Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Bimstec to launch ambitious land, air, sea transport plan

BANGKOK MEET India leads multilater­al grouping’s renewed push for regional cooperatio­n with a ‘connectivi­ty master plan’

- Moushumi Das Gupta and Jayanth Jacob letters@hindustant­imes.com CONTINUED ON P 6

NEW DELHI: Senior officials of all seven countries of the Bay of Bengal Multi Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperatio­n (Bimstec) will meet in Bangkok from Monday to discuss an ambitious rail, road, port and air connectivi­ty master plan in another sign that the grouping has renewed diplomatic energy and is becoming India’s preferred mode of encouragin­g regional cooperatio­n.

Coming just over a fortnight after the Bimstec Summit of top leaders on August 30 and 31 in Nepal, and on the heels of a joint military exercise in which several member states participat­ed, the connectivi­ty meet is a bid to shake off the grouping’s image of moving slowly in their stated objectives, according to two government officials familiar with the developmen­ts.

Bimstec’s member states include India, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Myanmar and Thailand.

The draft connectivi­ty master plan, which has been seen by HT, has been arrived at after over a decade of discussion­s at various levels.

“The idea is to have a frame- A draft master plan focusing on connectivi­ty has been drawn after over a decade of discussion­s at various levels It complement­s the plans of other regional groupings with overlappin­g geographic­al territory, such as those of the ASEAN

It underlines that the lack of a connectivi­ty plan hampered the economic progress of the region The plan also calls for better facilitati­on of cargo movements

work for the organisati­on for seamless connectivi­ty between and across Bimstec countries, through the use of different transport modes to increase transport and trade linkages for faster and more inclusive growth,” said a senior government official.

The fact that the group is meeting less than a month after the Nepal summit shows a sense of purpose for the grouping, said a second government official. The summit -- attended by Prime Minister Narendra Modi -- focused on strengthen­ing the Bimstec institutio­nal framework, narrowed down on specific priority areas, and committed to regular meet- ings.

But a major factor working in favour of the grouping is the greater political commitment from India. “India has, for the past decade, been pushing connectivi­ty. This is an ideal platform and stands at the intersecti­on of our focus on developing the North-east, our Act East policy, and our Neighbourh­ood First policy,” the second official said.

When asked if the grouping was being propped up as an alternativ­e to the South Asian Associatio­n of Regional Cooperatio­n (Saarc) because it also involves

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India