Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Modi, Hasina sign 22 pacts, vow quick action on Teesta

- Jayanth Jacob

NEW DELHI: India announced a $5-billion loan to Bangladesh on Saturday and signed bilateral pacts to step up nuclear and defence cooperatio­n between the neighbours, though the contentiou­s Teesta water sharing-deal remained elusive.

The line of credit was the biggest offered to any country at one go by India and underlined New Delhi’s efforts to wean away Dhaka from China, the biggest supplier of defence equipment to Bangladesh for many years.

PM Narendra Modi kept hopes alive for early signing of the Teesta pact after a 90-minute meeting with his Bangladesh counterpar­t Sheikh Hasina, who is on a four-day visit to India, her first since the BJP government came to power. “I firmly believe that it is only my government and...your government, that can and will find an early solution to Teesta water sharing,” Modi said at a press briefing.

Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee was opposed to the pact which is seen as vital for millions of farmers in Bangladesh. A deal was aborted at the very last minute during former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s visit to Bangladesh in 2011.

In 2015, Modi signed a historic land border pact with Dhaka, removing a major irritant and infusing warmth between the two countries that share a 4,097 kilometre-long porous border.

While 22 pacts were signed on Saturday, the two countries are expected to sign another 12 business deals which would entail investment­s of $9 billion.

Out of the $5 billion credit, $4.5 billion is for infrastruc­ture such as roads, ports, airports and setting up power transmissi­on lines. The other $500 million is for buying defence equipment from India. This took India’s total line of credit to Bangladesh to $8 billion in the past six years.

“India has always stood for the prosperity of Bangladesh and its people,” Modi added.

“We want to build cooperatio­n in new areas, especially some high-technology areas that have a deeper connect with the youth in both our societies.”

The Prime Minister also said both sides agreed that peace, security and developmen­t for people of the two countries and for the region will remain central engagement between the two neighbours.

On her part, Hasina said her government will take all necessary steps to ensure peace and security along the Indo-Bangla border and asserted that there will be zero-tolerance against terror. Her comments came amid a spate of attacks on the Hindu community in Bangladesh.

Later at a function, Hasina honoured 1,661 Indian soldiers killed during the Bangladesh’s war of liberation from Pakistan. India’s interventi­on on behalf of Bangladesh’s independen­ce fighters proved decisive in that conflict.

 ?? AP ?? PM Narendra Modi with Bangladesh counterpar­t Sheikh Hasina and West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee in New Delhi on Saturday.
AP PM Narendra Modi with Bangladesh counterpar­t Sheikh Hasina and West Bengal CM Mamata Banerjee in New Delhi on Saturday.

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