Participants from the five
countries of Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Myanmar and Nepal at a
Regional Policy Dialogue on “Connectivity Imperatives in the
Bay of Bengal Region”, organised by CUTS International in New
Delhi, India, strongly suggested that an Empowered Working
Committee needs to be formed which can function as a regional
platform to push ahead the agenda of connectivity in the
region.
The two-day Dialogue saw participation from a cross-section of
government, private players, multilateral agencies, civil
society, think-tanks and media from all the five countries to
deliberate on issues to facilitate connectivity in the region
by charting out a forward looking agenda to push for it at
local, sub-national, national and regional levels.
While day one dwelled on strategic and geo-political drivers
of connectivity in the Bay of Bengal region and the role to be
played by allies like the United States and United Kingdom,
the second day examined pertinent development linkages of
connectivity, including those relating to livelihood, gender
and socio-political realities at the ground level. It was
informed by a detailed study undertaken by CUTS International
and its country partners on the issue of connectivity and its
development linkages.
Pradeep Mehta, Secretary General, CUTS International
emphasised the importance of distribution of gains from
regional connectivity so as to be inclusive of women and other
marginalised and vulnerable communities in the region. While
Jaya Singh Verma of UK’s Department for International
Development stressed public-private linkages as a crucial
element for advancing the connectivity agenda, Robert Gaverick,
Minister-Counsellor for Economic, Environmental, Science and
technology Affairs, US Embassy, New Delhi emphasised the need
for a regional commitment to international laws, treaties and
rule-based regime for trade and connectivity.
Sagar Prasai, Country Representative of The Asia Foundation,
stressed that it is important to see to it that connectivity
leads to proportionate gains to places and spaces away from
the metropolitan centres in each of the countries. He
underlined the fact that enhancement in trade and connectivity
disproportionately benefit metro-urban centres while borer
regions and the second rung cities of a country are not really
benefitted. He added that for connectivity to work and make
sense border region development must be prioritised, with
stress on economic development of remotely located and
marginalised population.
Anusua Basu Ray Choudhury of Observed Research Foundation
flagged that while economic aspects of connectivity is much
talked about, the other and linked implications of movement of
vehicles and people are seldom highlighted. She mentioned the
importance of looking at health hazards of an increasingly
connected world where diseases, practices and pathogens also
move across borders and not just trucks, which in turn, impact
women at the border regions disproportionately.
CUTS presented on implications of connectivity on livelihoods,
among other things, and highlighted that since the population
across these five countries who are directly or indirectly
linked to connectivity are a heterogeneous group, advancement
in connectivity will impact them differentially While some
will gain with new and improved livelihoods and access to new
and bigger markets, it is important to look at what that means
for vulnerable groups such as women and other marginalised
population, who may have to deal with shifts and loss of
livelihoods.
Software of connectivity was the other important issue that
was discussed and experts agreed that there is a substantial
gap in terms of aligning domestic policies with regional ones
and also that information asymmetry, capacity of institutions
and people were critical hurdles. It was pointed out that
regional institutions, agreements and coordination was
required to go past these hurdles. The BBIN Motor Vehicles
Agreement and its protocols can prove to be a game changer in
terms of boosting confidence for regional initiatives and
their implementation, it was pointed out.
Toe Aung Myint, Permanent Secretary of Ministry of Commerce,
Government of Myanmar, said that Myanmar is keen to align with
the current discourse on BBIN connectivity and is looking
forward to the completion of various connectivity projects
with India, which would help in bridging gaps between South
and Southeast Asia.
The event came up with concrete recommendations to enhance
physical, institutional and people-to-people connectivity
among countries in the region. The strongest among them were
focused on the need for coordination of various initiatives
and efforts at national and regional levels through the
formation of an Empowered Working Committee. Other
recommendations that emerged were to do with the completing
ongoing and planned infrastructure development projects,
focusing the development discourse on gains at the ground
level, importance of engaging media, private sector players
and use of new and emerging technology, particularly
Information and Communications Technology, which has largely
been under-utilised in the region.
--------------------------------------------------------------
For more information, please
contact:
Bipul Chatterjee, bc@cus.org ; +91-98292-85921
Vijay Singh, vs@cuts.org ; +91-99102-64084