Charting a new Course in Bangladesh-India Relations: Challenges for Sheikh Hasina
Date:November 21, 2009
Charting a new Course in Bangladesh-India
Relations
Challenges for Sheikh Hasina
M. Serajul Islam
THE Indian Foreign Secretary's visit ended
positively for a number of reasons. She was upbeat about the forthcoming visit
of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to India
next month. The fact that Nirupama Rao found time to meet Khaleda Zia and
refrained from calling on the Army Chief that her predecessor had done added to
the positive tone of her visit.
Clearly the Indian foreign secretary's visit was
not intended to be one of substance. The Indian Foreign Secretary held official
talks with her Bangladeshi counterpart. She also met Foreign Minister Dipu Moni
and paid a courtesy call on the Prime Minister of Bangladesh. She also called
on Khaleda Zia, the Chairperson of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
She did not give any reaction to the media except telling them that her visit
was “significant” during which issues were discussed ahead of Sheikh Hasina's
visit to India that she termed would be a “very important one”.
The Bangladeshi Foreign Secretary addressed the
media in depth. He said that Sheikh Hasina would start her three-day official
trip on 19th December, flying to New Delhi
from Copenhagen after attending the
UN sponsored Conference on Climate Change. She will hold official talks that
day with the Indian Prime Minister. She will also visit Ajmer Sharif and
Kolkata. The Bangladesh Foreign Secretary said that three agreements would be
signed during the visit related to legal matters in dealing with criminals and
criminal activities. The Foreign Secretary hinted at an agreement on “mutual
transit facilities” without giving details and also stated that a draft would
be kept ready for agreement on sharing of Teesta waters but did not say for
sure whether it would be signed. He also said that India
agreed to allow Bangladesh
rail transit to Nepal
following up on the land connectivity it had agreed to give during the visit of
the Bangladesh Foreign Minister. Bangladesh Foreign Secretary also spoke of the
need to remove “cobwebs” in Bangladesh-India relations to understand each
other's position in a transparent manner so as to make joint efforts to resolve
them.
The Foreign Secretaries, their upbeat stance
notwithstanding, side-tracked some of the major issues that have stood in the
way of Bangladesh-India relations developing into a mutually beneficial one as
geopolitical realities should have dictated. Bangladesh's concerns over sharing
of the waters of the common rivers; demarcation of the maritime boundary; trade
imbalance and on the Indian side, the issue of land transit (now being called
connectivity), security were not addressed in the meeting of the two top
diplomats as priority agenda items for the Bangladesh-India summit level talks.
This leaves doubt whether any agreement would be reached on such vital issues
when Sheikh Hasina goes to New Delhi.
A senior Foreign Ministry official also told the media that agreements on
reducing the trade gap and on land boundary issues were also unlikely during
Sheikh Hasina's visit.
Expectations have been high in Bangladesh
following AL's massive election
victory and the return of Congress in India
with an equally strong mandate that Bangladesh
and India would
resolve some of their longstanding issues given the historical close
relationship between the two ruling political parties. The visit of the Indian
Foreign Minister and the Indian Foreign Secretary in February and April this
year, however, raised questions instead of raising optimism. The Bangladesh
Foreign Minister's visit in October also did not focus on the major issues. The
talks between the two foreign secretaries also have not given much cause for
hope because the issues they have discussed in preparation for Sheikh Hasina's
visit have not focused on those that have held up friendly relations between
the two countries for nearly four decades. In fact, the main obstacle that has
held up bilateral relations to grow in strength, namely the negative mindset on
either side, is coming into play once again for reasons that are hard to
understand as both sides seem inclined towards putting into the back seat the
major contentious issues.
Neither side however gains anything by keeping
the major issues unresolved. There are in fact no “cobwebs” in Bangladesh-India
bilateral relations because the unresolved issues are as transparent as
daylight where both sides know that the “cobwebs” are there because of the lack
of political will to deal with them. Sheikh Hasina should use her visit to India
to appeal to her hosts for a change in the Indian mindset. In Manmohon
Singh, India
has a leader who has the vision to rise above the negative mindset and is
capable of acting with vision that does justice to India's
status as a regional leader in world politics. It is to him that Sehikh Hasina
must register the issues of water sharing, trade, Tipaimukh, harassment over
the issue of illegal migrants, and the maritime boundary.
Sheikh Hasina must also meet Sonia Gandhi for her
support because her influence on the incumbent government is unquestioned.
While meeting her, she should keep in mind that one of the few Indian leaders
who tried to improve Bangladesh-India relations without considering reciprocity
was Rajiv Gandhi. He made a historic visit to the cyclone-devastated Urichar to
show solidarity with Bangladesh
at times of distress. Rahul Gandhi whose importance in the ruling party is
second to none should be another politician that Sheikh Hasina should meet.
Recently, Rahul Gandhi has stated his opposition to river linking projects in India,
an issue with which Indian diplomats and bureaucrats have kept Bangladesh
on the tenterhooks. She should thank him for that stand to get a commitment
from India
against river linking which would help brighten the gloomy background of
Bangladesh-India relations.
The signing of the three agreements on the table
would hardly make Sheikh Hasina's visit a success. Its success would be
determined by what commitment she can get on the Tipaimukh issue that many in
Bangladesh believe would be disastrous for the country; on sharing of the water
of the common rivers where abandoning the river linking idea by India would
help the cause of the visit; on stopping the Indian campaign about 20 million
illegal Bangladeshis; on giving Bangladesh better trade deal; and assurance to
negotiate on the maritime boundary fairly. India
could accommodate all these without causing its national interests any harm. To
Bangladesh,
these commitments would mean a major breakthrough in achieving its national
interests. These commitments would also allow Bangladesh
to follow up positively on Indian connectivity request, security concerns, and
use of Chittagong port.
The question now is will Sheikh Hasina be able to
show the political will needed to make her visit a watershed in Bangladesh-India
relations if India
shows the wisdom to so do? She may not because her greatest drawback in
succeeding with her forthcoming trip to India
will be in the nature of the country's domestic politics. The massive majority
with which the AL won the last
election notwithstanding, India
knows too well that without a clear indication of bipartisanship from Bangladesh,
any concession that it would choose to make would be opposed by the opposition
and any reciprocal gesture that Bangladesh
makes would be impossible to implement. At this stage, the bipartisanship
necessary to convince India
is an unimaginable proposition. Therefore the “cobwebs” may linger on the
canvas of Bangladesh-India relations a little while longer and Sheikh Hasina's
visit may be just another one made by a Bangladesh Prime Minister to India.
The writer is a former Ambassador to Japan
and Director, Centre for Foreign Affairs Studies.