Crowds cheer Bangladesh-India land swap after 70 years in limbo

162 tiny islands of land -- 111 in Bangladesh, 51 in India -- officially handed over to countries surrounding them


Afp July 31, 2015
In this photograph taken on July 30, 2015, a villager walks through fields of Dalaha-Khagrabari in the Bangladeshi district of Panchagarh. PHOTO: AFP

DASHIAR CHHARA: Jubilant crowds celebrated Saturday as Bangladesh and India swapped tiny islands of land, ending one of the world's most intractable border disputes that has kept thousands in stateless limbo for nearly seven decades.

As the clock struck one minute past midnight (1801 GMT Friday), thousands of people who had been living without schools, clinics or power for a generation erupted in cheers of celebration at their newfound citizenship.

"We have been in dark for 68 years," said Russel Khandaker, 20, as he danced with friends in the Dashiar Chhara enclave, which belonged to India but has now became part of Bangladesh.

"We've finally seen the light," he told AFP.

Read: Bangladesh, India exchange land islands in historic deal

A total of 162 tiny islands of land -- 111 in Bangladesh and 51 in India -- were officially handed over to the countries surrounding them on Saturday after Dhaka and New Delhi struck a border agreement in June.

The land-swap means some 50,000 people who have been living without a state to call their own since 1947 will now become part of the countries that surround their homes.

In Dashiar Chhara, thousands of people defied monsoon rains to celebrate, marching through rain-soaked muddy roads singing the Bangladeshi national anthem and shouting: "My country, your country. Bangladesh! Bangladesh!"

Others lit 68 candles to mark the end of "68 years of endless pain and indignity".

Sharifa Akter, 20, held a candle in her hand and smiled. "I can now fulfil my dream to be a top government bureaucrat," she told AFP.

Maidul Islam, 18, said the handover meant "we're now human beings with full human rights."

Read: India takes step toward resolving border dispute with Bangladesh

Officials from Bangladesh and India are set to hoist their respective national flags over their new territories on Saturday morning in formal ceremonies.

The enclaves date back to ownership arrangements made centuries ago between local princes.

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

Bangladesh endorsed a deal with India in 1974 in a bid to dissolve the pockets, but India only signed a final agreement in June when Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Dhaka.

In the final hours before the handover, villagers held special feasts and joined prayers in mosques and Hindu temples to usher in the new era.

Prodeep Kumar Barman sang a devotional song praising Hindu Lord Krishna as he led his troupe near a temple at the main bazaar in Dashiar Chhara, singing: "Oh what a joy, what a joy!"

Plans for more lavish festivities have been scaled back as India is observing a period of national mourning for former president A. PJ Abdul Kalam, who died this week.

"This is the biggest celebration of my life. I can't describe how I feel today," said Parul Khatun, 35, a resident of the Indian enclave of Kot Bajni.

Both India and Bangladesh conducted surveys this month asking enclave residents to choose a nation.

The overwhelming majority of people living in Indian enclaves in Bangladesh opted for Bangladeshi citizenship, but nearly 1,000 people on the Bangladesh side opted to keep their Indian nationalities.

They now have to leave their homes by November for India where they will be resettled in the state of West Bengal.

COMMENTS (5)

Kadwa Sach | 9 years ago | Reply @Bewildered: You sound like a disgruntled Pakistani who will always see black - dark, pitch black - whenever India achieves a breakthrough. Bangladesh and India have had a long-standing issue and this latest swap has brought clarity not only to both sides but also, particularly, to the population involved. Learn to give up your madrassa mindset, and you will find that the world has a lot to offer. Pakistanis should first and foremost become nation builders, and not always be constricted by narrow-mindedness which is impeding their progress and making them a stone-age country (it's not even a country for many!). Why learn the hard way that you are a backward nation with backward people? The moment you accept that, you will work towards change for the better. That is the key to future success. Give up your obsession with religious extremism and death and destruction. That is destroying, in effect, generation after generation. Believe you me, Pakistan badly needs progress. Just step out of your country with your green passport, and see how the world treats you.
Spock | 9 years ago | Reply Entire south asia was waiting for Modi. Now he has arrived in style
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