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And yet the Indians remain ungrateful

Bangladesh should be the last country to talk about "Ungratefulness".

Besides, we are building the infrastructure in Bangladesh through our lucrative soft loans and grants, infrastructure that Bangladesh can also use for its benefit.

Hehe,we can also take some of these products as rent for using our roads...

We have already given $2 billion soft loan on very easy terms and minuscule interest rates, considering the inflation rates, you will pay less than the principal itself, $250 million of which has been converted to grant also (means you don't have to pay even the principal), all for building Bangladeshi roads and bridges that you so proudly call 'our' with an air of doing charity.

"Small minds can't see the big picture" -
has someone already given this quotation? If not, then I am giving it for Bangladeshis.

@Nilgiri @gslv mk3 @Abba_Dabba_Jabba You see, quotation market is highly competitive, most good things have already been said. :(
 
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Im posting here since BD is naturally the largest future economic partner for India in the immediate region:

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com...ess-south-asia-trade/articleshow/54009974.cms

india-ready-for-truck-with-seamless-south-asia-trade.jpg


NEW DELHI: A truck is trundling its way to Delhi, making history along the way. In Gadar: Ek Prem Katha (2001), Sunny Deol's character had sung with enthusiasm about driving across the subcontinent through Amritsar, Lahore...

That's a road too far but our real life lorry is still important. It's carrying goods made for global retail chain Marks & Spencer, having left the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka on August 28 and set to reach Delhi on Monday. It will mark the start of an endeavour to create a seamless mega market comprising Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan and India (sorry Sunny, no Pakistan).

There is a clear cost and time advantage to through transport.

"We are expecting the freight cost to come down by 20% and transit time by three days due to this," said Nidhi Dua, India country manager for Marks & Spencer. "Earlier the Bangladeshi trucks had to be offloaded at the border and the goods shifted for onward journey into India in Indian trucks."

Apart from the delays, goods would get damaged as they were transferred between trucks besides making them vulnerable to the weather and pilferage. The pilot run of the Bangladeshi truck through customs-free borders is being monitored in real time thanks to an onboard chip. The template may be followed for all forms of such movement.

"This will help in seamless move ment of both goods as well as passenger vehicles across borders within the South Asian region," a senior customs official told ET. As part of the Motor Vehicles Agreement (MVA) signed among the countries cited above in June 2015, trucks can cross borders with just a cargo manifest and a document seeking temporary admission.

An electronic seal is affixed when a vehicle reaches the first land customs station in the destination country. The first truck is part of trials to help draw up protocols to facilitate trade while maintaining effective controls.

"We have been monitoring the truck's movement since it left Benapole, the Bangladesh checkpost near Petrapole," said the official cited above. "Customs duty on the goods would be paid in Delhi before they are released to the company."

The vehicle that's coming to Delhi via Kolkata will file a bill of entry at the Inland Customs Depot in Patparganj in the capital before it is cleared, the official said. The project is in partnership with the Asian Development Bank, which is supporting the project by helping to create better physical infrastructure in the four countries.

It's supporting over 30 priority road projects with a total estimated cost of over $8 billion. The opening up is expected to help boost development of the northeast as the transport corridor runs through that region.

A World Bank study expects South Asian intra-regional trade as a whole to rise 60% thanks to the agreement. Marks & Spencer sees trade between Bangladesh and India growing thanks to the easing of transport rules. "Marks and Spencer brings in about 20 trucks of manufactured goods every month from Bangladesh," Dua said.

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No trolling please.

@PARIKRAMA @anant_s @Bilal9 @Anubis @Loki @BDforever @bongbang @Doyalbaba @Levina et al.\

@ebrahym This is what I was talking about in things India - Pakistan can also look at implementing to improve trade in current political framework.

Interesting... :-)

But one could go to Delhi from Dhaka bypassing Kolkata as it is out of the way - really.

500 or more miles out of the way - as a matter of fact...

And please come back to the topic guys.
 
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Bangladesh should be the last country to talk about "Ungratefulness".

Besides, we are building the infrastructure in Bangladesh through our lucrative soft loans and grants, infrastructure that Bangladesh can also use for its benefit.



We have already given $2 billion soft loan on very easy terms and minuscule interest rates, considering the inflation rates, you will pay less than the principal itself, $250 million of which has been converted to grant also (means you don't have to pay even the principal), all for building Bangladeshi roads and bridges that you so proudly call 'our' with an air of doing charity.

"Small minds can't see the big picture" -
has someone already said this quotation? If not, then I am saying it for Bangladeshis.

@Nilgiri @gslv mk3 @Abba_Dabba_Jabba You see, quotation market is highly competitive, most good things have already been said. :(

India has not been a development partner of Bangladesh until recently. Even then most loans are given in projects which benefit India to carry goods from India to IONE. Bangladesh is using some Indian funds in Padma bridge also but the biggest contributors in infrastructural development have been Japan and China so far.
 
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India has not been a development partner of Bangladesh until recently. Even then most loans are given in projects which benefit India to carry goods from India to IONE. Bangladesh is using some Indian funds in Padma bridge also but the biggest contributors in infrastructural development have been Japan and China so far.

Are Bangladeshis not allowed to use the projects funded or implemented by India ? I am sure it benefits Bangladeshis more. There is no f*****g reason for BDs to hate India. India is only helping BD except that many BDs don't have the IQ to see the larger picture.
 
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India has not been a development partner of Bangladesh until recently. Even then most loans are given in projects which benefit India to carry goods from India to IONE. Bangladesh is using some Indian funds in Padma bridge also but the biggest contributors in infrastructural development have been Japan and China so far.

Heard about CPEC? At least Pakistanis don't show such attitude towards a country building their infrastructure.

Are Bangladeshis not allowed to use the projects funded or implemented by India ? I am sure it benefits Bangladeshis more. There is no f*****g reason for BDs to hate India. India is only helping BD except that many BDs don't have the IQ to see the larger picture.

As if they don't want it, and we are doing it forcefully. Every country wants foreign investments unless they are absolutely dumb.
 
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Don't forget that you also have to drive piling all the way down to base rock. I don't know how deep the base-rock is in that area but could be hundreds of feet like the rest of Bangladesh. This could be quite expensive as well.
Burn khalifa foundation has no base rock underneath. Pure sand. To solve the problem engineers drilled and filled reinforced concrete as long as the tower to prevent it from tipping off.
 
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http://www.thefinancialexpress-bd.c...et-to-approve-yet-another-4-lane-road-project
Published : 05 Sep 2016, 23:49:46
ECNEC set to approve yet another 4-lane road project
Elenga-Rangpur connectivity to cost Tk 118.81b
FHM Humayan Kabir


The government is likely to approve Bangladesh's largest road development project, the Elenga-Rangpur 4-lane, at a cost of Tk 118.81 billion, officials said Monday.

Planning Commission (PC) officials said it would place the Elenga-Hatikumrul-Rangpur road upgradation project before the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC) today (Tuesday) for approval.

The project implementing agency- the Roads and Highways Department (RHD)-would develop the existing 190.40km highway into a 4-lane one with the financial support from the Asian Development Bank (ADB).

The ADB will finance the project from the regional fund called-South Asia Sub-regional Economic Cooperation (SASEC).

According to the project proposal, the ADB will provide Tk 93.40 billion from the SASEC fund while the government will make available the remaining portion of the projected expenditure. Meanwhile, the PC has asked the Ministry of Road Transport and Bridges (MoRT&B) to justify cost of the proposed Elenga-Hatikumrul-Rangpur 4-lane road project as it has found the cost abnormally high, compared to that of identical projects, officials said.

Earlier a few months back, the RHD sent the project proposal to the PC with a cost of Tk 124.91 billion for getting its approval.

After scrutiny of the project, the Project Evaluation Committee of the PC asked the MoRT&B to rationalise the cost. Then the RHD recast the project proposal cutting the cost by Tk 6.1 billion to Tk 118.81 billion.

Meanwhile, the RHD is now upgrading the existing 70-kilometre Joydevpur (Gazipur)-Elenga road to a four-lane one.

In April 2013, the government approved the Tk 27.88 billion project for upgrading the existing 70-km road from Joydebpur (Gazipur) to Elenga (Tangail) to ensure smooth communication between Dhaka and the country's northern and north-western regions.


A RHD official said they will have to acquire a large stretch of land for widening the road up to northern Bangladesh. The RHD will also need substantial volume of funds for that propose.

Besides, a portion of funds from this project would be diverted to the currently ongoing Joydevpur-Elenga 4-lane road as the latter project needs more funds, he added.
@Bilal9 @UKBengali
 
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But one could go to Delhi from Dhaka bypassing Kolkata as it is out of the way - really.

Small steps friend. Let something start and then it will bloom and take a nature of its own....and when it comes to economics, its always efficiency that gets rewarded.
 
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We have already given $2 billion soft loan on very easy terms and minuscule interest rates, considering the inflation rates, you will pay less than the principal itself, $250 million of which has been converted to grant also (means you don't have to pay even the principal), all for building Bangladeshi roads and bridges that you so proudly call 'our' with an air of doing charity.

"Small minds can't see the big picture" -
has someone already given this quotation? If not, then I am giving it for Bangladeshis.

@Nilgiri @gslv mk3 @Abba_Dabba_Jabba You see, quotation market is highly competitive, most good things have already been said. :(

SHW understands the basic quid pro quo a lot better than the majority of BD riffraff posting in this subforum. It will stay that way for a long time too.
 
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And indian NE people who are seeing independence will find these fuel trucks and vessels as easy target. Not to mention potential environmental disaster. awami league should be hold responsible for any mishap inside Bangladesh.
 
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The Truckers should be monitored. They are a significant source of HIV infection. The last thing it needs is cross border transmission. The truckers should always be preferably a Bangladeshi
I think, the trucks coming back from India should be disinfected before even they sets foot in BD. What is the current GoB position, I do not know. Can someone check and hilite this?

The truck that reached Delhi belonged to a Bangladeshi company with Allahu seal in its front. I don't think it was given to an Indian driver.
Allahu or what, do you think a truck driver from BD would know the route to Delhi? There are certainly Indian drivers for the Indian portion.
 
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Why Indians are so much exited with the event that BD truck moving straight to Delhi? Its like 5-6 threads opened. 2 truck drivers one named Mohamed and another one Islam from BD driven on Indian roads. What next?

Drivers of the truck - Motiur Islam (32) and Md Rasel (28) - were enthusiastic over their first visit to India.
“It is a proud moment for us. I enjoyed driving on the India roads,” said Rasel. Motiur, who could barely speak in Hindi, was happy to be part of this historic event.


Source: https://defence.pk/threads/india-re...amless-south-asia-trade.447726/#ixzz4JWuDcBxG
 
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Yes but not implemented but expect in recent future maybe before election

What do you mean "not implemented" ?

So they didn't add 500 billion rs in the GDP? But that's a very miniscule amount for rebasing. Adding $5 billion won't make much difference anyways. So if our GDP is only off by $5 billion, why even bother 'rebasing' it since it's pretty accurate overall?

What am I missing here?

Also, does census have anything to do with accurate economic data? May be they want to do census first?
 
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