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Updated: June 10, 2015 02:15 IST
Exchange of enclaves from midnight of July 31 - The Hindu

The much-awaited implementation of the Land Boundary Agreement will start next month, beginning with the exchange of enclaves on July 31 midnight, official documents say. Launching the exchange of 111 Indian and 51 Bangladeshi enclaves, the two countries will start implementing the historic LBA, which the Indian Parliament ratified in early May.

Before the start of the historic process, the officials of the two countries will jointly visit the enclaves to finalise the process, according to the documents the two sides exchanged on June 6.
 
bang_enclave_2440230g.jpg

A group of children celebrate by waving the national flag at Korola Chitt. — Photo: Sujanya Das
OPED_BANGLA__1__jp_2440022g.jpg

Women huddle in the same enclave.
OPED_BANGLA__2__jp_2440023g.jpg

Freedom: Two women walk in the rain at Madhya Mashal Danga Chitt.

Updated: June 16, 2015 07:31 IST
Homeless, no longer - The Hindu

Neither accepted by Bangladesh nor India for 40-odd years, the enclave dwellers can now finally pick a nation. Mehboob Jeelani visited a chitt and found a people deeply hopeful that belonging to India might finally give them the identity they need to survive

On May 7, a day after India and Bangladesh signed the historic Land Boundary Agreement, the residents of Mosaldanga, a hamlet in south Cooch Behar district of West Bengal, marched down the main market. Bharat Mata Ki Jai (Long Live Mother India)”, they shouted, waving the Indian flag. As the parade entered the neighbouring village of Battala, it was blocked by a group of men wielding long bamboo sticks. “They asked us if we have permission to step on Indian land,” said Jayanal Abidin, 25, who was leading the procession.

Mr. Abidin and his people in Mosaldanga are among the 50,000 stateless people of East Bangladesh who, after India’s independence, got cut off from both East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, and India, confined to fragments of land belonging to neither country. In an accident of geography, about 51 parcels of Bangladeshi land stayed on the Indian side, known as Bangladeshi enclaves, but with all roads leading to Bangladesh either fenced with concertina wires or guarded by the Border Security Force. And across the border, Bangladesh was left with 111 enclaves with Indian citizens and no access to India.

After four decades of dithering, the conundrum has been finally resolved, with enclave dwellers on both sides now allowed to choose which of the two countries they want to belong to. On the Indian side, the Bangladeshis have decided to become Indian citizens. They consider this a milestone of “freedom” and worth a thousand celebrations.

It was this sense of freedom that Mr. Abidin and his friends were celebrating in Battala village. They told the Battala men that the enclaves would soon be recognised as part of India, and its people would be considered Indians, so there was no need for any permission to rejoice. But the Battala men were in no mood to listen. “They said, ‘go back or we [will] beat you,” Mr. Abidin recalled.

The Mosaldanga group didn’t, however, pay heed to the threats. They regrouped in the village and danced to the drumbeats all through the afternoon. But as dusk fell, the protestors from Battala entered Mosaldanga with knives and sticks, beat up the revellers, and set a house on fire.

1_2440500a.JPG


But, much to everyone’s surprise, the police arrived — the first-ever intervention made by an Indian law enforcement agency in a Bangladeshi enclave — and arrested an attacker immediately. They are currently searching for five more persons suspected to have been involved in the rampage.

Prior to the agreement, the Indian government viewed the enclaves as foreign territories, where Indian law was inapplicable and where criminals settled for years to evade police arrests. The police’s appearance in Mosaldanga this time sent out a strong message to the residents that the law had finally been established in the enclaves. For the first time, these stateless people today feel that they belong to India and India belongs to them.

The transition from being Bangladeshi to embracing an Indian identity will dismantle several oppressive structures that bred the lawlessness. Drug dealers who sold their marijuana in both Indian and Bangladeshi markets; local contractors who smuggled the enclave’s teenagers to Delhi and Mumbai for cheap labour; or Sarpanchs of Indian Panchayats who passed biased judgments on property disputes — all of this will end.

Political and economic players

Indian citizenship will make the enclave’s residents equal players in the local politics and economy.

The political workers of the Trinamool Congress and the All India Forward Bloc have already sensed the shift. They have started canvassing support in the enclaves, promising to build everything from scratch for the new citizens. All 51 enclaves will soon merge with the electoral constituencies adjacent to them, and their votes will be game-changers in legislative and gram panchayat elections, where victories are often decided by small margins.

With the sudden influx of political activism, the community is wondering if it should support a traditional political group or float its own party. The budding state-enclave relationship is empowering, and will help the enclave residents negotiate their rights with the people who have exploited them for decades.

But it’s hard to foresee that change taking place smoothly: the violence in Mosaldanga is evidence of the fact that the people who illicitly benefited from the enclaves are enraged and peace will not be granted so quickly.



On a rainy Thursday morning, a group of middle-aged men in lungis sat in a huddle under a rusty metal roof in Nalgram, another Bangladeshi enclave in east Cooch Behar. They chain-smoked beedis and crushed tobacco in their palms. Several cows wandered by on long halters. A woman in a pink saree fetched water from a hand pump. In the absence of piped drinking water, the people of Nalgram use groundwater.

The mood was jubilant. “We want to congratulate Mamata Banarjee and Narendra Modi,” Rasidar Mian, a 50-year-old farmer, who seemed to be the unofficial leader of the group, said. “We are very happy that we are becoming Indians very soon.”

More men assembled around Mr. Mian to narrate their stories of suppression. Mushtaq Ali, 38, explained the ordeal of studying as a stateless student. “My father has bribed so many people to get me enrolled in school and college,” Mr. Ali said. “I’m the first graduate of my chitt [enclave] but that doesn’t mean anything. I am still ineligible for a job.”

Mr. Ali graduated in 2010 in political science. The same year he passed an examination for the post of bus conductor in the government’s transportation department. Like most enclave dwellers, Mr. Ali acquired a voter ID, a unique identification number (Aadhaar card), and a driving licence by bribing the local Indian authorities. He submitted all the documents in the transportation department as proof of Indian citizenship. But the Panchayat of the neighbouring Indian village came to know about it, and “the Sarpanch told them that I was a Bangladeshi and got my named removed from the list,” said Mr. Ali.

Finding ways to establish an Indian identity hasn’t been restricted to students. In the last decade, the younger generation in the enclave has tried hard to buy property on Indian territory, so that the sale agreement documents can be used as proof of their Indian identity, allowing them to marry Indian women. Without this, finding a match was difficult. In the winter of 2010, 32-year-old Abdul Rehman of Karola enclave got ready in a groom’s finer. He was to marry a girl in the neighbouring Indian village of Nadina. The bride’s family welcomed Mr. Rehman and his companions with a delicious meal. Before approving the vows of consent, though, the cleric crosschecked Mr. Rehman’s name, parentage and address. Mr. Rehman felt it would be inauspicious to lie about his identity, so he confessed that he was from a Bangladeshi chitt. The bride’s father simply cancelled the wedding and asked Mr. Rehman and his companions to leave.

“As we walked out, everyone [from the bride’s side] said things like ‘we will never send our daughter to that jungle,’” Mr. Rehman recalled.

The women in the enclaves are just as hard up for marriage partners. In fact, they fare worse. The men in their community prefer marrying outside — it is a trend, a status booster. “We are compelled to pay huge dowries to get our girls married to Indian men,” said Mr. Rehman. As a result, a large number of people in the enclaves are reeling under debt. Many farmers have mortgaged their agricultural land. Many of them have uncleared debts dating back to the early 2000s. Every year, their landlords, the moneylenders, take 70 per cent of the production, leaving them with two or three gunnybags of rice.

It is in the absence of governance that an informal economy, aimed at exploiting the enclaves, materialised. It has been largely run by Indians from the villages that encircle the enclaves. From small grocery shops, which even have charging slots for cell phones because the enclaves don’t have electricity, to a big cattle and labour smuggling industry, the enclaves are a haven for exploitative entrepreneurs. “It costs Rs. 5 to charge one cell phone here,” said Jamal Sheikh, 20, from Mosaldanga. “There are about 200 cell phones in this enclave and we charge them twice a week.”

Similarly, the middlemen sell the farmers’ rice and jute to Indian merchants for a massive commission. Contractors take Rs. 1,000 per person to smuggle them to big cities as cheap labour. Agents charge Rs. 5,000 for an original voter ID and Rs. 500 for a fake one. For every small step, there is an agent to go through. It’s hard to know whether these exploitative forces will vanish after the enclaves join the Indian mainstream, or whether they will realign themselves to the new reality.

Hidden voters

Diptiman Sengupta, a social activist from Dinhata distict, is watching the developments closely. Mr. Sengupta has worked for the rights of enclave dwellers, just as his father Dipak Sengupta, a former MLA of Dinhata from Forward Bloc, did. Mr. Sengupta said 3,000-odd “hidden votes” were issued by local politicians to the enclave people, in order to bolster their voter base. “The politicians promised them [hidden voters] jobs. But after the elections, they refused to recognise them. We thought about this vote bank and decided, ‘let’s have them vote for a candidate who’s an Indian but lives in an enclave’”.

Mr. Sengupta found Mayamana Khatun, an Indian who’s married to an enclave resident, and pitched her as a candidate in the legislative elections of 2011 from Dinhata constituency. “She lost the elections but she proved that she was able to turn around [the results of] four-five gram panchayats,” he said. “She got 3,500 votes, which is enough to destroy any [assembly-level] politician.”

Through Ms. Khatun’s electoral advance, Mr. Sengupta earned some degree of power. He utilised it by lobbying the politicians to gather support to “Indianise” the enclaves. “I told them we will support you in the next elections if you convince the Chief Minister to support us,” he said. By 2014, the West Bengal Chief Minister had changed her stance, from being critical of merging the enclaves with the Indian mainland, she endorsed the settlement bill passed by the Indian Parliament in May 2015.

On June 6, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Hasina signed the historic deal. The government has now signed contracts for laying roads, drainage systems, and building hospitals and schools. An initial investment of Rs. 174.98 crore has been charted out. In addition, existing government schemes for housing, sanitation and agriculture are set to be implemented shortly.

And this is where politics comes into play, Mr. Sengupta worries. As the enclaves will be run by the Panchayats close to them, he thinks their unity is likely to be challenged. “The politicians may divide the people on the basis of religion and caste while misappropriating funds,” he said. When asked if the Mosaldanga violence had anything to do with local politics, Mr. Sengupta said: “I don’t think so. I think it’s too early to jump to any conclusion. I would say some miscreants did it.”
 
bang_enclave_2440230g.jpg

A group of children celebrate by waving the national flag at Korola Chitt. — Photo: Sujanya Das
OPED_BANGLA__1__jp_2440022g.jpg

Women huddle in the same enclave.
OPED_BANGLA__2__jp_2440023g.jpg

Freedom: Two women walk in the rain at Madhya Mashal Danga Chitt.

Updated: June 16, 2015 07:31 IST
Homeless, no longer - The Hindu

Neither accepted by Bangladesh nor India for 40-odd years, the enclave dwellers can now finally pick a nation. Mehboob Jeelani visited a chitt and found a people deeply hopeful that belonging to India might finally give them the identity they need to survive

On May 7, a day after India and Bangladesh signed the historic Land Boundary Agreement, the residents of Mosaldanga, a hamlet in south Cooch Behar district of West Bengal, marched down the main market. Bharat Mata Ki Jai (Long Live Mother India)”, they shouted, waving the Indian flag. As the parade entered the neighbouring village of Battala, it was blocked by a group of men wielding long bamboo sticks. “They asked us if we have permission to step on Indian land,” said Jayanal Abidin, 25, who was leading the procession.

Mr. Abidin and his people in Mosaldanga are among the 50,000 stateless people of East Bangladesh who, after India’s independence, got cut off from both East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, and India, confined to fragments of land belonging to neither country. In an accident of geography, about 51 parcels of Bangladeshi land stayed on the Indian side, known as Bangladeshi enclaves, but with all roads leading to Bangladesh either fenced with concertina wires or guarded by the Border Security Force. And across the border, Bangladesh was left with 111 enclaves with Indian citizens and no access to India.

After four decades of dithering, the conundrum has been finally resolved, with enclave dwellers on both sides now allowed to choose which of the two countries they want to belong to. On the Indian side, the Bangladeshis have decided to become Indian citizens. They consider this a milestone of “freedom” and worth a thousand celebrations.

It was this sense of freedom that Mr. Abidin and his friends were celebrating in Battala village. They told the Battala men that the enclaves would soon be recognised as part of India, and its people would be considered Indians, so there was no need for any permission to rejoice. But the Battala men were in no mood to listen. “They said, ‘go back or we [will] beat you,” Mr. Abidin recalled.

The Mosaldanga group didn’t, however, pay heed to the threats. They regrouped in the village and danced to the drumbeats all through the afternoon. But as dusk fell, the protestors from Battala entered Mosaldanga with knives and sticks, beat up the revellers, and set a house on fire.

1_2440500a.JPG


But, much to everyone’s surprise, the police arrived — the first-ever intervention made by an Indian law enforcement agency in a Bangladeshi enclave — and arrested an attacker immediately. They are currently searching for five more persons suspected to have been involved in the rampage.

Prior to the agreement, the Indian government viewed the enclaves as foreign territories, where Indian law was inapplicable and where criminals settled for years to evade police arrests. The police’s appearance in Mosaldanga this time sent out a strong message to the residents that the law had finally been established in the enclaves. For the first time, these stateless people today feel that they belong to India and India belongs to them.

The transition from being Bangladeshi to embracing an Indian identity will dismantle several oppressive structures that bred the lawlessness. Drug dealers who sold their marijuana in both Indian and Bangladeshi markets; local contractors who smuggled the enclave’s teenagers to Delhi and Mumbai for cheap labour; or Sarpanchs of Indian Panchayats who passed biased judgments on property disputes — all of this will end.

Political and economic players

Indian citizenship will make the enclave’s residents equal players in the local politics and economy.

The political workers of the Trinamool Congress and the All India Forward Bloc have already sensed the shift. They have started canvassing support in the enclaves, promising to build everything from scratch for the new citizens. All 51 enclaves will soon merge with the electoral constituencies adjacent to them, and their votes will be game-changers in legislative and gram panchayat elections, where victories are often decided by small margins.

With the sudden influx of political activism, the community is wondering if it should support a traditional political group or float its own party. The budding state-enclave relationship is empowering, and will help the enclave residents negotiate their rights with the people who have exploited them for decades.

But it’s hard to foresee that change taking place smoothly: the violence in Mosaldanga is evidence of the fact that the people who illicitly benefited from the enclaves are enraged and peace will not be granted so quickly.



On a rainy Thursday morning, a group of middle-aged men in lungis sat in a huddle under a rusty metal roof in Nalgram, another Bangladeshi enclave in east Cooch Behar. They chain-smoked beedis and crushed tobacco in their palms. Several cows wandered by on long halters. A woman in a pink saree fetched water from a hand pump. In the absence of piped drinking water, the people of Nalgram use groundwater.

The mood was jubilant. “We want to congratulate Mamata Banarjee and Narendra Modi,” Rasidar Mian, a 50-year-old farmer, who seemed to be the unofficial leader of the group, said. “We are very happy that we are becoming Indians very soon.”

More men assembled around Mr. Mian to narrate their stories of suppression. Mushtaq Ali, 38, explained the ordeal of studying as a stateless student. “My father has bribed so many people to get me enrolled in school and college,” Mr. Ali said. “I’m the first graduate of my chitt [enclave] but that doesn’t mean anything. I am still ineligible for a job.”

Mr. Ali graduated in 2010 in political science. The same year he passed an examination for the post of bus conductor in the government’s transportation department. Like most enclave dwellers, Mr. Ali acquired a voter ID, a unique identification number (Aadhaar card), and a driving licence by bribing the local Indian authorities. He submitted all the documents in the transportation department as proof of Indian citizenship. But the Panchayat of the neighbouring Indian village came to know about it, and “the Sarpanch told them that I was a Bangladeshi and got my named removed from the list,” said Mr. Ali.

Finding ways to establish an Indian identity hasn’t been restricted to students. In the last decade, the younger generation in the enclave has tried hard to buy property on Indian territory, so that the sale agreement documents can be used as proof of their Indian identity, allowing them to marry Indian women. Without this, finding a match was difficult. In the winter of 2010, 32-year-old Abdul Rehman of Karola enclave got ready in a groom’s finer. He was to marry a girl in the neighbouring Indian village of Nadina. The bride’s family welcomed Mr. Rehman and his companions with a delicious meal. Before approving the vows of consent, though, the cleric crosschecked Mr. Rehman’s name, parentage and address. Mr. Rehman felt it would be inauspicious to lie about his identity, so he confessed that he was from a Bangladeshi chitt. The bride’s father simply cancelled the wedding and asked Mr. Rehman and his companions to leave.

“As we walked out, everyone [from the bride’s side] said things like ‘we will never send our daughter to that jungle,’” Mr. Rehman recalled.

The women in the enclaves are just as hard up for marriage partners. In fact, they fare worse. The men in their community prefer marrying outside — it is a trend, a status booster. “We are compelled to pay huge dowries to get our girls married to Indian men,” said Mr. Rehman. As a result, a large number of people in the enclaves are reeling under debt. Many farmers have mortgaged their agricultural land. Many of them have uncleared debts dating back to the early 2000s. Every year, their landlords, the moneylenders, take 70 per cent of the production, leaving them with two or three gunnybags of rice.

It is in the absence of governance that an informal economy, aimed at exploiting the enclaves, materialised. It has been largely run by Indians from the villages that encircle the enclaves. From small grocery shops, which even have charging slots for cell phones because the enclaves don’t have electricity, to a big cattle and labour smuggling industry, the enclaves are a haven for exploitative entrepreneurs. “It costs Rs. 5 to charge one cell phone here,” said Jamal Sheikh, 20, from Mosaldanga. “There are about 200 cell phones in this enclave and we charge them twice a week.”

Similarly, the middlemen sell the farmers’ rice and jute to Indian merchants for a massive commission. Contractors take Rs. 1,000 per person to smuggle them to big cities as cheap labour. Agents charge Rs. 5,000 for an original voter ID and Rs. 500 for a fake one. For every small step, there is an agent to go through. It’s hard to know whether these exploitative forces will vanish after the enclaves join the Indian mainstream, or whether they will realign themselves to the new reality.

Hidden voters

Diptiman Sengupta, a social activist from Dinhata distict, is watching the developments closely. Mr. Sengupta has worked for the rights of enclave dwellers, just as his father Dipak Sengupta, a former MLA of Dinhata from Forward Bloc, did. Mr. Sengupta said 3,000-odd “hidden votes” were issued by local politicians to the enclave people, in order to bolster their voter base. “The politicians promised them [hidden voters] jobs. But after the elections, they refused to recognise them. We thought about this vote bank and decided, ‘let’s have them vote for a candidate who’s an Indian but lives in an enclave’”.

Mr. Sengupta found Mayamana Khatun, an Indian who’s married to an enclave resident, and pitched her as a candidate in the legislative elections of 2011 from Dinhata constituency. “She lost the elections but she proved that she was able to turn around [the results of] four-five gram panchayats,” he said. “She got 3,500 votes, which is enough to destroy any [assembly-level] politician.”

Through Ms. Khatun’s electoral advance, Mr. Sengupta earned some degree of power. He utilised it by lobbying the politicians to gather support to “Indianise” the enclaves. “I told them we will support you in the next elections if you convince the Chief Minister to support us,” he said. By 2014, the West Bengal Chief Minister had changed her stance, from being critical of merging the enclaves with the Indian mainland, she endorsed the settlement bill passed by the Indian Parliament in May 2015.

On June 6, Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Hasina signed the historic deal. The government has now signed contracts for laying roads, drainage systems, and building hospitals and schools. An initial investment of Rs. 174.98 crore has been charted out. In addition, existing government schemes for housing, sanitation and agriculture are set to be implemented shortly.

And this is where politics comes into play, Mr. Sengupta worries. As the enclaves will be run by the Panchayats close to them, he thinks their unity is likely to be challenged. “The politicians may divide the people on the basis of religion and caste while misappropriating funds,” he said. When asked if the Mosaldanga violence had anything to do with local politics, Mr. Sengupta said: “I don’t think so. I think it’s too early to jump to any conclusion. I would say some miscreants did it.”
This will help a lot to and the illegal problem
 
BSF to get hi-tech equipment to enhance vigil along border
Shillong, Jun 26, 2015 (PTI)
The Border Security Force is going to procure hi-tech equipment to enhance supervision and reaction capability of its troops along the International boundary with Pakistan and Bangladesh, officials said here.

"The Force (BSF) is under the process of procuring hi-tech equipment to enhance supervision and reaction capability of its troops," a BSF spokesperson said here, a day after the two-day force level commander conference, which concluded yesterday.

He said a large number of vehicles of various categories were also being introduced keeping in view the terrain of the International borders.

Chaired by Director General of BSF D K Pathak, the conference was attended by all five ADGs, 19 IGs and Director, Pay and Accounts department of the BSF.

Among other issues discussed in the conference was the Land Boundary Agreement and the problems related to exchange of Adverse Possession of Lands and Enclaves with Bangladesh, the BSF spokesperson said.


The other issues were cross border smuggling prevalent all along both the Eastern and Western borders and strategies on how to curb anti-national activities, he said.

The BSF DG later met Meghalaya Governor V Shanmuganathan and Chief Secretary P B O Warjri where he urged the state government to provide power for floodlights along the border, the spokesman added.
 
India, Bangladesh launch survey in enclaves over nationality | Zee News
Last Updated: Monday, July 6, 2015 - 13:52


377146-india-bangladesh-border700.jpg

Dhaka: India and Bangladesh on Monday launched a joint survey to record the "choice of nationality" of 51,584 people in 162 enclaves in each other's territories ahead of the July 31 integration of the land with the respective mainland under the historic Land Boundary Agreement (LBA).


Officials said 50 teams began the survey in 111 Indian enclaves in Bangladesh while 25 teams went inside India to carry out the identical task in 51 enclaves in India.

They are expected to complete the survey by July 23.


The launch of the survey comes exactly a month after the two neighbours sealed the landmark deal to settle the 41-year- old land boundary dispute through exchange of territories, removing a major irritant in bilateral ties.

"Each team comprise five men representing both countries and they are asking the enclave residents which nationality they opt for... They will have to complete their task in next 16 days and submit the findings to the respective authorities of the two countries," a home ministry spokesman told PTI here.

According to earlier reports, a joint delegation of Bangladesh and India will finalise the survey and prepare a list of intending Bangladeshi and Indian nationals while the two governments will then finalise the list by July 31 and arrange for their rehabilitation in the country of their choice.

A total of 37,369 people live in the 111 Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh while 14,215 people live in the 51 Bangladeshi enclaves inside Indian territories.

Unofficial surveys earlier found all residents of 51 Bangladeshi enclaves inside India would opt for Indian nationality while 1,057 people of 223 families in 99 of the 111 Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh territory were willing to go to the Indian mainland.

A non-government organisation called India-Bangladesh Enclaves Exchange Coordination Committee recently carried out the study.

On the first day of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's maiden visit here on June 6, India and Bangladesh swapped documents regarding the LBA that paves the way for operationalisation of the 1974 pact under which 161 enclaves under the control of either countries will be exchanged.

PTI
 
Indo-Bangla LBA: Shifting process to be over by Nov 30 | Zee News
Last Updated: Wednesday, July 15, 2015 - 22:41

New Delhi: India and Bangladesh have planned to complete by November 30 the process of shifting of people living in border enclaves as per their citizenship choice under the provision of the historic Land Boundary Agreement (LBA) ratified by the two countries last month.

Official sources said the exercise to know option of around 51,000 people whether to take Indian or Bangladeshi citizenship will be complete by tomorrow.

Under the LBA which was ratified during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Dhaka last month, 111 border enclaves will be transferred to Bangladesh in exchange for 51 that will become part of India.

According to estimates, around 37,000 people are living in Indian enclaves in Bangladesh while 14,000 people are staying in the Bangladeshi enclaves in India.

India and Bangladesh had jointly launched an exercise on July 6 to know views of people whether they would like to take Indian citizenship or that of Bangladesh and 98 per cent people have exercised their option by today.

A total of 75 groups of officials were formed, 25 in India and 50 in Bangladesh, to carry out the exercise.

"By tomorrow, we will have option of 100 per cent people about their citizenship choices," said a sources.

The entire exercise to shift people as per their citizenship choices will be completed by November 30, sources said.

They said government will also start the process of obtaining the land ownership records of people living in the enclaves to facilitate final settlements.

They said no sale and purchase of land in the enclaves will be allowed between June 21 and July 31 and that Home Ministry was working on the modalities to address issues relating to land transfer.

The sources further said the government may start the process of issuing Adhaar card and other required documents to those who opted for Indian citizenship.

The Prime Minister of Bangladesh had given specific instructions to ensure that there was no coercion in making people leave their enclaves in Bangladesh, the sources said, adding the entire exercise was taking place in a joyous atmosphere.

The government has also taken a humanitarian approach if a family is divided on the citizenship issue.

PTI
 
997 Indian enclave dwellers to come home after 'historic' Indo-Bangla land swap deal | Zee News
Last Updated: Monday, July 20, 2015 - 21:47

Dhaka: A total of 997 people living in Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh`s territory will move to India as the historic Land Boundary Agreement (LBA), struck recently between the two neighbours, is implemented.

However, no one from Bangladeshi enclaves inside India`s territory would go back to Bangladesh, reported The Daily Star.

The numbers were revealed by Habibur Rahman, deputy commissioner of border town of Lalmonirhat in Bangladesh, after a meeting between delegates representing the two nations at Changrabandha frontier of Cooch Behar district in West Bengal.

The meeting came after a joint survey was conducted from July 6 to July 16 to ascertain the enclave dwellers` choice of nationality. It focussed on tabulating the findings of the survey and finalising the nationality of enclave people.

Meanwhile, the two countries have imposed a ban on the sale and purchase of land in the enclaves till July 31 midnight, when the formal handover process would begin.

A total of 37,369 people live in the 111 Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh while 14,215 people live in the 51 Bangladeshi enclaves inside Indian territory.

ANI
 
997 Indian enclave dwellers to come home after 'historic' Indo-Bangla land swap deal | Zee News
Last Updated: Monday, July 20, 2015 - 21:47

Dhaka: A total of 997 people living in Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh`s territory will move to India as the historic Land Boundary Agreement (LBA), struck recently between the two neighbours, is implemented.

However, no one from Bangladeshi enclaves inside India`s territory would go back to Bangladesh, reported The Daily Star.

The numbers were revealed by Habibur Rahman, deputy commissioner of border town of Lalmonirhat in Bangladesh, after a meeting between delegates representing the two nations at Changrabandha frontier of Cooch Behar district in West Bengal.

The meeting came after a joint survey was conducted from July 6 to July 16 to ascertain the enclave dwellers` choice of nationality. It focussed on tabulating the findings of the survey and finalising the nationality of enclave people.

Meanwhile, the two countries have imposed a ban on the sale and purchase of land in the enclaves till July 31 midnight, when the formal handover process would begin.

A total of 37,369 people live in the 111 Indian enclaves inside Bangladesh while 14,215 people live in the 51 Bangladeshi enclaves inside Indian territory.

ANI

So no bangladeshi wants to live in Bangladesh. They all want to come to India. Seriously we need to kick out these lungi pole vaulters.
 
This means that they will become Indian citizens and those enclaves will become part of India.

And that's the focal point. We don't want one damm bangladeshi more in our country. They have already infiltrated in millions. This is going to create a serious problem for India in the form of jehadi activities.
 
Bangladesh, India in historic land swap after 70 years
Dahala Khagrabari (Bangladesh), Jul 30, 2015 (AFP)
492431_thump.gif

Bangladesh and India will this week finally swap tiny islands of land, ending one of the world's most difficult border disputes that has kept thousands of people in stateless limbo for almost 70 years.

At one minute past midnight tomorrow, some 50,000 residents along the border will light candles and celebrate their "new found freedom" following a historic deal sealed between the two countries' prime ministers.

"The 68 candles mark our 68 years of endless pain since 1947 and the agonies and poverty we faced living in no-man's land," said Golam Mostafa, who lives in an Indian enclave in the Bangladesh district of Kurigram.

Mostafa and other residents of the 162 enclaves -- small pockets of one country's territory surrounded by the other -- lack basic services such as schools, clinics, power and water because they are cut off from their national governments.

Under the agreement finalised in June and coming into effect tomorrow, the "islands" will effectively cease to exist, as each country will assume sovereignty over all enclaves in its territory.

Residents can choose to live in India or Bangladesh and will be granted citizenship. They can stay put or choose to move across the 4,000-kilometre long border.

With the land swapping less than 48 hours away, excitement has gripped the enclaves, with villagers holding feasts, rehearsing their new national anthem and preparing for celebrations including traditional games.

"It's like Eid day here. It's like a new found freedom," Rabbul Alam, who lives in the Indian enclave of Dahala Khagrabari, some 400 kilometres north of Dhaka, told AFP.

One of the weirdest enclaves, Dahala Khagrabari is situated in Bangladesh's northernmost district of Panchagarh, is surrounded by a larger Bangladeshi enclave, which is circled by an even bigger Indian one.

"For an outsider, it is difficult to know who is a Bangladeshi or who is an Indian here. Even we get confused. Only some concrete pillars mark which part is Bangladesh and which is India," Alam said.

The enclaves date back to ownership arrangements made centuries ago between local princes. Local legends say the enclaves were the result of 18th-century chess games by two competing princes.

The parcels of land survived partition of the subcontinent in 1947 after British rule and Bangladesh's 1971 war of independence with Pakistan.

Bangladesh endorsed a deal with India in 1974 in a bid to dissolve the pockets, but a souring of ties in the next few decades meant India only signed a final agreement in June during a visit to Dhaka by premier Narendra Modi, keen to strengthen regional ties.


****************



Development a far cry at counter enclaves

Drimi Chaudhuri Cooch Behar, July 31, 2015, DHNS
The overhead high-tension power line and satellite TV dishes at counter enclaves like Madnagura and Chhit Seoraguri mark the aspirations of those living in Bangladeshi enclaves of India.

The real condition of counter enclaves, however, belies their hopes and dreams. The ground situation also raises a question on the proposed steps for development the government talks about.

Enclaves are land pockets of Bangladesh surrounded on all sides by Indian mainland while counter enclaves are bits and pieces of India in the middle of these Bangladeshi enclaves.

The two counter enclaves closest to Cooch Behar in northern West Bengal are Madnagura and Chhit Seoraguri. While Madnagura lies in the middle of Bhatrigachhi, a Bangladeshi enclave, Chhit Seoraguri is an area of around 2.5 acres in the middle of Mashaldanga, another Bangladeshi enclave. Madnagura, home to around 450 Indians, is a small hamlet where most people are involved in farming.

Surrounded on all sides by waist-high concrete pillars that draw an invisible line between India and Bangladesh, what makes Madnagura a desirable location is the overhead power line. It bypasses Bhatrigachhi even as it passes over it, making residents of the Bangladeshi enclave sigh in silent despair. “All we get to do is see the power line over our heads. We can see houses at Madnagura lit up in the night when we live in darkness,” said 79-year-old Md Ali.

Other residents of Bhatrigachhi also expressed despair at being left out of the development process since they are enclave residents. They complained as to how they have to travel to Indian villages just to get their phones charged. What they consider as comforts – power supply, irrigation canals, glowing bulbs at home and direct-to-home TV antennas – have become the bane of existence for those living next door at Madnagura. They have electric poles and supply lines but hardly any power throughout the year.

“We’ve been living in darkness since Eid day on July 18,” said 69-year-old Asgar Ali, a resident of the Indian counter enclave, on Friday. “People at Bhatrigachhi think we’re living a comfortable life but they don’t know the whole truth. It’s true that we can cast our vote but we hardly get any benefits of being Indian citizens,” he complained. If the nearest health centre is a 15-km trip, the closest police station is 35 km away at Dinhata, the sub-divisional headquarters. “Our plight is not much different from those living in enclaves,” he said.

If at Madnagura, the complaint is of poor infrastructure, at Chhit Seoraguri, the crisis is more complex. The lush green oasis has only one family living in it, that of Chitto Das. Most of the counter enclave is his land where he cultivates wheat but he lives in perennial fear. “We’re the only Hindus surrounded by Muslims on all sides,” he said, referring to Mashaldanga, which spreads across eight villages. “Now that they are getting citizenship, we’re facing threats every day to sell our land and leave. The nearest Hindu household is a kilometre away and in case of trouble, we’ll be completely outnumbered,” he said.
 
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The Hindu
Mansur Ali Mian and Mansur Ali Khandakar busy for the preparation at Poatarkuthi (Enclave), which from midnight from July 31st, 2015 will become a part of India - Photo by Sanjoy Ghosh
More than 14,000 residents of 51 enclaves are eagerly waiting for August 1 when they can hoist a flag of a country they can call their own.

The residents of the Bangladeshi enclaves on the Indian side — who till now had no identity or citizenship — will become Indian nationals from the midnight of July 31.

“The district administration will organise flag hoisting ceremonies in all the 51 enclaves. The Tricolour will hoisted and quickly put on half-mast as the nation is mourning its former President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam,” P. Ulagnathan, District Magistrate, Cooch Behar, told The-Hindu on Thursday.

For Mr. Ulagnathan, the past few months have been extremely hectic. The district administration raced against time to complete the formalities involved in the mammoth task of exchanging Indian and Bangladeshi enclaves.

While there are 111 Indian enclaves in four districts of Bangladesh with a population of over 34,000, there are 51 Bangladeshi enclaves in Cooch Behar district of West Bengal with a population of 14,854. The two countries finalised the exchange plan during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bangladesh visit in June this year.

Jubilation, high hopes

Practically every house in the enclaves is preparing for some celebration. Archways are being constructed, arrangements are being made to hoist the Tricolour and many will be lighting candles and lamps to herald their “new Independence.”

“It took us 68 years to finally come to this point. Words cannot describe how we feel,” said 75-year-old Mansur Ali Mian of Potarkuti enclave.

He recalled the time when he was a student of a primary school which he was forced to leave after Partition.

“The school authorities said I was now a foreigner and could not continue to be there any more,” he said.

No more fake identities

Many young boys and girls in enclave are happy that they will no longer have to fake identities to gain admission in schools.
 
Tri-colour raised; candles, torches lit as 51 enclaves join India | Zee News
Last Updated: Saturday, August 1, 2015 - 19:18

Dinhata: The tri-colour was hoisted, the national anthem sung and crackers burst as over 14,000 residents of 51 Bangladeshi enclaves became Indians citizens at the stroke of midnight Friday/Saturday, ending their 68 years of stateless existence.

With the two neighbours exchanging enclaves in the midnight hour, another 37,000 people Aresiding in 111 Indian enclaves in Bangladesh, became Bangladeshi citizens.

Torches and candles were lit, people came out of their houses, burst crackers and hugged each other as part of the celebrations with their eyes shining bright with hope.

Their facial expressions showed ecstasy after decades of isolation and deprivation during which they were denied even the basic civic amenities.

History was written as India gave away to Bangladesh 17,160 acres, covering the 111 enclaves and in return received 7,110 acres comprising 51 enclaves.

As the clock struck 12, the Bharat Bangladesh Enclave Exchange Co-ordination Committee (BBEECC) - an organisation that fought for the rights of the enclave dwellers - celebrated the occasion in Mosaldanga enclave of West Bengal`s Cooch Behar district.

Euphoria took over, as the new Indian citizens saluted the tri-colour as it was raised on a makeshift stage and sang in chorus the Jana Gana Mana national anthem. Sixty-eight torches were held aloft, 68 candles lit, and 68 balloons went into the sky, marking the years the enclave dwellers have remained stateless. The darkness of the night was dispelled by fireworks, with the old and the young, octogenarian grandmothers to kids all soaked in the festivities.

The preparations for the celebrations had started from the morning. Arches with late former president APJ Kalam`s dictum of `Dream is not that which you see while sleeping it is something that does not let you sleep` adorned the area. A two-hour documentary brought out the hardships of the enclave dwellers all these years and their marathon struggle for citizenship.

The district administration organised more solemn functions in all the 51 enclaves at 9 am on Saturday. The national flag was raised and people lent their voices to singing the national anthem. Immediately after the flag hositing, the tri-colour was flown at half-mast in view of the national mourning due to Kalam`s death.

The main programme was held at Poatarkuti enclave, where district magistrate P Ulagnathan and police superintendent Rajesh Kumar Yadav participated.

"We welcome all of you as Indian citizens. We will try to ensure all the services for you. We could not hold big celebrations this time, in view of our former president`s death," said the district magistrate.

Many of the dwellers raised the tri-colour at their small residences and shanties.

The 111 Indian enclaves are located in the Bangladesh districts of Lalmonirhat (59), Panchagarh (36), Kurigram 12 and Nilphamari (4) while all the 51 Bangladeshi enclaves are situated in Cooch Behar district.

The swapping is in pursuance of the inking and exchange of documents of the Land Boundary Agreement (LBA) on June 6 in Dhaka in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart, Sheikh Hasina.

The LBA was first inked in 1974 by then Bangladesh prime minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and former Indian prime minister Indira Gandhi.

Other steps on implementing the 1974 Land Boundary Agreement and 2011 Protocol are underway in accordance with agreed modalities between the Indian and Bangladeshi governments, it said.

"I am very happy. From today, I am an Indian,` said 12 year old Rajesh Kumar Yadav, summing up the mood, as one of the most complicated and confusing border disputes in the world came to an end.

It was truly a new dawn at the enclaves.

IANS
 
Undisputed border
We have solved our dispute
Both India and Bangladesh to work know for development of their people.


All the best
 

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