Home Asia Pacific

Historic Realignment! 1st Direct Cargo Ship From Pakistan Docks In Bangladesh; Should India Be Worried?

A major strategic realignment is underway in South Asia. In a historical first since Bangladesh’s founding in 1971, a direct cargo ship from Pakistan docked at Bangladesh’s Chittagong port, signaling an unprecedented thaw in relations between the two countries, which had been part of the same nation for nearly a quarter century.

The cargo vessel from Karachi arrived at Bangladesh’s southeastern port city of Chittagong on November 11, marking the first-ever direct maritime contact between the two countries in over five decades.

Establishing a direct maritime link between India’s eastern and western neighbors signals a major realignment in the region and has New Delhi alarmed.

For New Delhi, this is just one in a series of signals by the three-month-old Muhammad Yunus-led caretaker government in Bangladesh that Dhaka is slowly but certainly drifting towards Islamabad.

The Panama-flagged Yuan Xiang Fa Zhan, an 182-meter-long container ship, offloaded its cargo in Bangladesh before leaving port, news agency AFP reported, quoting top Chittagong port official Omar Faruq.

Port authorities said the ship brought goods from Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates, including raw materials for Bangladesh’s key garment industry and basic foodstuffs.




Bangladesh student protests. (via Platform X)

Pakistan’s envoy to Dhaka, Syed Ahmed Maroof, gave the details on social media platform X (formerly Twitter), “Direct cargo vessel from Karachi has reached Chittagong, marking the first direct maritime link between Pakistan & Bangladesh. The direct route promises to significantly streamline supply chains and reduce transit time besides enhancing bilateral trade and business ties.”

Incidentally, the establishment of a direct maritime link between the two estranged countries comes after Bangladesh, in September, eased import restrictions on Pakistani goods, which previously required a mandatory 100 % physical inspection of goods on arrival, which resulted in long delays.

Also, the lack of a direct maritime link meant that, previously, Pakistani goods had to be off-loaded onto feeder vessels, usually in Sri Lanka, Malaysia, or Singapore, before traveling onwards to Bangladesh.

People on social media expressed hope that this is just the beginning and that a direct flight between Islamabad and Dhaka and the signing of a free trade agreement between the countries should follow.

There is also a buzz that popular Pakistani singer Rahat Fateh Ali Khan can perform in the Bangladesh Premier League’s (BPL) 10th Edition opening ceremony.

All these developments have India alarmed for obvious reasons. Since the Muhammad Yunus-led caretaker government came to power in Bangladesh in August this year, multiple signals suggest Dhaka’s historic realignment away from India in favor of Pakistan.

Bangladesh’s Historic Realignment

One of the first signs that the new government in Bangladesh is warming up to Pakistan and drifting away from India came less than 30 days after Muhammad Yunus took over as its leader following the overthrow of Sheikh Hasina’s government after month-long violent protests.

In August, Bangladesh and parts of northeast India, including Tripura, Assam, and Meghalaya, experienced heavy rainfall that led to unprecedented floods. Within hours, Bangladeshi cyberspace was inundated with posts that alleged India deliberately released more water from the Dumbur Dam, upstream of the Gumti River in India’s Tripura State, to cause flooding in Bangladesh.

The narrative peddled was that New Delhi was doing this to punish Dhaka for the August 5 uprising that led to the overthrow of the Sheikh Hasina government, widely perceived to be close to India.

Read More

Exit mobile version