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Rediff.com  » News » 'We won't let anti-India insurgents use our soil'

'We won't let anti-India insurgents use our soil'

Source: PTI
April 08, 2007 21:48 IST
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Bangladesh on Sunday said it will not allow its territory to be used by any insurgents against India and a foreign secretary-level meeting between the two countries will be held soon to deal with long-standing problems.

Foreign Affairs Adviser Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury described as a 'welcome development' Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's decision on trade concession to Least Developed Countries in SAARC and said Dhaka will hand over a list of its products for zero-duty access to the Indian market, the UNB news agency reported.

Chowdhury denied a media report on anti-India insurgent camps operating in Bangladesh and said his country 'would not allow its territory to be used by any insurgents against India or any other country.'

He said the recent meeting between Bangladesh's Chief Advisor Fakhruddin Ahmed and Singh on the sidelines of SAARC summit was productive Dhaka raised three concerns -- no demarcation of over 6.5 km of boundary, sharing the Teesta River waters and India's Tipaimukh dam, and tariffs on Bangladeshi exportable.

He said India has assured that they would not divert common-river water at the Tipaimukh dam while remaining issues will be settled through existing mechanisms between the two neighbours.

The advisor said a foreign secretary-level meeting between the two countries will be held soon to deal with the long-standing problems, the UNB said.

Chowdhury said, "India has sought a list from us and we will hand over it to accrue the benefit of India's decision to liberalise trade with the LDCs."

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