India has approved a $750 million loan for Bangladesh to develop trade infrastructure ahead of a visit to Dhaka by Prime Minister Manmohan Singh this week, a senior Bangladesh official said on Sunday.
The money is part of a $1 billion credit line India proposed for its eastern neighbour to develop ports and related infrastructure, said Musharraf Hossain Bhuiyan, secretary of the economic relations division of the finance ministry.
"The Indian government has already asked the relevant ministry to disburse the credit for implementing nearly two dozen infrastructure projects under the $1 billion credit agreement signed in August last year," Bhuiyan said. "The most important from our point of view of course are the two agreements on interim (water) sharing arrangements for the Teesta and Feni rivers," Foreign Minister Dipu Moni told a news conference.
She said Bangladesh decided to "provide connectivity for the countries of the region, particularly in view of obvious geographical exigencies, to Nepal, Bhutan, and India."
"We are in the process of developing those linkages that will facilitate connectivity, including by rail, waterways, road and air." Singh and Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina are expected to sign agreements to swap disputed territory dating back to the 1947 partition of British India, as well as pacts on water rights from major shared rivers, during the September 6-7 trip, the first by an Indian prime minister to Bangladesh in 12 years.
Singh's visit is widely seen as a demonstration of India's willingness to have closer understanding and co-operation with the small neighbour, and remove decades of mistrust.
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