as well as the alleged Chinese backing for a hybrid of insurgent groups operating in Indian northeast, Bangladesh must juggle assiduously through a maze of strategic dilemmas and our policy makers must ponder thoroughly whether the PM must sign those agreements at all.

Double standard

Dhaka must not also forget the painful memory of Indian double standard in matters relating to our vital national interests. In 1972, India cited security threat as its main reason not to allow Bangladesh the use of Calcutta port (the Chittagong port being almost inoperative due to obstruction created by war-damaged sunken ships). That Dhaka now can not invoke its own reasoning to say 'no' to many of the 'anti-national-interest' propositions of India is indicative of how beholden the AL-led regime is to this regional bully.

As well, Dhaka's failure over the last 38 years to obtain from Delhi any agreement to use the 16 miles transit through Indian territory (the Siliguri Corridor) for bilateral trade between two SAARC countries - Bhutan and Nepal - shall serve as aide memoirs before a decision to concede anything substantive to Delhi in the upcoming summit.

Transit & transshipment

Then, there are other major variables to be factored in. As speculations thicken that the PM will ink the transit deal too during her upcoming visit to Delhi, the very prospect of it instils fears in the heart of our people. Transit refers to the passage across our territory of Indian goods, using Indian transports, without discrimination whether those goods are military or civil.

Transshipment, on the other hand, refers to the same movement of goods using the transport of transiting countries, which Dhaka may agree, if compelled to. India did avail transshipment facilities from Pakistan since 1947 to commute goods to the northeast, until relations soured in the 960s, leading to the 1965 war.

Belgium syndrome

One of the prime movers of Bangladesh-China relationship is China's vehement objection to Bangladesh granting transit facilities to India, due mainly to Beijing's concern that, in case of any Indo-China hostility, India will bring her troops to North Eastern provinces through Bangladesh to prevent severance of the Siliguri corridor from mainland India.

This strategic conundrum reminds one of the Belgium syndromes. Belgium lost its sovereignty during the Second World War after the Nazi forces invaded that country on May 10, 1940, precipitating the invasion of Netherlands and the Luxemburg in the broader military sweeps that followed. If the allied forces did not win the war, Belgium to date would have remained a German satellite.

Likewise, if India and China go to war once again, as they did in 1962, India will conquer Bangladesh first by using the transit at Ashugonj and Chittagong ports, and the corridor being offered in the name of Asian highway, as Hitler did against Belgium.

Moreover, nearly half of India's total armed forces being already deployed in the trouble-ridden northeast, the strategic priority of the region has increased manifold in recent years, especially after Pakistan became militarily weaker amidst a foreign-imposed civil war and the invasion of Afghanistan, allowing India to focus singularly on China by slowly gobbling Bangladesh into its underbelly for use as strategic depth, a buffer, and a subjugated economic hinterland.

http://newsfrombangladesh.net/view.php?hidRecord=296757
 
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Despite Indian Border Security Force (BSF) having admitted that they took possession of the ULFA leaders (Rajkhowa, his wife and their two children, his personal bodyguard Raja Bora, as well as the deputy commander-in-chief of ULFA's military wing, Raju Barua, among others) from Bangladesh authorities, the insistence by Home Minister Shahara Khatun that 'our security forces were not involved in the arrests of ULFA leaders' further indicated the recent raids in Dhaka having been conducted by Indian Special forces. And, these unlawful actions have startled legal communities and other observers due to Bangladesh and India not having any extradition treaty, although Indian intelligence agencies have hinted a number of times since the AL-led regime's coming to power that Dhaka has 'tacitly' agreed to track down Indian insurgents hiding in Bangladesh.

Way to go India :victory:. Hats-Off to RAW for carrying out such a swift operation in a foreign land. Good job done RAW. :yahoo:
 
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Way to go India :victory:. Hats-Off to RAW for carrying out such a swift operation in a foreign land. Good job done RAW. :yahoo:

Yes now they got mot reasons to talk about Indian stooges ;)
 
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Thank you for this wonderful articles. In return for all of this, we have to calculate what are we getting ? Are we only getting a gurantee that Awami League will come to power next time by any means with the help of india and we will have a very hostile population and armed
insurgent who will be happy to point there gun at us for betrying their
trust by donating their freedom father to india.

Is this govt. capable of even communicating BSF killing in Bangladesh or just for staying in power it will not bother to raised that in Prime minister level meeting. All 5 agreement which will be sign this time none of them will give us any benefit - So called terrorist agreement,
land passage etc.

Correct me if im wrong. You stay in BD, correct?
Didn't your people vote for your government? .... Looking at your fair view point, Did you participate in any rally objecting to your governments murky decision?
 
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Sorry, I have deleted because of double posting. See the post below.
 
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Time for new border


TIME FOR NEW BORDER
Outgoing Indian HC Pinak Ranjan tells The Daily Star
Diplomatic Correspondent

Outgoing Indian High Commissioner Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty has emphasised redrawing of Indo-Bangladesh border to comprehensively address all the old issues on land boundary and enclaves to remove sufferings of people of the two countries.

In an exclusive interview with The Daily Star on Thursday, he said the people who live in the enclaves have to cross international border every day for cultivation and they need to follow the official formalities as well as clearance from the BDR and BSF.

Though the people are allowed to cross the border for cultivation, but this everyday problem can be resolved through exchange of enclaves, which would require redrawing the international border in a small way, he opined.

Pinak Ranjan Chakravarty is due to leave Dhaka today to take his new diplomatic assignment in Thailand. His successor Rajeet Mitter, another Bengalee diplomat, will join as Indian high commissioner to Bangladesh on December 26. Rajeet's last mission was in the Philippines as Indian ambassador.

During the lengthy interview, Pinak touched on a range of bilateral issues like Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's visit to India, security, transit, trade, water sharing, etc and he is very much optimistic about breaking out of these very old issues.

According to official sources there is a stretch of 6.5 km unmarked border, and some 110 enclaves are inside Bangladesh while 55 others in Indian territory.

Pinak Ranjan said during joint visits of Indian and Bangladesh officials in the past, it was found that people of the enclaves do not want to leave the land in which they have settled, worked and have farms. "These pieces of land are all contiguous, so there is a possibility that we redraw the international border and finish this problem once and for all. Of course we will need a joint survey, which we will start soon after the summit meeting of the prime ministers of India and Bangladesh," he added.

The Bangla speaking Indian diplomat, who spent over six years as deputy high commissioner and high commissioner in Bangladesh, said, "We have only 6.2 kilometres of undemarcated border when we have settled dispute over 4,000 kilometres. My suggestion is, let us draw the line along the places where status quo is imposed."

Asked whether there is any progress made in this regard, Pinak said the issues have been discussed at the highest level and by and large there are agreements in principle. The unmarked land and enclaves are not in a position of great strategic importance, so it is doable and soluble.

Turning to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's upcoming visit to India, Pinak said he was very much optimistic about the summit meeting. Presently, the India-Bangladesh relations are breaking new grounds and there is renewed commitment between the two new governments to break out of long-standing unresolved issues through innovative solutions.

He said the PMs had already met twice, once in NAM summit and then in Commonwealth summit, so dialogue has started. "Now I look at the visit as culmination of the dialogue. We hope there will be a joint declaration, in which all the issues of our bilateral significance will be covered. Let me say that we will surprise you with what will happen."

Asked what will be the surprise for Bangladesh, the outgoing high commissioner said, "No, nothing dramatic, I mean there will be no earth-shaking event, but solutions will be there. And we will break some new grounds as we have said."

Citing example, he said India has already promised 100MW of power to Bangladesh and there will be an agreement on the provision of power from India. "I think the grid connectivity work will start soon after the agreement. May be in a couple of years time we may actually find power flowing in from India to Bangladesh."

At the summit meeting of the two PMs, he said, another important issue would be transit for Bangladesh to Nepal and Bhutan. "We are hoping that motor vehicle agreement will be signed or at least work will start immediately after the visit, so that we can have Bangladeshi trucks go to Bhutan and Nepal through Indian territory. And vice versa Indian trucks to come to offload goods up to certain points as Benapole and Petrapole are highly congested land ports. Some kind of dispersion would help in decongestion."

The other major issue, he said, the officials are working on is how can containers come over land from India and Bangladesh to each other's territory. Train and waterways are very viable and the cost of trade would go down that would ultimately benefit the people.

On security issues, he said, cooperation between the two countries in the field of security is expanding and the present government in Bangladesh is very sensitive and both the countries are now working closely to combat terrorism, insurgency and criminal activities. "I think the issue needs to be get down on the microscope ... we will naturally pursue it vigorously because we think security is so essential to our development, well-being and future prospects."

He also said that India will not give shelter to anybody who is wanted in Bangladesh and will be happy to hand them over to Bangladesh. "I am confident that it is already happening. I am sure this will send a huge message to those who want to disturb the peace of either country or destabilise them. I think they will get the message that Bangladesh and India are not the places where they can get away with it."

On trade gap, he said India has already shortened the negative list and will probably reduce more so that Bangladeshi products can get duty free access. In this context, he said, India has provided duty free access to 8 million pieces of readymade garment, of which Bangladesh has not used 60 percent or thereabout. He suggested that Bangladeshi exporters go to the Indian market and do a lot of advertising because there is no such presence of marketing and advertising of Bangladeshi products.

About his personal feeling prior to departure Pinak Ranjan said, "I am very satisfied, but my only regret is that I am not able to stay on for the visit of the Bangladesh prime minister next month as I am going to take my new diplomatic assignment. Now my successor who is coming here on 26th will have the honour …… and I shall surely watch with great interest from Bangkok."
 
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Essentially indian outgoing indian HC wanted to nullify 1974 boarder treaty and redraw border and hence statement "My suggestion is, let us draw the line along the places where status quo is imposed."

There is no mention of indian occupation of Talpatti island. No mention of indian violation and withdrawal of water from Teesta and Tipaimukh dam. No mention of killing hundreds of Bangladeshis.

Every Bangladeshis should ask what was the purpose of Dail Star interview??? Polishing Pinak Ranjan image???? Surely interview was not for Bangladesh interest. Shame on Daily Star and and mahfuz Anam gang.
 
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