Political Crisis in Bangladesh to hit Indo-Bangla Railway Link project
Dhaka: The current political turmoil
in Bangladesh is likely to delay the execution of a new rail link
between India and its neighbour, officials said Wednesday. “At a meeting
in Dhaka Tuesday, the Bangladesh railway ministry officials indicated
that it was difficult for them to complete the necessary survey and to
start the actual work before the Jan 5 general elections,” a top Indian
railway official, who did not want to be named, told IANS.
“However, the
Bangladesh railway ministry would start the initial work and prepare
the DPP (detailed project proposal) by February next year,” the official
added. The steering committee of the Agartala-Akhaurah railway project
had met to discuss early completion of the 15-km railway link. The 8
member Indian delegation was led by joint secretary in the railways
ministry, A.K.Sinha, while the Bangladesh side was headed by joint
secretary (development and infrastructure), railways, Sunil Chandra
Paul. Tripura’s Transport Secretary Kishore Ambuly, who was also a
member of the Indian delegation, said that the Northeast Frontier
Railways (NFR) would lay the 15-km railway line on both sides of the
border and IRCON (Indian Railway Construction Company) would be the
project’s consultant. Earlier, it was planned that IRCON would construct
the new railway lines. While five kms of the track would be laid by
IRCON, the remaining 10 km track would be constructed by the Bangladesh
Rail as decided in a bilateral meeting held in Dhaka on
Tuesday. Earlier, it was decided that the entire rail link would be laid
by IRCON at an estimated cost of Rs 386 crore. However, the Tuesday
meeting decided that Bangladesh Rail authority will undertake the
construction work in its territory. While briefing the media, Transport
Secretary Kishore Ambuly said the land acquisition process from
Agartala (India) to Gangasagar (Bangladesh) is expected to get completed
by December itself. After completion of the land acquisition, a
Detailed Project Proposal (DPP) would be sent to the competent authority
for the final nod, he said adding that the actual work would begin by
February next. Though he did not say anything on the recent unrest in
Bangladesh, there are apprehensions that the project might get delayed
due to the political uncertainty in the neighbouring country.
“It was also decided that by February
next year the Bangladesh railway authority and IRCON would separately
prepare the detailed project proposals (DPR) before starting the actual
work,” Ambuly told IANS. The next meeting of the steering committee
would be held in Agartala in March next year. The new rail link would
connect Agartala, one of the newest stations of the Indian Railways
which came up on the country’s rail map in October 2008, with
Bangladesh’s southeastern city of Akhaurah – an important railway
junction connected to Chittagong port, resource-rich Sylhet and Dhaka.
It would ease ferrying of goods to mountainous northeastern states from
the rest of India and abroad via Bangladesh. Surface connectivity is an
important factor as the landlocked northeastern states are surrounded by
Bangladesh, Myanmar, Bhutan and China and the only land route to these
states from within India is through Assam and West Bengal. But this
route passes through hilly terrain with steep roads and multiple hairpin
bends. For ferrying goods and heavy machinery to the northeast from
abroad and other parts of the country, India has for long been seeking
land, sea and rail access through Bangladesh. Agartala, for instance, is
1,650 km from Kolkata and 2,637 km from New Delhi via Guwahati and West
Bengal, whereas the distance between the Tripura capital and Kolkata
through Bangladesh is just about 350 km. The agreement for the new
railway line, which will lie five km in Indian territory and the rest in
Bangladesh, was signed between Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his
Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Hasina during her visit to India in
January 2010. “Preliminary survey and alignment of the railway tracks
have been completed. We expect the work for the vital railway line would
start first part of next year,” said Ambuly, who returned here
Wednesday. “The total cost of the proposed project is estimated at
Rs.253 crore. The entire expenditure would be borne by the Indian
government,” the official added. The NFR is now laying tracks to connect
Tripura’s southern-most border town – Sabroom, 135 km south of here.
From Sabroom, Chittagong port is just 72 km.
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