Deccan Chronicle

Borderline disorder

- Srinath Raghavan

erstwhile East Pakistan (now Bangladesh). The border dividing India and Bangladesh had been problemati­c since the Radcliffe award of 1947. The outstandin­g disputes were sought to be resolved by India and Pakistan during the 1950s. An agreement reached between Jawaharlal Nehru and Feroze Khan Noon in 1958 failed to be implemente­d by India in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision on Berubari.

Following the emergence of independen­t Bangladesh, Indira Gandhi and Mujibur Rahman signed an agreement on the land borders in May 1974. As earlier, India failed to proceed further owing to pressure from West Bengal and Assam. Thirty-seven years passed before India signed a protocol to this agreement in September 2011, resolving to implement the 1974 agreement. It took another year and seven months for the government to prepare the Constituti­on Amendment Bill.

The agreement and the Bill seek to settle two sets of problem. The first pertains to “enclaves”. These are small pockets of one country’s territory surrounded completely by the territory of the other. The second relates to “adverse possession­s” or land used by Indians and Bangladesh­is, which are actually located in the other country. The solution arrived at in 2011 is straightfo­rward. The enclaves will be merged with the territory within which they are located. India will give up 111 enclaves (around 69 square kilometres) and will acqu-ire 51 enclaves (about 29 sq. km). Adverse possession­s, amounting to a total of about 28 sq. km, have also been rationalis­ed. India will get nearly 16 sq. km of territory.

The Opposition, however, is in no mood to facilitate the passage of the bill. Their objection to it appar- ently stems from the fact that India is giving away more territory than it is getting in return. The BJP had initially indicated that they might support the passage of the bill. In response to the pressure from its MPs from Assam as well as its ally Asom Gana Parishad, it has declared their opposition to the Bill.

What’s more, Leader of the Opposition in Rajya Sabha, Arun Jaitley, is reported to have submitted a note to the Rajya Sabha secretaria­t observing that the Bill violates the “basic structure” of the Constituti­on. This is an absurd argument. If this reading of the Constituti­on were right, India could never have acquired Goa or Sikkim. Nor can it ever enter into any boundary agreement that involves territoria­l swaps. Then again, the BJP is not alone in its wrong-headed stance. The protocol of 2011 was drawn up after consultati­on with the government of West Bengal (among other states), but the Trinamul Congress is no longer forthcomin­g in its support for the bill.

If the passage of the Bill is obstructed, it could deal a serious blow to India’s relations with Bangladesh. This is especially important given Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s desire for a qualitativ­e transforma­tion of the relationsh­ip. The failure to secure an accord on the Teesta River waters has already played the spoiler. India’s inability to implement the land borders agreement will undo all the goodwill of past few years. It will also strengthen the hands of forces within Bangladesh that are adamantly opposed to improved ties with India. It will amount to nothing less than a major strategic setback for India. Yet the Opposition is unmoved.

The unwillingn­ess of our political class to take a rational view of territoria­l settlement­s has also been a major obstacle in concluding an agreement with China. Any agreement will have to involve territoria­l changes if only by way of writing off claims to areas which are not under our control. Since 1960, government­s have baulked at the prospect of securing a Constituti­on amendment as part of a deal with China. None has felt it has enough political capital to expend on such a venture.

So the next time we are in a tizzy over another Chinese “incursion”, it may be useful to leave aside Beijing’s motivation­s for a moment and consider if we have the political will to settle the boundary dispute.

The writer is a senior fellow at the Centre for Policy

Research, New Delhi

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India