Tripura Road Transport Corporation MD Keshab Kar told the Dhaka Tribune that Indian businesses currently had no interest in the Ashuganj port since the rail connectivity between Guwahati and Agartala had improved.
“However, when the Agartala – Akhaura rail link is opened, the Ashuganj port will become profitable,” he said.
The Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) still thinks transhipment and transit facilities will prove useful for Indians and it will become popular once several major infrastructure projects that will facilitate transport are completed in the next 18 months.
“We will build an inland container terminal at Ashuganj by December of next year to help increase transhipment,” said Commodore Mohammad Mozammel Haque, the chairman of BIWTA.
“We have already acquired 31 acres of land (and) the project will be implemented under the Indian LOC (Line of Credit). Although navigability is not a major concern here, as a precaution we are nevertheless dredging the river.”
The BIWTA chairman said the road between Ashuganj and Akhaura border must be improved to ensure smooth traffic. “The Road Transport and Highways Division has undertaken a project to upgrade the Ashuganj-Akhauara Highway to four lanes,” he said.
“When Indian businesses will get the integrated facilities on our transhipment and transit routes, it will become their preferred network,” he hoped.
All these projects have missed their deadlines due to complications over releasing funds from the Indian LOC and because of disputes over land acquisition, government officials have said.The transit and transhipment agreements between Bangladesh and India were hotly debated and widely discussed.
Arguments were made on both sides for and against opening up a route between the Indian cities of Kolkata in West Bengal and Agartala in Tripura through the middle of Bangladesh.
Dissenters said the deal was a “sellout” and would destroy infrastructure, while the Bangladesh government said it would open up greater economic opportunities and bring in business.
And yet in the two years since we opened our roads to India, very little traffic has come this way and none of the prophecies made by either side have been fulfilled.
Since June 6, 2015, three bus services a week have been running through Bangladesh, but the buses are never carrying more than five or six passengers at a time. An Indian news portal reported that Indian travellers had little interest in travelling between the two cities by bus through Dhaka.
Similarly, Indian businesses have been able to avail of transhipment through the Ashuganj river port through the Akhaura border for over a year now, but in the last eight months only seven ships have used this route.
Tripura Road Transport Corporation MD Keshab Kar told the Dhaka Tribune that Indian businesses currently had no interest in the Ashuganj port since the rail connectivity between Guwahati and Agartala had improved.
“However, when the Agartala – Akhaura rail link is opened, the Ashuganj port will become profitable,” he said.
The Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) still thinks transhipment and transit facilities will prove useful for Indians and it will become popular once several major infrastructure projects that will facilitate transport are completed in the next 18 months.
“We will build an inland container terminal at Ashuganj by December of next year to help increase transhipment,” said Commodore Mohammad Mozammel Haque, the chairman of BIWTA.
“We have already acquired 31 acres of land (and) the project will be implemented under the Indian LOC (Line of Credit). Although navigability is not a major concern here, as a precaution we are nevertheless dredging the river.”
The BIWTA chairman said the road between Ashuganj and Akhaura border must be improved to ensure smooth traffic. “The Road Transport and Highways Division has undertaken a project to upgrade the Ashuganj-Akhauara Highway to four lanes,” he said.
“When Indian businesses will get the integrated facilities on our transhipment and transit routes, it will become their preferred network,” he hoped.
All these projects have missed their deadlines due to complications over releasing funds from the Indian LOC and because of disputes over land acquisition, government officials have said.
Tripura Road Transport Corporation MD Keshab Kar told the Dhaka Tribune that Indian businesses currently had no interest in the Ashuganj port since the rail connectivity between Guwahati and Agartala had improved.
“However, when the Agartala – Akhaura rail link is opened, the Ashuganj port will become profitable,” he said.
The Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) still thinks transhipment and transit facilities will prove useful for Indians and it will become popular once several major infrastructure projects that will facilitate transport are completed in the next 18 months.
“We will build an inland container terminal at Ashuganj by December of next year to help increase transhipment,” said Commodore Mohammad Mozammel Haque, the chairman of BIWTA.
“We have already acquired 31 acres of land (and) the project will be implemented under the Indian LOC (Line of Credit). Although navigability is not a major concern here, as a precaution we are nevertheless dredging the river.”
The BIWTA chairman said the road between Ashuganj and Akhaura border must be improved to ensure smooth traffic. “The Road Transport and Highways Division has undertaken a project to upgrade the Ashuganj-Akhauara Highway to four lanes,” he said.
“When Indian businesses will get the integrated facilities on our transhipment and transit routes, it will become their preferred network,” he hoped.
All these projects have missed their deadlines due to complications over releasing funds from the Indian LOC and because of disputes over land acquisition, government officials have said.

