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India-Bangladesh land swap: Over 14,000 new Indian citizens

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India, Bangladesh exchange enclaves as residents erupt in joy

India, Bangladesh exchange enclaves as residents erupt in joy
  • Snigdhendu Bhattacharya, Hindustan Times, Mashaldanga (Cooch Behar)
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  • Updated: Aug 01, 2015 03:26 IST
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Children wave the Indian flag to celebrate the exchange of enclaves between India and Bangladesh. The exchange of 162 enclaves is taking place on July 31, 2015, marking the start of implementation of their landmark land boundary agreement. (Photo credit: Subhendu Ghosh)

"Seven...six...five...four...three...two...one...and now...and now we are freeeeeeee!" screamed Anwarul Haque, an 18-year-old high school student.

Carrying a tricolour, he turned with a shriek of delight and sprinted through the moonlit village road towards a chawk on the neighbourhood that till Friday was foreign land to them. But, no longer.

At the stroke of midnight, Mashaldanga, like 50 other Bangladeshi enclaves in Indian territory, turned into Indian land with an Indian pin code. Altogether 14,856 residents of these enclaves became Indian citizens, putting an end to an agony that started in 1947 with the Partition.

So, they danced and screamed and whistled. Some took a few somersaults on the ground that has turned tender after a few spells of rain.

“It’s like being released from jail where you’re born,” Haque's friend, Jelhasur Sheikh, said.

Read: Celebrations in Bangladesh over enclave exchange with India

Late on Friday night, all residents of the village and neighbouring ones emptied their houses and came out to hoist the Indian tricolour at the entrance to Mashaldanga.

“The West Bengal government is laying maximum emphasis on education, healthcare and sanitation. The government will now start development work here,” said Augsutine Lepcha, the additional district magistrate of South Dinajpur district, in a short speech.

Rabi Ghosh, MLA of Natabari in Cooch Behar and the district Trinamool Congress president, said: “Agencies such as PWD, public health engineering and the power utilities have started working on estimates."

As many as 111 Indian enclaves were in Bangladesh, while India housed 51 Bangladeshi enclaves. All the Indian enclaves were in West Bengal's Cooch Behar district.

According to a survey carried out in 2011, as many as 37,369 Indian enclave dwellers live in Bangladesh, while 14,856 people reside in Bangladeshi enclaves in India. On Friday midnight, India transferred 17,158 acres to Bangladesh, and in turn received 7,110 acres.

For the new Indian citizens, it was not just freedom of free movement anywhere in India, it was also about getting a government from which they can demand services an infrastructure.

A ‘stateless’ existence of 68 years had forced these enclave dwellers to utmost deprivation. None of the enclaves had roads and electricity, and suffered from the paucity of drinking water.

A famous quotation from former president APJ Abdul Kalam was put on a banner atop the entrance to the celebration venue along with his picture. The quotation -- “A dream is not what you see when you sleep. A dream is what keeps you awake" -- seemed to sum up the mood of the people at Mashaldanga.

"We have achieved the dream that did not let us sleep all these years," said Diptiman Sengupta, chief coordinator of Bharat Bangladesh Enclave Exchange Coordination Committee.

At Mashaldanga, where the main programme on the Indian territory was held, the mood for the historic moment was built up throughout Friday.

Members of the committee recalled various stages of their movement throughout Friday. Among them were victims of police atrocities and those who have suffered due to the lack of basic human rights.

Folklore attributes the birth of the enclaves to the outcome of chess games between the kings of Cooch Behar and Rangpur in the early 18th century, some academics say they could have been a result of a peace treaty between the Mughals and the king of Cooch Behar.

The real problems for the enclave dwellers, however, surfaced after 1947, when Rangpur district became a part of East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) and Cooch Behar remained independent before merging with India in 1949. Immediately, the areas held by each in the other’s territory were faced with an identity crisis.

In 1958, some 13 years before Bangladesh was born, then Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru and ex-Pakistan prime minister Feroz Khan Noon unsuccessfully tried to solve the problems.

Three years after Bangladesh came into being, then India prime minister Indira Gandhi and ex-Bangladesh prime minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman signed the Land Boundary Agreement in 1974. The pact could not be implemented due to various reasons, including the lack of necessary amendment to the Indian Constitution.

The final hurdle to the land and population swap was overcome in May 2015 when both houses of the Indian Parliament approved the 119th amendment of the Constitution.
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Guys,previous article was generating a lot of confusion regarding who get how much of land.Now I am replacing that article with this correct one from Hindustan Times.:patsak::patsak::patsak:
 
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Bangladesh is getting 10,000 acres extra land and 23,000 additional citizen.:victory::victory::victory:
 
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Really interesting around 36,000 Indians left their citizenship and choose to become Bangladeshi.
 
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How is this statement correct then??

I also thought that. Lol. Indian medias are either ignorant or avoiding backlash of general Indians that they are loosing lands.
 
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Its good to know that one issue get resolved peacefully without much issue...I hope rest of the issues are also resolved..
 
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I also thought that. Lol. Indian medias are either ignorant or avoiding backlash of general Indians that they are loosing lands.

Its wrong reporting by one newspaper. You ll find countless other newspapers, channels, reporting that India is losing land in this deal.
 
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I also thought that. Lol. Indian medias are either ignorant or avoiding backlash of general Indians that they are loosing lands.

No ..It is not that Indian media are ignorant...Rather India and its people sees BD as a friendly nation unlike Pakistan..where our main focus is the settlement of issue in a peaceful manner...If BD is due with getting more land than India, then we respect it...And its good that BD is happy with this treaty gets completed..

Usually Indian media gets hyper only with Pakistan...Even they do not get hyper with China too...So forget about BD...
 
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India–Bangladesh enclaves - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Agreement


The diagramatic sketch of Cooch Behar district of West Bengal marking enclaves
The Land Boundary Agreement was signed on 16 May 1974 between Indira Gandhi and Sheikh Mujibur Rahman which provided for the exchange of enclaves and the surrender of adverse possessions. Under the agreement, India retained the Berubari Union No. 12 enclave while Bangladesh retained the Dahagram and Angorpota enclaves with India providing access to it by giving a 178-by-85-metre (584 ft × 279 ft) corridor, called the Tin Bigha Corridor. Bangladesh quickly ratified the agreement in 1974 but India failed to do so. The issue of the undemarcated land boundary of approximately 6.1 kilometres (3.8 mi) in three sectors — Daikhata-56 in West Bengal, Muhuri River-Belonia in Tripura and Lathitila-Dumabari in Assam — also remained unsolved. The Teen Bigha Corridor was leased to Bangladesh in 1992 amid local opposition.[2]

The list of enclaves was prepared in 1997 by the two countries. Two Joint Boundary Working Groups were formed to work out the details of enclaves in 2001. A joint census was carried out in May 2007. In September 2011, India signed the Additional Protocol for the 1974 Land Boundary Agreement with Bangladesh.[11] Both nations announced an intention to swap 162 enclaves, giving residents a choice of nationality.[12][13][14] Under the agreement, India will receive 51 of the 71 Bangladeshi enclaves (from 51 to 54 of the 74 chhits) that are inside India proper (7,110.2 acres, 2,877.4 ha), while Bangladesh will get from 95 to 101 of the 103 Indian enclaves (111 out of 119 chhits) that are inside Bangladesh proper (17,160.63 acres, 6,944.66 ha). India will also acquire 2,777.038 acres (1,123.827 ha) adverse possession areas and transfer 2,267.682 acres (917.698 ha) adverse possession areas to Bangladesh. According to July 2010 joint census, there were 14,215 people residing in Bangladeshi enclaves in India and 37,269 people residing in Indian enclaves in Bangladesh.[15] Apparently Bangladesh would retain the 4,617 acres (1,868 ha) of its Dahagram-Angarpota exclave.

The Constitution (119th Amendment) Bill, 2013 was introduced in the Rajya Sabha, the Upper House of Parliament of India, on 18 December 2013.[7][16][17][18][19][20] The parliament panel, Standing Committee on External Affairs, approved the bill in November 2014.[3][21] The Rajya Sabha approved the constitutional amendment on 6 May 2015, and the Lok Sabha approved it the following day.[4] President of India Pranab Mukherjee gave his assent to the Act on 28 May 2015.[5]

On 6 June 2015, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi ratified the agreement during his visit to the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka. In the presence of Modi and Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, the foreign secretaries of the two countries signed the instruments of the land exchange.[22] Under this agreement, India will get 51 Bangladeshi enclaves (i.e., 51 or more chhits, covering 7,110 acres (2,880 ha)) in the Indian mainland, while Bangladesh will get 111 Indian chhits (i.e., 95 or more enclaves, covering 17,160 acres (6,940 ha)) in the Bangladeshi mainland.[6][2] According to the agreement, the people living in these enclaves without a nationality will be allowed to choose their nationality.[23] The two countries signed a total of 22 agreements including the ones on maritime safety co-operation and curbing human trafficking and fake Indian currency. Modi also announced a line of credit of $2 billion to Bangladesh.[24]

The physical exchange of enclaves and land parcels in adverse possession, and the boundary demarcation, will be implemented in phases between 31 July 2015 and 30 June 2016. The enclaves shall stand exchanged on the midnight of 31 July 2015 and the boundary demarcation will be completed by 30 June 2016 by Survey Departments of the respective countries. The transfer of enclave residents is expected to be completed within 30 November 2015.[8]

Indian and Bangladeshi officials began conducting a field survey of enclave residents on 6 July, and were scheduled to complete it by 16 July. Seventy-five teams, made up of one Indian and one Bangladeshi member each, were tasked with conducting the enumeration. Twenty-five teams surveyed the Bangladeshi enclaves which would be transferred to India, while 50 worked on the enclaves that would be transferred to Bangladesh. All enclave residents can choose to retain their current citizenship, or take citizenship of the other nation. New citizenship, if chosen, will take effect from 1 August 2015. As of 13 July, 100 families residing in the Bangladeshi enclaves have applied for Indian citizenship, while none of the residents of the Indian enclaves chose to go to Bangladesh.[25]
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Indian media is just switching the countries name on a conventional fact.Is it deliberate or mistake?:crazy::crazy:

Its wrong reporting by one newspaper. You ll find countless other newspapers, channels, reporting that India is losing land in this deal.
Yes,Their headline is stating that India will get 14000 new citizen and Bangladesh 37000 which is inconsistent with being India will get more acres.
 
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Doesn't it prove that India did not act as a hegemon to Bangladesh and is even prepared to part with more land for the benefit of Indo-Bangla citizens :angel:
I also thought that. Lol. Indian medias are either ignorant or avoiding backlash of general Indians that they are loosing lands.

.... And I have seen some jamatis here accusing India of so many things. It proves that Jamatis are wrong and the progressive Govt of Bangladesh right.
 
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A Pin Code: That Will be India's First Gift to 14,000 New Citizens Today

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Cooch Behar: At midnight on Friday, when India and Bangladesh officially swap land, the District Magistrate of Cooch Behar in West Bengal, P Ulaganathan, will experience what a civil servant might have experienced at Independence.

According to the India-Bangladesh land boundary agreement, signed 41 years after it was endorsed, the two countries will swap 162 enclaves, whose 50,000-odd inhabitants have been deprived not only of nationality, but also public services. India will gain access to 55 Bangladesh enclaves that house 14,000 residents.

"These are people with no addresses. So getting them one, assigning a pin code is my first job," Mr Ulaganathan told NDTV.

His assignment for tonight has no precedence after Independence.

The residents of these enclaves on both sides were given the choice to stay. Mr Ulaganathan said much like the Bangladeshis who do not want to leave India, of the 37,000 Indians living in 111 enclaves there, only 980 are coming back.

"They have formed social bonds there, built houses, bought land. So they chose to stay back where they have been for the last 68 years," he said.

The 980 people who have chosen to return are the most deprived and have nothing there, so they stand to gain from coming back, the officer said.

"All through this month, we are offering them an exploratory visit," said Mr Ulaganathan. "They can find relatives and rebuild their lives. If they are unable to, then we will allow them to move in with all our help in November."

But taking care of 900 people who return may be easier than ensuring support for the 14,000 Bangladeshis who will be Indians from tomorrow. Most have had no education as they couldn't access Bangladesh schools. Some are yet to experience the magic of electricity.

No wonder that they will celebrate their official status as Indians by lighting 68 candles in their homes - one for every year that they have lived here.

A Pin Code: That Will be India's First Gift to 14,000 New Citizens Today
 
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