In this regard,
Bangladesh wants to use ports on the Indian east coast which have better water
draught and mother vessels can dock there. In
the next week. a Bangladeshi team comprising port experts, trade experts,
exporters and importers, and shipping ministry officials will visit Indian
ports, such as the port of Chennai in Tamil Nadu, Visakhapatnam and
Krishnapatnam ports in Andhra Pradesh, and Haldia and Kolkata ports in West
Bengal, to check the commercial viability and technical feasibility of using
these ports.
Bangladesh presently
uses regional transhipment ports in Singapore, Colombo, and Malaysia to send
and receive its export and import cargoes. Feeder vessels to and from
Chittagong and Mongla ports carry the inbound and outbound cargoes as there is
no deep-sea port in Bangladesh for mother vessels to dock. If found viable, the Indian ports will open a new window for external
trade by cutting time and costs as they are closer to Bangladesh compared to
the regional hub ports. If it is decided to use the Indian ports,
Bangladesh will be able to send the cargo by road as the two neighbours have
long land boundaries between them.
Officials are
concerned that after returning from India they will submit a report to the
shipping secretary of the government elaborating the pros and cons of using the
ports of neighbouring countries for carrying out external trade.
After that, the
decision will be forwarded to the Indian authority for their approval and
finalise modus operandi. India has been
granted permission to use Bangladeshi seaports, Chittagong, Mongla and Payra,
to carry goods to its landlocked states in the northeast. Moreover, it has
been permitted to use Bangladesh’s roads and rail infrastructures to transship
goods to the seven sister states Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland, Manipur,
Meghalaya, Shillong, Tripura, and Mizoram.