Friendly
India fences Bangladesh
Daily Sun
April 28, 2012
M.
Serajul Islam
By the end of this year, India will complete fencing the 4053 km
border with Bangladesh that it started 25 years ago. India started building the
fence to stop Bangladeshis in large numbers from illegally migrating to India.
At various times, India has stated that 10 to 20 million Bangladeshis were
illegally living in India, claims that Bangladesh has dismissed consistently as
exaggerated and ill motivated. During the tenure of the BJP, there was also the
talk of a “push-in” or sending these alleged Bangladeshis across the border
forcibly!
The present government in New Delhi however has not raised the
issue of so-called illegal Bangladeshis. Nevertheless, it continued to complete
the fence. The present government of Bangladesh on its part has not considered
it necessary to question Indian about the fence. In fact, it has gone out of
the way to please India while ignoring the fact that the Indians have just not
been completing the fence; in places they have been strengthening it as well.
At the lowest point, the fence is “four metres
and floodlit, with menacing spools of razor at its base and top “.
The Indians have also turned the Bangladesh-India border as one
that does not even indicate that the two countries have reasonably friendly
bilateral relations. In fact, the hints are all to the contrary. Unknown to the
rest of the world and amidst strange efforts of the present governments in New
Delhi and Dhaka to push it under the carpet, the fence is openly referred by
people living in the border on the Bangladesh side as “Berlin Wall of Asia.”
It is just not the name that is reprehensible for Bangladeshis. It
is the treatment that people living there are subjected to by the Border
Security Forces of India that guards the barbed wire fence that is more
reprehensible. Leading newspapers of the world like the New York Times,
London’s Economist, etc have highlighted the unfortunate plights of the
Bangladeshis, although such reports have so far not attracted serious attention
of the international community that it deserves.
In a recent article in The Age, a leading Australian newspaper,
its reporter has filed a report based on his visit to the Bangladesh-India
border. He interviewed the BSF and researched about the unfortunate plight and
predicament of Bangladesh and Bangladeshis living on Bangladesh-India border.
The report was headlined “Indian border force cross the lines” that pointed an
accusing finger at India on a number of counts.
The reporter Ben Doherty focused on the nature of the fence and
the way it is guarded. He felt such a fence could have made sense on
India-Pakistan and India-China borders but not Bangladesh-India border. He
highlighted the deaths of mainly Bangladeshis at the hands of the BSF to underscore
massive human rights violations. He interviewed human rights organizations in
both India and Bangladesh to come to this conclusion. Indian HR organization
Mausam’s General Secretary told him that BSF was killing Bangladeshis and
Indians with impunity “because they are never charged with any punishment.”
The Indians have now introduced a new element to rationalize the
fence. They feel that with the adverse impact of climate change in Bangladesh, alleged
mass migration of Bangladeshis to India would increase in the future. In making their assertions on the fence, the
Indians have never addressed the issue as a responsible power. Indian
governments have simply quoted an unbelievable number off the cuff without ever
being able to give Bangladesh even a partial list of illegal Bangladeshi
immigrants it claims to be in India.
In claiming such an unbelievable number, the Indians have included
all Bengali speaking people found outside West Bengal as Bangladeshis,
forgetting that there are 130 million people of Paschim Bangla who also speak
Bangla. The way the issue was projected when it blew into a major conflict
during the BJP tenure underpinned an anti-Bangladesh and anti-Muslim bias in
the Indian claim. If indeed there were a number of illegal Bangladeshis closer
to what the Indians claims, then it would have been reflected in reports of
independent international bodies and organizations that study and report on
migration.
International reporters like Doherty and others who have written
have all been critical of India for first, building physical barriers between
nations that have been condemned into the garbage of history, and second, for
the untenable reasons that India has put forward to build the “Berlin Wall of
Asia.” They have all also unequivocally condemned the BSF for its wanton
violation of HR and the Indian Government for failing to restrain its trigger
happy BSF.
It is an irony that India is caging Bangladesh when the AL led
Government is going out of its way to be friendly to India. In fact, the ruling
party is now facing a serious political situation because of India’s failure to
reciprocate after Bangladesh had unilaterally given India full cooperation on
its security concerns and a trial run of land transit. The border fence and the atrocities of the BSF
are going to be additional factors against the AL in the next general
elections.
These factors apart, the fence adds to the negative image that
Bangladesh has historically suffered ever since that insensitive statement of
Henry Kissinger that an independent Bangladesh
would become an “international basket case”. Bangladesh has come a long way since
that remark. Today it shows all the positive signs of becoming a middle income
country. Seven million Bangladeshis live abroad legally and collectively remit
US$ 12 billion a year with a similar figure lost because of the Hundi operators
or illegal money operators with network in India.
The opportunity of such a
large number of Bangladeshis to serve abroad legally and the significant strides
that Bangladesh has made in economic and social development raises serious doubt
on the Indian claim of illegal mass migration. Indian Noble Laureate Amarta Sen
has said that on key social and economic indicators of growth, Bangladesh is
ahead even of India in South Asia.
For Bangladesh, the fence when completed and publicized around the
world would become be a major hurdle in projecting the image it needs to
attract foreign investment. Ironically it is India that has held out the
promise to the present government in Bangladesh that if it gave it land
transit, it would help make Bangladesh the regional hub of connectivity. A
country that offers such promise for Bangladesh is building and strengthening
the “Berlin Wall of Asia” because it believes that Bangladeshis would migrate
in masses to India because of economic depravity and adverse impact of climate
change! There is a serious contradiction in what India promises for Bangladesh with
the connectivity hub and what it is doing with the fence.
It is a tragedy that those in charge of our relations with India
do not see through this contradiction and muster the courage to question India
on the fence when it has the potential to give Bangladesh an image that would
be disastrous for the country’s future. As for more contradiction, the country
that accepted 10 million refugees from Bangladesh in 1971 is now fencing the
same country so that they would not be able to flee to avoid death and
depravation due to the adverse effects of climate change!
The
writer is a former Ambassador to Japan
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