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Bangladesh,
India resume train after 43-years
DHAKA—Passenger trains began rolling between Bangladesh and India on
Monday, resuming a service suspended more than four decades ago due to a
war between India and Pakistan. Amidst singing and dancing, the first
“Maitree Express” left Dhaka for Kolkata in the morning with nearly 500
passengers.
Another specially painted train left Kolkata for Dhaka at almost at the
same time, officials said. “It is a journey down memory lane,” said
Rangalal Chowdhury, 62, who left Bangladesh after passing school
examinations, in Kolkata. In Dhaka, senior officials and diplomats
attended festivities at the decorated station to mark the maiden journey
of the train service, which coincided with the Bengali New Year.
“I heard a lot about the train service from my parents. Now it is going
to be resumed, so I never wanted to miss this opportunity. I am happy to
be part of this historic moment,” said passenger Chowdhury Mainul Hasan.
Bangladesh, which became independent from Pakistan in 1971, was part of
East Bengal before Indian partition in 1947 and its people share a
common history, culture and language with those in the Indian state of
West Bengal.
“It is a historic occasion and the beginning of a new era. It will
strengthen the bonds between the two countries,” said Iftekhar Ahmed
Chowdhury, adviser for foreign affairs of Bangladesh’s army-backed
interim government. Thousands of people on both sides of the
India-Bangladesh border have relatives on the other side, and many
Bangladeshis also travel to Kolkata, capital of West Bengal, and other
Indian cities to seek medical treatment, officials said.
“Now the visit to India by students, patients, businessmen and tourists
will be cheaper and easier,” an official said. Before the rail service,
most people travelled by bus between the two countries. “It’s a historic
moment for both the nations,” Pranab Mukherjee, India’s external affairs
minister, said after sounding a horn to start the journey of the train
from Kolkata.
With one-way tickets starting from $8 (to $20), the service is expected
to strengthen ties between the people of both the nations, Mukherjee
said. The passenger train service between India and Bangladesh was
suspended after a war between India and Pakistan in 1965, when
Bangladesh was the eastern province of Pakistan.
Officials said around six hours would be taken up by customs and
immigration formalities at the border stations in Bangladesh and in
India, meaning the 500 km journey would take 14 hours. Initially, the
train would make the trip twice a week, but its frequency would be
raised, they said.
The first trip of the Maitree Express included a 56-member media
delegation from Bangladesh and a host of enthusiastic passengers.
Bangladesh and India signed a deal on July 12, 2001, to resume a direct
train service between Dhaka and Kolkata.
But the restart of the service was delayed by India’s insistence on the
construction of a 150-metre security cage along the railway passage
through a no-man’s land between both countries to ensure security and to
stop smuggling or illegal migration.
Goods trains already run between the two countries. Bangladesh annually
imports about $2 billion worth of products from India, and earns nearly
$400 million from exporting to that country, officials said.—Agencies
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