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  • Wednesday, 25 December 2024

Nepal-Bangladesh ties expected to enter new era with President’s state visit

Published Date : March 21, 2021
President Bidya Devi Bhandari welcoming the President of Bangladesh Mohammad Abdul Hamid in 2019 in Kathmandu. (file photo)

-Sharachchandra Bhandary/RSS

KATHMANDU: President Bidya Devi Bhandari is paying a state visit to Bangladesh on March 22 and 23. The people of both countries are closely observing with excitement this visit taking place at the Head-of-State level for the first time after Nepal’s adoption of the federal democratic republican political system.

They are confident that the visit will be fruitful in broadening the diplomatic scope of Nepal and further deepening the political, cultural, economic and people-level relations between the two South Asian neighbours.

It is expected that the far-reaching impact of this visit taking place when the world has passed two decades into the 21st century would be centered not only in making the mutual ties more cordial but also would be important from the viewpoint of promoting collaboration, partnership and cooperation towards materializing Nepal’s dream of prosperity.

High level visits are found very useful in renewing mutual ties as well as exploring new avenues of collaboration and cooperation. Three separate memorandums of understanding (MoU) on tourism promotion, sanitary and phyto sanitary measures are to be signed between the two countries in course of President’s visit.

The Government of Bangladesh has provided Nepal transit facility through the Kakadbhitta-Phulbari-Banglabandh roadway as well as at the Chittagong and Mongla sea ports. It has also made available additional ‘rail corridor’ for operation of freight train from Rohanpur-Singhabad to Nepal, and it has opened the way for Nepal to use the Mongla harbour as an option to the Kolkata port. Since Mongla port is nearer than Kolkata port, it will help expand bilateral trade at comparatively lesser cost for Nepal. It is 217 kilometres from Mongla port to the integrated checkpost at Biratnagar and 600 kilometres to the integrated checkpoint at Birgunj of Nepal.

‘Bangladesh according high importance and respect to Nepal’

Nepal’s ambassador to Bangladesh, Dr Bansidhar Mishra said Bangladesh has been according high importance and respect to Nepal and it has invited President Bhandari as the state guest in the special ceremony marking the birth centenary of its Father of the Nation Sheikh Mujibur Rahaman as a reflection of this reality.

Dr Mishra informed RSS over the phone that grand preparation has been made for President Bhandari’s state visit in Dhaka and Bangladesh’s President Mohammad Abdul Hamid is scheduled to receive his Nepali counterpart at the Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport on Monday.

He said although preparations have been made for signing the preferential trade agreement (PTA) for developing multiple frameworks of connectivity, for promoting investment for consolidated transit facility and collaboration in tourism expansion, for enhancing partnership in energy sector, for increasing more cooperation in the cultural and educational sectors, and for unrestricted supply of each other’s products in the two countries, the PTA is not being done during the President’s visit due to some technical difficulties.

Nepal and Nepalis can reap long-term benefits if Nepal utilized this visit as an opportunity to strongly present its agenda, focusing especially on removing customs and non-customs barriers that are hindering expansion of bilateral trade, on decreasing the high customs tariff , on reaching Nepali products to the Bangladeshi market via surface road, on securing extra scholarship quotas for Nepali students who are mostly attracted to medical science faculties and on resolving issues they have been facing including the visa problem.

Citizens of both countries expect that President Bhandari’s visit would be helpful not only in further deepening the mutual cordial relation subsisting at the people’s level but also in promoting trade and commerce through the broader connectivity network linking both countries by air, water and surface ways, and by facilitating trade, transit and commerce with the provision of providing unhindered accessibility to Nepali vehicles carrying goods and passengers to Chittagong and Mongla ports.

An opportunity for promoting trade and commerce

Former Assistant Minister for Industry, Commerce and Supplies Rajesh Kaji Shrestha has stressed on Nepal holding talks with high officials of Bangladesh by focussing on topics as finalizing the modality of the operation of goods carrying vehicles of Nepal and Bangladesh, fulfilling the modality on implementation of the market accessibility and customs-free/ preferential facility, supporting the tourism promotion by resuming the Dhaka-Kathmandu bus service which is disrupted due to various reasons, and providing market accessibility to Nepali goods of comparative advantage without charging customs duty for reducing Nepal’s growing trade deficit.

He also stressed on holding talks with Bangladeshi high officials on ending the procedural and administrative hassles at the customs points, on simplifying the customs procedures and upgrading of the physical infrastructures at the bilaterally-agreed transit points and other routes as well as at customs checkpoints.

Shrestha opined that the visit would be fruitful if provisions could be made for the formation of a joint committee of the customs officials of both countries for the easy checking of goods and trade promotion, for putting to an end the technical barriers of trade between the related bodies of the two countries, for issuing on-arrival visa at the point of entry to Nepalis entering Bangladesh via surface and air route and for issuing long-term visa to Nepali students studying in Bangladesh and business visa to the businesspersons and investors of both countries.

He opined that both countries would benefit if initiatives were made for exploring areas of broadening cooperation as promotion of mutual assistance and project construction including in electricity production, purchase and installation of transmission lines, for promoting cooperation with public corporations like the Salt Trading Corporation of Nepal in building agriculture infrastructures and construction of fertilizer plants and for signing the bilateral investment promotion and protection agreement (BIPPA). Shrestha suggested that Bangladesh could provide customs-free market access to Nepali goods of comparative advantage as tea, coffee, cardamom, ginger, medicinal materials, broomstick, green vegetables, fruits, yarn, lentil, catechu, pashmina, handicraft goods, among others.

Discussions to be held on energy, trade and investment

Joint Secretary of the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Supplies Prakash Dahal said discussions would be held during President Bhandari’s visit to Bangladesh on possible partnership in power production, trade and investment between Nepal and Bangladesh, on easy access of productions of pharmaceutical companies of both countries to each others’ market, on promoting mutual tourism, on exploring possibility of establishing air link from Biratnagar and Bhadrapur of Nepal to Saidpur of Bangladesh and on each others’ participation in the international trade fairs to be organized in both countries.

Joint Secretary Dahal said Nepal has asked Bangladesh to provide the list of goods it exported. It is under study and so PTA would not be reached during the President’s visit this time. He accepted there has been some delay in PTA as the treaty and agreements have to be made keeping Nepal’s national interest supreme.

According to the Trade Promotion Centre, Nepal exported goods worth one billion 293 million 475 thousand 310 to Bangladesh in the Fiscal Year 2018/19. The goods exported include lentil, herbal raw materials used for making scent, wheat, cauliflower, tomato, vegetable seeds, juice, furniture, broom, broom grass, felt, wooden furniture, shawl, mufflers, jute sacks and others.

Possibilities for expansion of cooperation

Former permanent representative of Nepal to the United Nations, Prof Dr Jayaraj Acharya’s suggestion is that Nepal, which is moving forward in the direction of fulfilling the national aspiration of ‘Prosperous Nepal, Happy Nepali’, should identify the areas of mutual collaboration and cooperation, and it should work accordingly. He viewed that the objective of the President’s visit should be made public. “Mutual goodwill, cooperation, understanding and collaboration would support in achieving the goal of prosperity. Both countries having immense possibilities for expanding cooperation should work together at the bilateral, regional and international level for the sake of their national welfare and the larger benefit of the people,” Dr Acharya reiterated.

President Bhandari’s state visit taking place when Bangladesh has graduated itself from the list of least developed countries would be helpful in acquiring Bangladesh’s experience and learning towards fulfilling Nepal’s own dream of climbing up in the graduation ladder. Moreover, it could play a constructive role towards providing new impetus, as the Chair country of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC), to the obstructed SAARC process. It is also hoped that this visit would provide a good opportunity to Nepal to chalk out the future strategy in the context of both countries’ collaboration in multilateral organizations including Bay of Bengal Initiatives for Multi-Sectoral and Technical Cooperation (BIMSTEC) and the Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal (BBIN) initiative.

It is expected that President Bhandari’s state visit will further the multi-dimensional Nepal-Bangladesh relations that has been enriched at the political level as well by Nepal’s then political leadership providing arms to the Mukti Bahini army led by Bangabandhu at the time of Bangladesh freedom struggle. (Mr Bhandari is the Deputy Chief Reporter at National News Agency (RSS))

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