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India, Bangladesh seal deal in long-stalled land swap

Pact reached in ’74 will settle border dispute

- By Julhas Alam Associated Press

DHAKA, Bangladesh — India and Bangladesh on Saturday finalized a muchdelaye­d land swap agreement to settle a long-running border dispute.

The deal — initially reached in 1974 but only recently ratified by India’s Parliament — calls for the transfer of 111 border enclaves to Bangladesh in exchange for 51 that will become part of India. More than 50,000 residents of the enclaves will be able to select their citizenshi­p after the agreement is implemente­d.

Relations between India and its smaller neighbor have significan­tly improved since Bangladesh­i Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina promised that her administra­tion would not allow Indian insurgents hiding in her country to use the porous 2,500-mile border to carry out raids in India.

Aided by India, Bangladesh gained independen­ce from Pakistan following a bloody war in 1971.

Hasina and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who arrived in Bangladesh on Saturday for a two-day visit, exchanged the ratificati­on documents for the land swap before holding official talks.

Bangladesh­i Foreign Affairs Minister A.H. Mahmood Ali said a number of other agreements covering trade, security and connectivi­ty are also expected to be signed, as well as a framework for combating human traffickin­g, counterfei­t currency and cooperatio­n for the sea-based “blue economy.”

Officials said India could offer a $2 billion line of credit to Bangladesh for in- frastructu­re developmen­t inside the country.

Ali said Bangladesh was focusing on better connectivi­ty with India by introducin­g new bus service with Indian states. India faces difficulti­es reaching its isolated and impoverish­ed northeaste­rn region, and any passage through Bangladesh could cut hundreds of miles to get to those areas.

Energy-starved Bangladesh is also looking to import 600 megawatts of electricit­y from India on top of the 500 megawatts it currently imports, Ali said.

Separately, Bangladesh signed memorandum­s of understand­ing Saturday with two Indian companies to set up power plants for producing 4,600 megawatts of electricit­y, Bangladesh­i authoritie­s said in a statement.

The state-run Power Developmen­t Board signed the deals, which are worth $5.5 billion, with Indian companies Adani Power and Reliance Group, the statement said.

Adani Power will invest $2.5 billion to set up a coalbased power plant with a capacity of 1,600 megawatts of power, according to the statement. Reliance Group will set up another gas-fired power plant with capacity of 3,000 megawatts of power, investing $3 billion.

Bangladesh and India have 54 common rivers and the sharing of water is a contentiou­s issue for the countries. Officials say the two leaders will discuss how to effectivel­y deal with the issue.

 ?? MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/GETTY-AFP ?? Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, left, and Bangladesh­i Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, right, finalized the border swap deal Saturday during Modi’s visit to Bangladesh.
MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/GETTY-AFP Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, left, and Bangladesh­i Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, right, finalized the border swap deal Saturday during Modi’s visit to Bangladesh.

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