Railway Lines along International Borders to strengthen India’s Sovereignty & Security
New Delhi: With China all set to
pump on another $1.2 billion in its Tibetan Rail Project which will
bring rail connectivity right up to the Indian border, India too is
getting ready to beef up its border security. On the agenda are 14
strategic rail lines along its borders with China and Pakistan. However,
while these rail lines are critical to meeting India’s security
challenges, want of funds could delay these ambitious projects which are
expected to cost more than Rs.78000 crore.
Some of these lines were planned a
hundred years ago but have not seen any development. Surveys for two of
the 14 lines are still to be completed and cost of four lines yet to be
estimated. The main hurdle has been the absence of a cost-sharing
agreement between the various ministries involved.
In December 2012, Defence Minister
A.K.Antony had in the Lok Sabha described these 14 lines as being
strategically important for national security. The rail lines, planned
in accordance with inputs from the Defence Ministry, are to be laid in
the border areas of Punjab, Rajasthan, Arunachal Pradesh and Jammu &
Kashmir.
The three lines planned in Rajasthan are
crucial for the movement of troops and artillery to the border. “The
terrain of Rajasthan is suited for mechanised warfare. But some tracks
in the state are still [the ageing and archaic] meter gauge, with single
lines. Doubling [the tracks] in the Jodhpur-Jaisalmer area will save
the time required to move supplies,” says Brig (retd) Rumel Dahiya,
Deputy Director General at the Institute of Defence Studies &
Analyses. “If you have a broad gauge rail line in the border areas, you
can move tanks and heavy artillery without noise and dust,” he adds.
Experts say that enhanced connectivity can save up to two days’ of
travel time. The Patti-Ferozepur track in Punjab, for example, will
reduce the time taken to supply goods to border areas, like Tarn-Taran
district, by about 12 hours. The line will run parallel to the border
and will enhance the strategic mobility and flexibility in employment of
troops,” says Dahiya.
Moving to Uttarakhand, four lines are
planned here in the difficult Himalayan terrain. Official sources say
that work has started on the 160-km Hrishikesh-Karnaprayag-Chamoli line
and that the Rail Vikas Nigam Limited, which has undertaken the task, is
currently awaiting environmental clearances for the initial 12-km
stretch. RVNL has submitted details of the line alignment to the state
government and Railway Board for approval.
One of the most expensive lines –
expected to cost about Rs 19, 108 crore – is the 378-km-long
Missamari-Tawang link which will connect areas of Arunachal Pradesh,
disputed by China, with Assam. With the Chinese aggressively building
infrastructure on the other side close to the border, this line becomes
crucially important. “Chinese infrastructure projects have grave
strategic implications for India and are a significant leg of the
overall Chinese recalibration in South Asia,” says Monika Chansoria,
senior fellow at the Centre for Land and Warfare Studies (CLAW) in
Delhi. “This extensive development of infrastructure in areas bordering
India suggests the impetus being given to the People’s Liberation Army’s
logistics capability, which, in turn, will enhance its operational
capability in these areas – some of which are in dispute with India,”
Chansoria adds. Experts also point out that the road network in
Arunachal Pradesh and the rest of the Northeast is on the ridges running
from north to south. There is almost no connectivity from east to west,
which increases the distances three-times.
The Akhnoor-Poonch line, meanwhile,
would create a parallel network along the border with Pakistan and
enhance connectivity near the Line of Control with Pakistan.
Of the 14 lines, preliminary survey for
10 has been completed, but work has begun on only two. This is despite
the fact that these rail lines have been declared national projects.
Funding is expected from the finance ministry. Railways had earlier
expressed its inability to fund any of these projects.
Apart from the Hrishikesh-Karnaprayag
line, work on the 30-km stretch of the Murkongselek-Pasighat segment has
been started by North Frontier Railways. Government officials who are
part of the project point out that this segment is a flat track and that
the real challenges lies ahead, in the rest of the track from Tezu to
Rupai. The cost of the 30-km stretch is expected to be around Rs 10
crore per km.
Official sources say that recently the
Uttarakhand chief minister had asked for the projects in the state to be
speeded up, but the cost involved is proving to be a hurdle. Sources in
the Planning Commission say that “unfortunately” these projects are not
on the priority list for funding. “Although we understand that these
projects cannot be placed in the same category as other projects, but
there is currently no consensus on resource allocation,” says a senior
official in the Planning Commission.
Other officials maintain that these
projects need to be phased out. “We are in consultation with the defence
ministry so that it can identify the priority projects. A cost-sharing
formula also has to be agreed on between the ministries of defence and
finance and the Planning Commission,” says an official.
A final location survey might also be
needed before funds for the projects are allocated. “Usually, the
project gets the money after the preliminary survey, but in this case,
keeping the cost escalations in mind, we might want to have a detailed
project report first,” says an official.
Apart from the costs, the tough terrain
also poses a challenge. Experts say India does not have any experience
of building rail tracks at high altitude and in tough terrains like
those in the Himalayas.
There is no good news with regard to
road construction either. The Cabinet Committee on Security had set the
deadline of 2012 for the completion of 73 key road projects which were
classified as India-China Border Roads.
The defence ministry has been pushing
for faster construction of these 73 roads that can be used around the
year and can sustain harsh weather conditions. About 15 of them have
been completed till now. A study done by CLAW points out that the
construction of roads in the Northeast has been put under the Special
Accelerated Road Development Programme for the North East. The project,
divided into two phases, will undertake the construction of 1,300 km in
the first phase and 5,700 km in the second. The deadline is 2013. About
36 out of these 73 roads are in Arunachal Pradesh, given its proximity
to China.
The worry is not without reason. China
has built a network of integrated highways and subsidiary/feeder roads
that connect the Tibet Autonomous Region to border areas with India,
Nepal and Bhutan. It has developed 58,000 km of road network in Tibet,
which includes five major highways and subsidiary roads, says a study by
CLAW.
The Yunnan-Tibet highway holds strategic
importance for India, as the Chinese army is currently building an
eastern theater opposite to that of India. China is also heavily
investing in border areas by constructing new airfields and upgrading
new advanced landing grounds. “The construction of airfields and
advanced landing grounds closer to Indian borders boosts the PLA Air
Force (PLAAF) fighter aircrafts’ striking range and provides PLAAF the
ability to strike and engage targets in India on a broad front and in
depth,” says Chansoria.
Delay from the Indian side to boost the
infrastructure will have long-term effects on India’s overall bargaining
power, especially with China, says a former defence officer on the
condition of anonymity. A study has also revealed that low
infrastructure development also makes India “more vulnerable to
manipulation of river water”. In 2004, after China informed India that
an artificial lake had formed on Pareechu river, a tributary of Sutlej,
India was denied the permission to assess the causes of its formation,
causing suspicion that the lake was man-made.
Dahiya points out that poor
infrastructure also leaves out the emotional integration of people. “It
makes people disconnected and gives the enemy a chance to fuel local
unrest and take advantage of the situation.”
The rail links, assert experts and
defence officials, are fundamentally important to national security as
we already lose out on the competition with China.
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