India-Bangladesh to swap lands at midnight : The Tribune India

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India-Bangladesh to swap lands at midnight

COOCH BEHAR (WB): India and Bangladesh will make a historic exchange of enclaves at midnight on Saturday, finally ending a long-drawn border dispute between the two nations that has left some 51,000 residents of the enclaves stateless for several decades.

India-Bangladesh to swap lands at midnight

In this photograph taken on July 30, 2015, sixty-five year old Chopola Barman dries paddy at her home in Dalaha-Khagrabari in the Bangladeshi district of Panchagarh. Bangladesh and India prepared July 31, 2015, to swap tiny islands of land, ending one of the world's most intractable border disputes that has kept thousands of people in stateless limbo for nearly 70 years. AFP Photo



Cooch Behar (WB), July 31

India and Bangladesh will make a historic exchange of enclaves at midnight on Saturday, finally ending a long-drawn border dispute between the two nations that has left some 51,000 residents of the enclaves stateless for several decades.

More than 100 enclaves of India encircled by Bangladesh border and over 50 enclaves of Bangladesh enclosed by Indian territory will be exchanged between the two neighbouring countries at midnight, officials said on Friday.

As the country is observing mourning following the death of former President A P J Abdul Kalam, there would be no celebrations to mark the exchange, they said.

Some 51,000 residents of the enclaves — stateless for decades until now— have decided where they want to live.

The exchange of enclaves followed signing of an agreement in Dhaka by India and Bangladesh on June 6 this year.

Under the deal, signed in Dhaka in the presence of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart Sheikh Hasina, the two countries will swap the enclaves dotted around the border. Their inhabitants have been deprived of public services and living in squalid conditions.

The land accord was originally agreed in 1974 by then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. The progress of the accord stopped for a long time after Mujibur was assassinated in 1975 and subsequent governments failed to agree on the transfer of enclaves. — PTI

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