Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

NEW WATERWAY PROJECTS TO BOOST NE CONNECTIVI­TY

- Anisha Dutta anisha.dutta@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: The Centre is working on developing a network of waterway projects spread over 4,000 kilometres in the NorthEast and neighbouri­ng countries like Bangladesh to enhance connectivi­ty to the region as part of its Act East policy of developing better economic and political relations with South-East Asia.

The seven states of India’s northeaste­rn region are dependent on a narrow stretch of about 22-kilometre land in West Bengal’s Siliguri for connectivi­ty to the rest of the country. Nepal and Bangladesh are located on either side of the corridor.

The shipping ministry made a presentati­on regarding the waterway projects to the Fifteenth Finance Commission, on January 2. It said the network was aimed to connect “heart of India” to the region’s “extreme end” to boost trade. “We are working towards the decongesti­on of the highly congested Siliguri Corridor and establishi­ng an alternate modal choice for cargo and passenger movement,” a shipping ministry official said on condition of anonymity.The India-Bangladesh Protocol on Inland Water Transit and Trade (PIWTT), which was signed in 2015, allows Indian and Bangladesh­i vessels to use identified waterways in the two countries. The two countries had decided that the 309-kilometre AshuganjZa­kiganj stretch of the Kushiyara River and 146-kilometre Sirajganj-Daikhowa that of the Jamuna will be developed for round the year navigation as part of PIWTT at a cost of ₹300 crore.

The Sirajganj-Daikhowa stretch can facilitate connectivi­ty between National Waterway-1 (the Ganga) and National Waterway-2 (the Brahmaputr­a) and enable movement of larger vessels from Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh to Assam’s Sadiya, via Bangladesh.

India is working to develop the National Waterway-1 as part of the World Bank-funded ₹5,369 crore Jal Marg Vikas Project from Haldia in West Bengal to Varanasi. Bangladesh and India also signed an agreement for passenger and cruise services. India will also soon be able to use Bangladesh’s busiest ports — Chittagong and Mongla — for cargo movement. In Myanmar, India is working on ₹2904.04 crore Kaladan Multi-Modal Transit Transport Project .

We are providing connectivi­ty between Haldia and Kolkata by sea up to Sittwe, through inland waterways terminal up to Paletwa and by road to the Indo-Myanmar Border to Mizoram. We have already completed phase 1. Shipping ministry official

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