Banglabandha (also spelled Banglabandh) is a major inland port in northern Bangladesh established to provide a trade link with India, Nepal and Bhutan.[1] The three nations are separated by 52 km (32 mi) of Indian territory, known as the Siliguri Corridor. On the Indian side of the border is Phulbari.
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The Banglabandha land port is located at the tip of northwestern Bangladesh. It is 57 km (35 mi) north of the Panchagarh District and 7 km (4.3 mi) from Siliguri and Jalpaiguri, in the Indian state of West Bengal. The Indian city of Darjeeling is 58 km (36 mi) away to the north. Kankorvita, the Nepalese border transit point, is 61 km (38 mi) away and the Bhutanese border is 68 km (42 mi) away from the Indo-Bangladesh boundary near which Banglabandha stands.[1]
Despite the geographical proximity of the borders of India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Bhutan, the issues of border control and territorial sovereignty have prevented the establishment of direct trade routes. Banglabandha was functioning as a "Land Customs Station" (LCS) before the Government of Bangladesh decided to establish an inland port. To exploit the potential of a three-way trading post, the government of Bangladesh decided to develop an inland port, with facilities such as customs, banking, warehouses, police and immigration posts.[2] It was designed to be Bangladesh's first "export-oriented" inland port, explicitly promoting the transport of Bangladeshi goods to Nepal, India and Bhutan; other Bangladeshi inland ports are mainly used to import goods from India.[2] Nepal favours such an inland port to enable access for its goods to the Mongla and Chittagong seaports.[1]
The Banglabandha port was formally inaugurated in May 2004 but has not been fully functional owing to the absence of a transit agreement for the use of Indian territory as a transport route for Bangladeshi, Nepalese and Bhutanese trade cargoes. Nepali transport trucks are not allowed entry into Bangladesh and must exchange their cargo at the "zero point" of the Indo-Bangladesh border. Indian authorities also limit transport from Nepal to Bangladesh to only two hours a day. The existing Indo-Nepalese agreement provides for cross-border transport between the two countries, but no arrangement for use of Indian territory to link Nepal and Bangladesh.[1] But in 2010, a joint communique issued by the Prime Minister of India Dr. Manmohan Singh and the Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed said both countries would cooperate to provide Nepalese and Bhutanese cargo access to the Bangladeshi ports.[3] The commerce secretaries of Nepal and Bangladesh also held high-level talks to form an agreement resolving the transit issues between the two countries.[3]
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