Dhaka Thursday, November 21, 2024

India hands over 10 diesel locomotives
  • Staff Correspondent
  • 2020-07-27 22:32:58

Bangladesh on Monday received 10 broadgauge diesel locomotives from India.

The engines were given by India in an another move of raising railway cooperation in connectivity front between the two neighboring countries sharing more than 4000 km border, fifth-longest land border in the world.

Foreign ministers and railways ministers from both the countries joined the handing over ceremony at 3pm through videoconferencing.

Railway Minister Nurul Islam Sujon said Indian Railway gave the locomotives to Bangladesh as 'Eid gift.'

The engines reached Darshana Station around 4pm.

BSS adds: The Indian government provided the locomotives under its grant assistance progrmme in line with the commitment by New Delhi during Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s visit to India last October under Indian premier Narendra Modi’s “neighborhood first” policy.

The locomotives were handed at Darshana-Gede Interchange Point while Foreign Minister Dr AK Momen and Railway Minister Md. Nurul Islam Sujan joined from Dhaka and Indian External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaiahshankar and Railway Minister Piyush Goyal joined from Delhi at a virtual handover ceremony.

“This would help bring our two peoples even closer….India-Bangladesh relationship is rock solid,” said Dr Momen at the handing-over ceremony.

He said Dhaka believes “connectivity is productivity” while Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been trying to “expand our connectivity in roads, rail, river routes and heart to heart with our neighbors”.

He said connectivity in the region will unpack numerous opportunities for the people of South Asia including Bangladesh and India as the prospect remains limitless. “We are happy that India partners with Bangladesh in this endeavour,” he added.

Saying that “We are indeed enjoying the best of relations (with India)”, Momen mentioned, this week, for the first time, 50 containers loaded with FMCG cargoes and fabrics arrived in Bangladesh from India through Benapole-Petrapole rail link.

In fact, he said robust safe railway connectivity with lower unit costs is an enabler of economic growth, a platform for uniform development and a catalyst for national integration.

“By handing over the locomotives, we have been able to fulfill an important commitment made during the visit of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to India last October,” said Jaishankar.

The Indian external affairs minister said India and Bangladesh continue to script a relationship of ‘Sonali Addhyae (golden chapter)” guided by the progressive visions of prime ministers Narendra Modi and Sheikh Hasina.

“Very few countries in the world share such close fraternal ties as those of ours (India and Bangladesh), our partnership today stands out as a role model in the region … we are indeed happy to witness the transformative growth in Bangladesh,” he said.

Jaishankar expressed his happiness that the COVID pandemic had not slowed down the pace of bilateral cooperation and conveyed that he looked forward to more such milestones in the ongoing historic Mujib Year, marking the birth centenary of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Foreign Secretaries of Bangladesh and India Masud Bin Momen and Harsh Vardhan Shringla respectively and Bangladesh High Commissioner to India Muhammad Imran and Indian High Commissioner to Bangladesh Ms. Riva Ganguly Das also joined the virtual ceremony.

All the ten broad gauge locomotives Indian Railway handed over to Bangladesh Railway (BR) were commissioned between September 2012 and December 2015, said officials, BR official sources said.

With 72 percent locomotives of BR already crossing their economic life, the government took initiatives last year to hire locomotives from India for the first time to help them overcome the crisis, it added.

According to BR documents from May last year, it had 178 MG locomotives, of which 139 have crossed their 20-year economic life.

Recently, India and Bangladesh have stepped up their rail cooperation in mitigating the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, as trade via land border faced disruptions.

Both sides saw the highest ever exchange of freight trains in the month of June as a total of 103 freight trains were utilized for carrying essential commodities and raw materials.

Bangladesh and India have a total of 8 railway interchange points, of which 4 are now functioning – Petrapole (India) – Benapole (Bangladesh), Gede (India) – Darshana (Bangladesh), Singhabad (India)-Rohanpur (Bangladesh), Radhikapur (India)–Birol (Bangladesh).

Two passenger trains – Bandhan Express [Kolkata-Khulna] (2 days/week) and Maitree Express [Kolkata-Dhaka] (5 days/ week) operate between the two countries,

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