Published on 12:00 AM, September 13, 2020

Dhaka-Delhi connectivity positively impacts Bangladesh, India's north-east: Shringla

Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla. File photo

Indian Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla has said Bangladesh-India connectivity directly and positively impacts both India's North East and Bangladesh.

He said four of the six pre-1965 rail links between the two countries have been made operational, and work is underway on the remaining two.

The under-construction rail link between Haldibari in West Bengal and Chilahati in Bangladesh would revive the old Siliguri-Sealdah rail route through Bangladesh, taken by the Darjeeling Mail, Shringla said.

The Indian foreign secretary highlighted the connectivity issues while delivering the keynote address at a webinar on "Self-reliant India: Reimagining the North East India in terms of Employment and Skill" recently.

He said a new railway link between Akhaura in Bangladesh and Agartala and Tripura was under construction.

Nationals of the two countries cannot only travel on board the Maitree and Bandhan express to each other's countries, but also on buses plying between Shillong and Dhaka and between Agartala and Kolkata via Dhaka, he added.

"We are upgrading the infrastructure of land customs stations for enabling smooth cross-border movement of goods and people," Shringla said.

He said the potential of mutually beneficial resources and of generating common economic spaces was evident in another area -- energy.

Bangladesh currently imports 1,160 MW power through adjoining states in India, the Indian foreign secretary added.

"We are also looking at exporting the surplus hydropower potential of the North East to Bangladesh and Myanmar."

Shringla said there has been considerable augmentation of the inland water transport that links India's North East to Bangladesh.

He said 20 port townships are planned along the Brahmaputra and Barak river systems to enhance inland water connectivity. "This could galvanise multimodal linkages in the entire region."

Goods are trans-shipped to the North East through Ashuganj inland river port in Bangladesh and further through Akhaura-Agartala by road.

Recently, the first container of goods was moved from Kolkata to Agartala, using the newly-established India-Bangladesh agreement permitting the use of Chattogram port for India to transport goods to and from North East India.

A new waterway connecting Tripura to Bangladesh was also operationalised recently with the first ever export consignment from Bangladesh reaching Tripura through the waterway.

The Indian foreign secretary said a strong, stable and prosperous North East is key to building a self-reliant India.