4 April 2016

Trucks at the Indo-Bangladesh border

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It's déjà vu all over again. Pakistan has once again backtracked on its support for the trans-South Asian road connectivity project after suggesting that it needed more time to consider the implications of this project. And with this, Pakistan has managed to scuttle a pact that would have allowed free movement of passenger and cargo vehicles among the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation nations. After Pakistan had refused to sign this pact at the Kathmandu summit of Saarc in November 2014, India along with Nepal, Bhutan and Bangladesh had decided to move ahead of their accord. In June 2015, these four nation states signed a landmark motor vehicles agreement for the regulation of passenger, personnel and cargo vehicular traffic among the four South Asian neighbours in Thimphu, Bhutan. This major initiative is expected to pave the way for a seamless movement of people and goods across their borders for the benefit and integration of the region, thereby galvanizing economic development in South Asia at large. India only has bilateral motor vehicle agreements with Nepal and Bangladesh but a multilateral pact would go a long way in boosting trade in the region. The agreement opens up the possibility of turning border roads into economic corridors which could increase inter-regional trade within South Asia by 60 per cent.

Taking note of the finding that transforming transport corridors into economic corridors could potentially increase intra-regional trade within South Asia by almost 60 per cent and with the rest of the world by over 30 per cent, the joint statement read, "We acknowledge that apart from physical infrastructure, the development of economic corridors within and between our countries requires the implementation of policy and regulatory measures, including the BBIN MVA, which will help address the nonphysical impediments to the seamless movement of goods vehicles and people between our four countries."

A broader Saarc agreement would have allowed free movement of vehicles of each country - cargo as well as passenger vehicles - in the territory of other countries through authorized operator. After Pakistan's obstructionist stance could not be cleared, India decided to tap its eastern neighbours and the framework of the new agreement was finalized at the South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation -- another grouping of South Asian countries that includes India, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Maldives, Nepal and Sri Lanka. Pakistan is not part of this grouping. SASEC was set up in 2001 to bring together these six countries to promote regional prosperity and boost trade by improving cross-border connectivity.

India is now pursuing a similar framework between India, Myanmar and Thailand in order to get access to the larger market of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations through seamless passenger and cargo movement. Among other measures is the standard operating procedure India and Bangladesh have signed to operationalize an agreement on coastal shipping last year. The pact is aimed at promoting bilateral trade and bringing down the transportation cost of export-import cargo. India is also working on operationalizing a 3,200 kilometre road link from Moreh (India) to Mae Sot (Thailand). According to the India-Bangladesh SOP, both countries will have to treat each other's vessels as per international sea transportation norms.

Pakistan's paranoia is also evident in its repeated attempts at denying the use of the land route for trade between Afghanistan and India. This has resulted in growing ill-will for Pakistan in Afghanistan even as bilateral Afghan-India relations have continued to grow. Allowing the use of the land route for transit goods between India and Afghanistan would have opened up new possibilities for more extensive contacts in other areas and the Pakistan's transport sector would have directly benefited from the transit trade. Every day that ordinary Afghans lose opportunities of easy, direct trade with India, Pakistan generates more resentment from them.

Covering at least 1.5 billion people across India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Maldives and Afghanistan, Saarc, established in 1985, is one of the largest regional organizations in the world. But its achievements so far have been so minimal that even its constituents have become lackadaisical in their attitude towards it. Improved connectivity in the South Asian region, both through road links and waterways, should be leveraged by regional states as a means to enhance regional cooperation and foster intra-regional trade.

This can move the region beyond the blinkers created by Partition, whereby the region has more often than not missed the larger picture in pursuit of short-sighted rivalries. In South Asia, the security dynamics between a large India and its smaller neighbours have ensured that the road to economic and political cooperation will be a bumpy one. After the emergence of China, that road has become an even more difficult one to traverse. So it is all the more imperative for New Delhi to resolutely push the project of greater regional economic cooperation forward. If Pakistan persists in its obstructionist agenda, New Delhi is right in signalling it would find itself marginalized in the larger South Asian dynamic. Pakistan cannot hold the future of the region hostage to its India-paranoia.

The author is professor of international relations, Department of Defence Studies, King's College, London 

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