“China is ready but I want India to do the project,” Bangladesh Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina told reporters at a press conference in Dhaka on Sunday
14 July.
China and India both want to execute the Teesta River Comprehensive Management and Restoration —
a Dhaka-led initiative to better manage the river’s waters — as the two nation
vie for influence in neighboring Bangladesh. The project to develop the river
basin of 414 km (257.25 miles) long Teesta river that flows from India into
Bangladesh figured prominently in talks during Hasina’s visit to New Delhi in
June. The two countries share numerous rivers that flow from the Himalayas into
the Bay of Bengal.
An agreement on
sharing the river’s water was reached in 2011 but could not be sealed after the
eastern Indian state of West Bengal, through which the river flows before it
enters Bangladesh, objected to the deal.
As India has dithered over resolving the issue, China stepped in with
its proposal. New Delhi responded earlier this year with its own offer amid
security concerns about Chinese engineers working close to its borders.
“China has made an offer to us, they did a feasibility study. India has
also made an offer, and will do a feasibility study,” Hasina said added, “But I would give greater priority to this
being done by India because India has held up the Teesta’s waters.”