Hyderabad:Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina will be in India for the first time this week since her re-election for the third consecutive time in December 2018 and since PM Modi’s resounding election victory in May. Hasina who will be addressing the Indian Economic Summit under the aegis of World Economic Forum in New Delhi on 3rd and 4th October will hold formal talks with Narendra Modi on a host of bilateral and regional issues.
The two leaders met last week in New York along sidelines of the 74th United Nations General Assembly where Hasina reportedly said that the NRC (National Register of Citizens) issue has become ‘matter of great concern for Bangladesh’. According to her Foreign Minister Abdul Momen, she was assured by PM Modi that her country’s concerns could be taken care of very easily given the friendly bilateral ties.
The NRC issue was however not mentioned in the formal Indian Ministry of External Affairs statement released after the meeting. Despite Delhi’s assurances, with shrill domestic politics surrounding NRC and controversial comments made by top BJP and RSS leaders including Home Minister Amit Shah, Dhaka is worried. A Bangladeshi official on conditions of anonymity said that Amit Shah using word like ‘termites’ last year to describe Bangladeshi immigrants who face deportation is perceived as humiliating by his countrymen.
“On the NRC, people in Bangladesh expect an unequivocal statement of clarity from the Indian government. Positive assurances by PM Modi to PM Hasina on NRC and then on the contrary, negative remarks by the Home Minister Amit Shah is not helping the case of credibility and consistency on India’s side,” says Syed Munir Khasru, Chairman of the international think tank based in Dhaka, the Institute for Policy, Advocacy, and Governance (IPAG).
Nearly 1.9 million people in Assam stand to be rendered stateless and deported under the final NRC published on August 31 this year. Incidentally so far prior to the New York meeting, Bangladesh had maintained that NRC as in internal matter of India just like its stated position on abrogation of Article 370 from Jammu and Kashmir.
Also Read: INX Media case: HC refuses to grant bail to Chidambaram, says may influence witnesses
“NRC is a matter of concern because of uncertainty about population declared as non- citizens. Bangladesh fears that many will migrate to Bangladesh if livelihood opportunities are denied to them. This is, however, in the realm of speculation. NRC process is still incomplete with appeals going on. Political statements from RSS and BJP is adding to these fears,” says former Indian envoy to Bangladesh Pinak Chakravarty.
But there is palpable public tension in Bangladesh on the issue along with existing negative sentiments for a long-pending settlement on sharing of water in 54 common rivers especially the Teesta. Modi and Hasina had hoped to resolve Teesta by the end of their last official terms...Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh was all set to sign the Teesta deal during his visit to Bangladesh in September 2011, but the plan was torpedoed by West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee who objected to it at the eleventh hour. Teesta water issue remains a politically charged emotional one with the potential to fuel anti-India sentiments.