Published on 12:00 AM, December 06, 2014

Narendra Modi bites the bullet

Narendra Modi bites the bullet

IN telling the BJP workers in Assam that India will go ahead with the ratification of the land boundary agreement with Bangladesh, Prime Minister Narendra Modi has put the imperatives of national interest above the regional populism of his own party.

The 119th amendment bill was placed in the Rajya Sabha late last year amidst vociferous opposition from the Trinamool Congress of Bengal and the Asom Gana Parishad (AGP) in Assam. While the national leadership of the BJP did not oppose the tabling of the bill, it signaled ambivalence given the opposition from the party unit in Assam.

Much of the debate in Bengal and Assam about the agreement has been ill-informed. Delhi and Dhaka rightly decided to exchange these enclaves after a survey of opinion in these enclaves -- India would 'cede' 111 enclaves amounting to about 17,160 acres and 'gain' 57 enclaves spread over 7,110 acres from the other. The loss and gain of territory here is entirely notional for neither side was in control of these enclaves that they owned in theory since 1947. The overwhelming sentiment among people trapped in these enclaves is to stay put where they are rather than move to the other country.

While the Congress government in Assam supported the agreement, the Trinamool, AGP and the BJP played political football by raising concerns about 'loss' of territory.

Modi affirmed that the territorial swap with Bangladesh is in the interests of the nation. He also promised the people of Assam that Delhi will address their concerns on illegal immigration from Bangladesh. By framing an argument that limits the tension between 'national' and 'regional' interests, Modi has set the stage for the parliament's approval of the 119th Constitution Amendment Bill.

The standing committee on external affairs had recently cleared the Bill and the government is expected to seek approval of the two houses. India's ratification of this agreement will mark a comprehensive territorial settlement of its longest land border. At 4,060 km, India's boundary with Bangladesh is longer than those with China and Pakistan.

Having a settled boundary will now allow Delhi and Dhaka to consider effective management the border -- through more intensive cooperation on countering terrorism and extremism, facilitating trade across this long frontier, building trans-border industrial corridors and preventing illegal movement of people.

Constructing a border of cooperation with Bangladesh should liberate India from one of major geopolitical constraints imposed on it by the Partition of Bengal. When he travels to Dhaka in the near future, Modi will be in a position to unveil a genuine strategic partnership with Bangladesh.

The writer is a distinguished fellow at the Observer Research Foundation and a contributing editor for The Indian Express.

© The Indian Express. This is a slightly abridged version of the original article.