Teesta accord remains sore point in Indo-Bangla ties

DHAKA: The Teesta water sharing treaty remains the main bilateral issue between India and Bangladesh six months after the accord was called off at the last minute.

"It is a fact that Bangladesh was looking forward to the Teesta water treaty, and people were disappointed. All the other achievements, and there were many, were overshadowed during that visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Bangladesh has taken the initiative of making itself a hub of connectivity, everybody will benefit from it, Nepal, Bhutan, along with India... and also Myanmar. I believe these things do not happen overnight. We do new agreements, but we have to build on those. I would not say that it is an issue (Teesta) but when you are satisfied and happy you move better," Bangladeshi foreign minister Dipu Moni said on Sunday.

Moni was asked whether Dhaka was moving slow on finalizing the agreement on waterways transit and connectivity because the unfinished Teesta water sharing deal continued to hurt. She added that "people's perception also matters", referring to the sentiment against India among people here for not sharing its water with neighbours.

With West Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee disagreeing with the quantum of water to be shared with Bangladesh, the Teesta water deal fell through at the last moment when the PM was here to sign it among other bilateral deals between the two countries.

In fact, Moni also hinted that Dhaka was hoping and expecting Banerjee to hasten the process in the interest of the entire region. "We are part of one Bengal. Bangladesh recalls with a lot of gratitude West Bengal and Tripura, the spirit of cooperation and bond. It is important to have that spirit in all our exchanges. Expectations are very high on many, many issues... we will do it," she said.

Another sticky issue that came up during Moni's interaction with Indian journalists was the recent comment of the BSF chief who said firing would continue on the Indo-Bangladesh border as long as criminal activities went on. A day earlier, two Bangladeshi citizens were reportedly injured during border firing.

Moni was direct about Bangladesh's displeasure at the BSF chief's remark. "Why Bangladesh... anywhere else there would be resentment if there are such statements," she said. "We have repeatedly protested... there is total understanding at the political level that this cannot go on. There have been assurances from the highest levels and if such assurances are at variance with the functional level, it is disappointing and very surprising," she added.

 TOI
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