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Why do Bangladeshis go to India?

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Why do Bangladeshis go to India?

Muhammad Fouzul Kabir Khan
Published: 23 Apr 2021, 06:55

[IMG alt="Why do Bangladeshis go to India?

"]https://images.prothomalo.com/prothomalo-english/2021-04/97c1e9da-c2b3-4c26-96f3-f84d85cafbee/India.jpg?auto=format,compress&format=webp&w=400&dpr=3.0[/IMG]

Some 1.5 million Bangladeshis were issued Indian visas during normal times in 2019. This is 20 per cent of all visas issued to foreigners to enter India and the highest among all Indian missions abroad. Yet even just a few years ago, around 600,000 to 700,000 visas were issued. So Bangladeshis are going to India, whether out of necessity or otherwise. The number has been increasing in recent times. The natural question that arises is, why do Bangladeshis go there?

Amit Shah's comment

Indian home minister and former president of BJP, Amit Shah, has claimed, "The poor people of Bangladesh still do not get food."


He made this claim in a recent interview with Anandabazar Patrika. It was no slip the of tongue and he went on to elaborated the matter. Anandabazar Patrika asked him, "Bangladesh has seen massive economic achievement over the past 10 to 15 years, so why are people infiltrating West Bengal from there?" In reply, Amit Shah said, "There are two reasons for this. One, the development of Bangladesh has not reached to the backward border-lying areas. When the development begins in an economically backward country, it starts at the centre. And the benefit reaches to the rich people, not to the poor. Now that process is going on in Bangladesh. As a result the people are unable to eat. So the infiltration is taking place."

Statement of Riva Ganguly

According to former Indian high commissioner Riva Ganguly Das, India is being benefited economically by the large number of Bangladeshis visiting India. Bangladeshis go to India for Eid and wedding shopping and for business purpose. Owners of shopping malls and hotels in India were distraught when travel was disrupted for Bangladeshis visiting to India due to the outbreak of coronavirus.


Bangladeshis also go to India for medical treatment, studies and tourism. India recently started issuing medical visas despite suspension of other visas as a section of Indian hospitals and hotels in the adjacent areas fully depends on Bangladeshi patients. India earns around USD5 billion in foreign exchange from these sectors if Bangladeshi tourists spend an estimated cost of USD2,000 per person for more several trips and stays.

Classification of migration

People leave and migrate to other countries for various purposes including better economic opportunities, political repression and studies. Some of them migrate as permanent residents for citizenship. Others go on temporary migration. They return after their studies, medical treatment and trips. Bangladeshis go to India for specific purposes.

As under the National Register of Citizens of India and the amendment of citizenship act, non-Muslim citizens from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan are entitled to obtain citizenship.

Taking advantage of this opportunity, a small number of non-Muslim Bangladeshis have siphoned off their legal and illegal money to India and they are settling down in different towns and residential areas there including Salt Lake of Kolkata.

Political economy of migration

There are some push and pull factors behind migration. Unemployment, inadequate healthcare facilities, political and religious repression, damage of property, natural calamities and lack of marriage opportunities can push people to go abroad.

On the other hand, employment opportunities, high living standards, education, health facilities, security, family connections and marriage opportunities pull people abroad.

These reasons clearly indicate there are no reasons for Bangladeshis to migrate to India permanently.

But there are many reasons for Bangladeshis to migrate to India temporarily. Of the reasons, Bangladeshis go to India for better treatment, studies, tourism and shopping.

We should keep in mind that many middle class and even lower middle class people are compelled to undergo medical treatment and education abroad, and they also go abroad for tourism and shopping. The people who go to India for these services say the quality of services is better there and cost-effective. So if the quality of services can be enhanced and the expenditure reduced here, temporary migration to India will decrease to a great extent.

What should be done

Let us consider medical treatment and education. A gloomy picture of low quality and inadequate facilities of medical treatment surfaced clearly during the coronavirus pandemic. Private and public investment has to be increased. Pilferage and wastage have to be reduced in the government investment.

Different economic zones are being built.
Some of these can be selected for the investment of health and education. The purpose of this would be to stop people from going abroad.

We have to keep in mind that the amount Bangladeshi citizens spend in these sectors would be recovered in two to three years. We have to invest not only in infrastructure but also in human resource development. An environment has to be created so that qualified physicians, teachers and technologists stay in the country.

Let us take shopping and tourism into consideration. High prices are a problem here. Saris and other items of clothing the main items for Bangladeshis to buy from India. The apparel industry for local market is neglected due to attention focused on the export-oriented RMG sector. Textile mills have to be made dependent on local market. Small industries of this sector have to be given incentive.


Then again, a pinch of patriotism needs to be added. I recall visiting the shawl stalls during breaks in SAFTA trade negotiations in Kathmandu. The Indian delegation leader Meera Shankar was with us (later she became the Indian ambassador to USA). She looked at the shawls, asked the price but did not buy a single one. On the other hand, we bought many. I feel ashamed, in retrospect. We should follow policy 'Be local, buy local.'

Visiting various parts of India, it seems to me that Muslims and Bangalees are the most deprived communities after Dalits in India. The majority people of Bangladesh have these two identities. So such remarks by Indian rulers about Bangladesh are unwarranted.

Some believe such remarks are political, delivered for the elections in the West Bengal. This is not right. Large numbers of Indians have this attitude. The main reason of this is sociological. This is clear in the novel 'A Fine Balance' by expatriate Indian writer Rohinton Mistry.

There is reason for us to feel smug by the fact that most Indians defecate in open spaces or to be enraged by the remarks of Amit Shah.

We should simply adopt the measures as discussed, to rein in the visits of so many people to India.

*This article, originally published in Prothom Alo print and online editions, has been rewritten in English by Rabiul Islam.

 
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As in any other country, BD has a high-income group, a real middle class, and a marginalized group.

- The first group visits India, Bangkok, or Singapore for medical treatment. This group also visits India to see Tajmahal, Old Delhi, Kutub Minar, Ajmer Sharif, etc. I have some rich friends who usually visit places like Darjeeling for sightseeing.

- The second group visits India only for medical treatment.

- The third group consisting of the poor and lower-middle-class has no means to visit another country. I know some farmers to visit there by selling land properties though. The purpose is medical treatment.

There is no way a poorer BD guy would visit India to get a job when Indians themselves cry for jobs. Rather, it is the borderland Indians who get into BD to do seasonal works during the harvest time.

It happens because many young people in Kumilla or Noakhali work in foreign countries that create a shortage of hands during the harvest. Indians in those border areas including Sherpur in the north of Mymensingh regularly come as farm helpers during the harvest.

Both BGB and BSF look the other way when these Indians trespass the BD border because the BD farming community needs them and the Indians need employment.

Yet, this Amit Shah the Cockroach is making a baseless claim that BD sends its poor people to that very poor entity called India/Bharat/Hindustan. It is the other way.
 
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Well Medical tourism I understand, it may be a life saving thing and necessary.

But shopping is a frigging disease. Those afflicted are susceptible to fake calls of "50% off - only today".

No man anywhere in the world has cured their female near and dear ones from it. Sooner or later all women fall prey to it.

iu
 
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Taking advantage of this opportunity, a small number of non-Muslim Bangladeshis have siphoned off their legal and illegal money to India and they are settling down in different towns and residential areas there including Salt Lake of Kolkata.
This is an open secret in Bangladesh everybody knows but very few want to acknowledge. I have made a thread in the last year highlighting this problem. Many have fled to India after embezzling many crores of Taka loan.

Bangladesh: Prashanta Kumar Halder flees with Tk 35 billion($416 million)
 
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Prashanta Kumar Halder and many have fled the country with money to India. Yet, this BAL Chamcha govt of India is unable to catch the fugitives and bring them back to the country. It does not say a single word that displeases Hasina's mentor, India.

I heard he has fled to Canada and not India. When Hasina Bibi's govt speaks loudly to get back the killers of Mujib, it says nothing of these financial fugitives.

On the other hand, many Banks may go bankrupt due to many BAL cronies' acts of Bank thievery with internal connivance. After all, Halder was a BAL activist. He was stronger than others because he is a great Hindu.

The law on Bankruptcy says only an amount of Taka100,000 can be paid to a depositor in case of bankruptcy. How horrible is the situation!! You keep Taka 10 million and get back only1 lakh.

BAL Rajar Deshe Hasina Bibi Montri!! Bank vaults are empty because of stealing and forced govt borrowing. No doubt, BD will be a highly developed country in 2041!! Keep on dreaming, guys.
 
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Well Medical tourism I understand, it may be a life saving thing and necessary.

But shopping is a frigging disease. Those afflicted are susceptible to fake calls of "50% off - only today".

No man anywhere in the world has cured their female near and dear ones from it. Sooner or later all women fall prey to it.

iu

I am a man, but I confess that I love shopping for vinyl records :P

And medical tourism?

So is it a common thing to go up to India for certain medical technologies?
 
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Why do Bangladeshis go to India?

Muhammad Fouzul Kabir Khan
Published: 23 Apr 2021, 06:55

[IMG alt="Why do Bangladeshis go to India?

"]https://images.prothomalo.com/prothomalo-english/2021-04/97c1e9da-c2b3-4c26-96f3-f84d85cafbee/India.jpg?auto=format,compress&format=webp&w=400&dpr=3.0[/IMG]

Some 1.5 million Bangladeshis were issued Indian visas during normal times in 2019. This is 20 per cent of all visas issued to foreigners to enter India and the highest among all Indian missions abroad. Yet even just a few years ago, around 600,000 to 700,000 visas were issued. So Bangladeshis are going to India, whether out of necessity or otherwise. The number has been increasing in recent times. The natural question that arises is, why do Bangladeshis go there?

Amit Shah's comment

Indian home minister and former president of BJP, Amit Shah, has claimed, "The poor people of Bangladesh still do not get food."


He made this claim in a recent interview with Anandabazar Patrika. It was no slip the of tongue and he went on to elaborated the matter. Anandabazar Patrika asked him, "Bangladesh has seen massive economic achievement over the past 10 to 15 years, so why are people infiltrating West Bengal from there?" In reply, Amit Shah said, "There are two reasons for this. One, the development of Bangladesh has not reached to the backward border-lying areas. When the development begins in an economically backward country, it starts at the centre. And the benefit reaches to the rich people, not to the poor. Now that process is going on in Bangladesh. As a result the people are unable to eat. So the infiltration is taking place."

Statement of Riva Ganguly

According to former Indian high commissioner Riva Ganguly Das, India is being benefited economically by the large number of Bangladeshis visiting India. Bangladeshis go to India for Eid and wedding shopping and for business purpose. Owners of shopping malls and hotels in India were distraught when travel was disrupted for Bangladeshis visiting to India due to the outbreak of coronavirus.


Bangladeshis also go to India for medical treatment, studies and tourism. India recently started issuing medical visas despite suspension of other visas as a section of Indian hospitals and hotels in the adjacent areas fully depends on Bangladeshi patients. India earns around USD5 billion in foreign exchange from these sectors if Bangladeshi tourists spend an estimated cost of USD2,000 per person for more several trips and stays.

Classification of migration

People leave and migrate to other countries for various purposes including better economic opportunities, political repression and studies. Some of them migrate as permanent residents for citizenship. Others go on temporary migration. They return after their studies, medical treatment and trips. Bangladeshis go to India for specific purposes.

As under the National Register of Citizens of India and the amendment of citizenship act, non-Muslim citizens from Bangladesh, Pakistan and Afghanistan are entitled to obtain citizenship.

Taking advantage of this opportunity, a small number of non-Muslim Bangladeshis have siphoned off their legal and illegal money to India and they are settling down in different towns and residential areas there including Salt Lake of Kolkata.

Political economy of migration

There are some push and pull factors behind migration. Unemployment, inadequate healthcare facilities, political and religious repression, damage of property, natural calamities and lack of marriage opportunities can push people to go abroad.

On the other hand, employment opportunities, high living standards, education, health facilities, security, family connections and marriage opportunities pull people abroad.

These reasons clearly indicate there are no reasons for Bangladeshis to migrate to India permanently.

But there are many reasons for Bangladeshis to migrate to India temporarily. Of the reasons, Bangladeshis go to India for better treatment, studies, tourism and shopping.

We should keep in mind that many middle class and even lower middle class people are compelled to undergo medical treatment and education abroad, and they also go abroad for tourism and shopping. The people who go to India for these services say the quality of services is better there and cost-effective. So if the quality of services can be enhanced and the expenditure reduced here, temporary migration to India will decrease to a great extent.

What should be done

Let us consider medical treatment and education. A gloomy picture of low quality and inadequate facilities of medical treatment surfaced clearly during the coronavirus pandemic. Private and public investment has to be increased. Pilferage and wastage have to be reduced in the government investment.

Different economic zones are being built.
Some of these can be selected for the investment of health and education. The purpose of this would be to stop people from going abroad.

We have to keep in mind that the amount Bangladeshi citizens spend in these sectors would be recovered in two to three years. We have to invest not only in infrastructure but also in human resource development. An environment has to be created so that qualified physicians, teachers and technologists stay in the country.

Let us take shopping and tourism into consideration. High prices are a problem here. Saris and other items of clothing the main items for Bangladeshis to buy from India. The apparel industry for local market is neglected due to attention focused on the export-oriented RMG sector. Textile mills have to be made dependent on local market. Small industries of this sector have to be given incentive.


Then again, a pinch of patriotism needs to be added. I recall visiting the shawl stalls during breaks in SAFTA trade negotiations in Kathmandu. The Indian delegation leader Meera Shankar was with us (later she became the Indian ambassador to USA). She looked at the shawls, asked the price but did not buy a single one. On the other hand, we bought many. I feel ashamed, in retrospect. We should follow policy 'Be local, buy local.'

Visiting various parts of India, it seems to me that Muslims and Bangalees are the most deprived communities after Dalits in India. The majority people of Bangladesh have these two identities. So such remarks by Indian rulers about Bangladesh are unwarranted.

Some believe such remarks are political, delivered for the elections in the West Bengal. This is not right. Large numbers of Indians have this attitude. The main reason of this is sociological. This is clear in the novel 'A Fine Balance' by expatriate Indian writer Rohinton Mistry.

There is reason for us to feel smug by the fact that most Indians defecate in open spaces or to be enraged by the remarks of Amit Shah.

We should simply adopt the measures as discussed, to rein in the visits of so many people to India.

*This article, originally published in Prothom Alo print and online editions, has been rewritten in English by Rabiul Islam.


no problem with legal travellers , problem is with illegal bangladeshis . they are allover india . we are doing our best to identify and expell them . even 35000 rohangias sneeked in alongwith bangladeshis , they reached up to jammu .
 
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This thread help me understand the beef, pardon the pun, between our enemy and the frenemy.
 
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no problem with legal travellers , problem is with illegal bangladeshis . they are allover india . we are doing our best to identify and expell them . even 35000 rohangias sneeked in alongwith bangladeshis , they reached up to jammu .
Whoever Muslim is in India are all from Bangladesh, especially those who are in west Bengal. But, what your BSF is doing, cutting grass to feed the horses?

11 lakh Bangladeshis visit your great India every year to enrich your country by doing shopping. Show some gratitude. Many businesses now cry because our people cannot go and do the shopping as before.
 
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Whoever Muslim is in India are all from Bangladesh, especially those who are in west Bengal. But, what your BSF is doing, cutting grass to feed the horses?

11 lakh Bangladeshis visit your great India every year to enrich your country by doing shopping. Show some gratitude. Many businesses now cry because our people cannot go and do the shopping as before.

25 lakh
 
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Well Medical tourism I understand, it may be a life saving thing and necessary.

But shopping is a frigging disease. Those afflicted are susceptible to fake calls of "50% off - only today".

No man anywhere in the world has cured their female near and dear ones from it. Sooner or later all women fall prey to it.

iu

they're making wise consumer choices.
 
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no problem with legal travellers , problem is with illegal bangladeshis . they are allover india . we are doing our best to identify and expell them . even 35000 rohangias sneeked in alongwith bangladeshis , they reached up to jammu .
There is no large scale illegal Bangladeshi migration in India. Whom you suspect to be illegal Bangladeshi are actually your countrymen from other parts of India. One of the most peculiar thing about you Indians is that, most of you are totally ignorant about your compatriots from other side of your country. That's why any Bengali speaking Muslim from West Bengal and Assam to you is illegal Bangladeshi, any East Asian looking person from seven sisters states regularly branded as 'Chinese' by you. Whom you suspect to be 'illegal Bangladeshis'' , upon verification, 99.9% of times it reveals that they are Indians from other states or even people from same state but came from few hundreds km away. Perhaps you should not feel so proud about the diversity thing of India while remaining that ignorant about your those diversity.


'Bangaldeshi Migrants' Evicted in Bengaluru Demolition Were From the Northeast, Karnataka
The residents were in possession of valid identity cards including Aadhaar, pan and voter ID, and those from Assam also showed that their names figured in the NRC.

“People living in these sheds are from this country only, there are people from North Karnataka, North India and North East India. They all have their documents, but since we were issued a notice by the police, we evicted them,” said Chethan Babu, the land owner.

 
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Being a bengali, I don't mind at all. Keep visiting and bring me some ilish if you can please. We have to pay 1500+ per KG here and even then we don't get it often.
 
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There is no large scale illegal Bangladeshi migration in India. Whom you suspect to be illegal Bangladeshi are actually your countrymen from other parts of India. One of the most peculiar thing about you Indians is that, most of you are totally ignorant about your compatriots from other side of your country. That's why any Bengali speaking Muslim from West Bengal and Assam to you is illegal Bangladeshi, any East Asian looking person from seven sisters states regularly branded as 'Chinese' by you. Whom you suspect to be 'illegal Bangladeshis'' , upon verification, 99.9% of times it reveals that they are Indians from other states or even people from same state but came from few hundreds km away. Perhaps you should not feel so proud about the diversity thing of India while remaining that ignorant about your those diversity.


'Bangaldeshi Migrants' Evicted in Bengaluru Demolition Were From the Northeast, Karnataka
The residents were in possession of valid identity cards including Aadhaar, pan and voter ID, and those from Assam also showed that their names figured in the NRC.

“People living in these sheds are from this country only, there are people from North Karnataka, North India and North East India. They all have their documents, but since we were issued a notice by the police, we evicted them,” said Chethan Babu, the land owner.


WIRE is anti hindu propaganda on internet only muslims read it .
these illegal bangladeshis have better identity cards than local residents . criminals work meticulously
yes we know such imposters with fake adhar and voter id , all of them are thoroughly examined and sent back to jail or back to bangladesh .
 
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Whoever Muslim is in India are all from Bangladesh, especially those who are in west Bengal. But, what your BSF is doing, cutting grass to feed the horses?

11 lakh Bangladeshis visit your great India every year to enrich your country by doing shopping. Show some gratitude. Many businesses now cry because our people cannot go and do the shopping as before.

what nonsense 11lakh bangalis visit india in a year ? they can contribute hardly a drop in ocean as far as indian economy is concerned , there are malls in my city which have more than 11 lakh visitors which actually do purchase there .
 
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