The Borneo Post

India’s first bullet train project fast-tracks Japanese ties

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AHMEDABAD, India: Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe yesterday inaugurate­d India’s first bullet train project – a US$19 billion line in the home state of Indian leader Narendra Modi intended to revitalise the country’s vast but dilapidate­d network.

The initiative is seen as emblematic of fast warming relations between New Delhi and Tokyo, who are seeking to combat China’s growing influence. It is also a new beginning for a rail transport system plagued by accidents and chronic delays.

The line, using Japanese trains and technology, will link Ahmedabad to India’s financial capital Mumbai and is scheduled for completion by the end of 2023.

The 500-kilometre journey will be cut from eight hours now to just over two hours when services start.

“I hope to enjoy the beauty of India through the windows of the bullet train with Modi on my side when I come to India in a few years. It marks the beginning of a new chapter in ties between India and Japan,” Abe told a ceremony in Ahmedabad.

Abe’s visit comes just after a border standoff between India and China in a disputed and strategica­lly important Himalayan area. The two prime ministers both hailed the strengthen­ed ties between their countries.

“The Indo- Japan relationsh­ip is not just about bilateral trade. It has developed into a strategic and global partnershi­p in the IndianPaci­fic region,” said Abe.

Modi has pledged to invest billions of dollars to modernise India’s creaking railway system that remains the main form of travel for millions. The bullet train is one of his pet projects.

“Today, India has taken a giant step in fulfilling a long cherished dream,” Modi said to loud cheers from the audience.

“The bullet train project will bring great speed, great developmen­t and great technology to the country.” The new train with a capacity to carry 750 passengers is a bright spot for the world’s fourth largest network by track length. Much of it dates from the British colonial era however.

More than 22 million passengers commute daily on some 9,000 trains across the network despite frequent accidents and delays.

Trail derailment­s have already killed more than 200 people this year, including one last month in which 23 died in northern Uttar Pradesh state.

Japan is a pioneer in high-speed rail networks and the project is a joint venture between Indian Railways and Japan’s Shinkansen Technology. — AFP

 ??  ?? Abe (left) and Modi press a button at the groundbrea­king ceremony for a high-speed rail project in Ahmedabad, India. — Reuters photo
Abe (left) and Modi press a button at the groundbrea­king ceremony for a high-speed rail project in Ahmedabad, India. — Reuters photo

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