India
may declare no-firing along Bangladesh border: Pillai
India
may declare a unilateral no-firing along its border with
Bangladesh for a year to avoid the deaths of civilians
in any cross-fire, Home Secretary G.K. Pillai said here
Friday. We are considering unilateral no firing on the
border for one year. The modalities of that are being
worked out, Pillai said at the India-Bangladesh security
dialogue organised by the Observer Research Foundation
(ORF) and Bangladesh Enterprise Institute (BEI) here.
Responding
to suggestions of M.K. Rasgotra, former foreign secretary
and president of ORF's centre for international relations,
against any firing or transgression on the Indo-Bangladesh
border, Pillai said India understood that any killing
of civilians in border cross-firing was a very sensitive
issue in the neighbouring country.
He
dismissed reports that the Border Security Force had made
any transgression along the Bangladesh border earlier
this month. Pillai said some Indian men who had gone fishing
had come under fire and there was retaliatory fire from
the Indian side. The home secretary said India and Bangladesh
were at the cusp of a relationship change and there was
need to move fast to use the window of opportunity.
Terming
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's visit to India
earlier this year as a milestone, Pillai said the gains
will remain on paper unless translated quickly on the
ground. We need to move very fast. I don't think this
window of opportunity will last forever. The next nine
months are going to be critical. If we miss the bus in
nine months, we may find ourselves climbing a mountain.
Pillai said the boundary dispute related to only 6.1 km
of the 4,095 km border between the two countries, but
there had been no progress in the last 10 years to solve
the problem.
He
suggested creating a joint task force with a mandate to
solve the boundary dispute by the end of this year or
early next year. Pillai said a large number of visas were
issued by India's mission in Dhaka but there were pinpricks".
Asking the organisers of the dialogue to look at the issue,
the home secretary said there could be "massive"
visa relaxation for those having travelled to India earlier.
He said the government was also considering removing Bangladesh
from the list of countries where prior clearance from
the government was needed to give visas. The home secretary
suggested developing markets on the border to legitimise
economic activity and curb smuggling.
He
said that the delegates could come up with a solution
to the problem of cattle smuggling which had deep political
implications in India".
On security problems, Pillai said the cooperation extended
by Bangladesh in the recent months was gratifying".
It
is working on the ground, he said.
He
said terrorism was not country-specific and it was vital
for countries to share intelligence. Referring to the
problem of fake Indian currency, Pillai said Bangladesh
had become a transit point country for operators coming
from Pakistan and the Middle East. Coping with terrorism
and cooperation in the areas of security are the main
themes of the two-day conference whose recommendations
will be given to the two overnments.
The
Bangladesh side is being led by BEI president Farooq Sobhan
while the Indian side is being led by Rasgotra. The first
conference of the India-Bangladesh security dialogue was
held at Dhaka in December 2009. The dialogues follow a
memorandum of understanding between ORF and BEI to organsie
conferences on matters of mutual interest.