India, Bangladesh seal border agreements, trade deals (Agencies) Updated: 2005-06-22 09:37
India and Bangladesh agreed to several measures aimed at easing tensions
along their border, which is the scene of frequent bloody clashes between
security forces from the two countries, officials said.
The two sides decided after marathon talks to restart meetings of a boundary
working group from August, as well as increase joint patrolling of waterways
along the border, which has been a constant source of tension since Bangladesh's
creation in 1971.
The two countries share a 4,000-kilometre (2,500-mile) border of which only
20 percent is fenced, and India accuses Bangladesh of pushing illegal
Bangladeshi immigrants into India.
 Indian Foreign Secretary Shyam Saran (L)
listens to his Bangladeshi counterpart Mohammad Hemayetuddin speak during
a meeting in New Delhi. India and Bangladesh agreed to several measures
aimed at easing tensions along their border, which is the scene of
frequent bloody clashes between security forces from the two countries,
officials said.[AFP] | India estimates there are three million illegal Bangladeshis in the country.
Indian intelligence officials also say that top rebel leaders from groups in its
northeast are holed up in Bangladesh, a charge denied by Dhaka.
Border tensions frequently erupt in armed clashes between guards on both
sides that have left scores dead over the past few years.
At least 394 Bangladeshis were shot either by Indian border guards or Indian
criminals since January 2000, the Dhaka-based rights group Odhikar said Tuesday.
Regional security also was at the top of the agenda Tuesday, Indian officials
said, with New Delhi seeking an extradition treaty with its neighbour.
"Bangladesh briefed us on recent operation against Indian insurgent groups
and other criminal groups. We welcomed this and requested them to share details
of those killed and apprehended," the officials said.
Meeting participants also finalised a draft trade deal and an investment
protection agreement, as well as proposed three new bus routes between the two
countries, officials said.
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