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The Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region is a Government of India ministry, established in September 2001, which functions as the nodal Department of the Central Government to deal with matters related to the socio-economic development of the eight States of Northeast India: Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura and Sikkim.[1] It acts as a facilitator between the Central Ministries/ Departments and the State Governments of the North Eastern Region in the economic development including removal of infrastructural bottlenecks, provision of basic minimum services, creating an environment for private investment and to remove impediments to lasting peace and security in the North Eastern Region.
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | September 2001 |
Jurisdiction | Government of India |
Headquarters | Vigyan Bhavan Annexe, Maulana Azad Road, New Delhi -110 011. |
Annual budget | ₹5,892 crore (US$710 million) (2023-24 Budget Est.) |
Ministers responsible |
|
Website | mdoner |
The current Minister of Development of North Eastern Region is Jyotiraditya Scindia.[2]
Functions and responsibilities
editThe Department of Development of North Eastern Region (DoNER) was created in 2001 and was accorded the status of a full-fledged ministry in May 2004. The ministry is mainly concerned with the creation of infrastructure for economic development of North-Eastern region.
Main activities/functions of the DoNER.
- Non Lapsible Central Pool of Resources (NLCPR)[3] Coordination with the Central Ministries and the State Governments of the NE states.
- Capacity Building
- Advocacy and Publicity
- International Cooperation
- Enterprises of the Department
Organisations
editThe ministry has following organisations functioning under it:[4]
- North Eastern Development Finance Corporation Ltd.(NEDFi)
- North Eastern Regional Agricultural Marketing Corporation Limited (NERAMAC)
- The Sikkim Mining Corporation Limited. (SMC)
- North Eastern Handlooms and Handicrafts Development Corporation (NEHHDC)
Cabinet Ministers
edit- Note: MoS, I/C – Minister of State (Independent Charge)
No. | Portrait | Minister (Birth-Death) Constituency |
Term of office | Political party | Ministry | Prime Minister | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
From | To | Period | ||||||||
1 | Arun Shourie (born 1941) Rajya Sabha MP for Uttar Pradesh |
1 September 2001 |
29 January 2003 |
1 year, 150 days | Bharatiya Janata Party | Vajpayee III | Atal Bihari Vajpayee | |||
2 | C. P. Thakur (born 1931) MP for Patna |
29 January 2003 |
22 May 2004 |
1 year, 114 days | ||||||
3 | Paty Ripple Kyndiah (1928–2015) MP for Shillong |
23 May 2004 |
24 October 2006 |
2 years, 154 days | Indian National Congress | Manmohan I | Manmohan Singh | |||
4 | Mani Shankar Aiyar (born 1941) MP for Mayiladuthurai |
24 October 2006 |
22 May 2009 |
2 years, 210 days | ||||||
5 | Bijoy Krishna Handique (1934–2015) MP for Jorhat |
28 May 2009 |
12 July 2011 |
2 years, 45 days | Manmohan II | |||||
6 | Paban Singh Ghatowar (born 1950) MP for Dibrugarh (MoS, I/C) |
12 July 2011 |
26 May 2014 |
2 years, 318 days | ||||||
7 | General V. K. Singh (Retd.) PVSM AVSM YSM ADC (born 1950) MP for Ghaziabad (MoS, I/C) |
26 May 2014 |
9 November 2014 |
167 days | Bharatiya Janata Party | Modi I | Narendra Modi | |||
8 | Jitendra Singh (born 1956) MP for Udhampur (MoS, I/C) |
9 November 2014 |
30 May 2019 |
6 years, 240 days | ||||||
31 May 2019 |
7 July 2021 |
Modi II | ||||||||
9 | G. Kishan Reddy (born 1964) MP for Secunderabad |
7 July 2021 |
9 June 2024 |
2 years, 338 days | ||||||
10 | Jyotiraditya Scindia (born 1971) MP for Guna |
12 June 2024 |
Incumbent | 187 days | Modi III |
Ministers of State
editNo. | Portrait | Minister (Birth-Death) Constituency |
Term of office | Political party | Ministry | Prime Minister | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
From | To | Period | ||||||||
1 | Tapan Sikdar (1944–2014) MP for Dum Dum |
29 January 2003 |
22 May 2004 |
1 year, 114 days | Bharatiya Janata Party | Vajpayee III | Atal Bihari Vajpayee | |||
2 | B. L. Verma (born 1961) Rajya Sabha MP for Uttar Pradesh |
7 July 2021 |
9 June 2024 |
2 years, 338 days | Bharatiya Janata Party | Modi II | Narendra Modi | |||
3 | Dr. Sukanta Majumdar (born 1979) MP for Balurghat |
10 June 2024 |
Incumbent | 189 days | Modi III |
Northeast India connectivity projects
edit
Commerce with South and East Asian nations accounts for almost 45% of India's foreign trade.[5][6] Myanmar and ASEAN nations are part of India's Look East policy.[7][8][9] India is part of ASEAN+6, Asia Cooperation Dialogue, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, Asian Clearing Union, Asian Development Bank, Bangladesh Bhutan India Nepal Initiative, BIMSTEC, East Asia Summit, Mekong-Ganga Cooperation, SAARC, South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Asian Highway Network and the Trans-Asian Railway network.[10][11]
Major initiatives covered are Transport between India and Bangladesh, Bangladesh–India border, India-Myanmar barrier, Bhutan–India border, McMahon Line, etc.
Bridges
edit
Roads
edit
International roads
editNE has 5,000 km border with Nepal, Bhutan, China, Bangladesh and Myanmar while being isolated and connected to rest of India by 20 km narrow chicken-neck Siliguri Corridor.[12]
Strategic National Highways (NH)
edit13,500 km were NH out of total 3,76,819 km of road length in NE (March 2012).[12]
- Schemes: Bharatmala and NH[13]
- Non Lapsable Central Pool of Resources (NLCPR) plan[14] for NE and Look East connectivity.
- Special Accelerated Road Development Programme in North East (SARDP-NE) plan for the China border roads.[14]
- Funding:
- Total approved (A+B): ₹626,000 million (equivalent to ₹880 billion or US$11 billion in 2023) (until Dec 2017).[15][16]
- A. ₹326,000 million (equivalent to ₹460 billion or US$5.5 billion in 2023) 3,840 km approved and ₹135,000 million (equivalent to ₹190 billion or US$2.3 billion in 2023) 1,266 km completed (2014 to Dec 2017).[15][16][17]
- B. ₹300,000 million (equivalent to ₹420 billion or US$5.0 billion in 2023) additional approved under Bharatmala for NE NH (Dec 2017).[15][16]
- Routes:
Major NE NH route map and SARDP Arunachal roads map. - Highways:
- Arunachal Frontier Highway 2,000 km route along the China border in upper Himalayas, ₹400,000 million (equivalent to ₹640 billion or US$7.7 billion in 2023)[18][19]
- Trans-Arunachal Highway NH13 1,559 km route through the middle via 12 district HQ while connecting the remaining 4 district HQ with link highways, at ₹100,000 million (US$1.2 billion) (c. 2008) under SARDP-NE.[20][21]
- Northeast border roads:[22]
- NHIDCL launched in 2015 building of 100 strategic 7,000 km long border roads at the cost of ₹800,000 million (equivalent to ₹1.1 trillion, US$13 billion or €14 billion in 2023) across India including in Arunachal (Dec 2017 update).[15][16]
- BRO border roads:
— 73 border roads: incl. Sikkim and Arunachal, all to be completed by March 2022 (June 2017).[23][24]
— 410 border bridges:
- 144 in Arunachal (75 under construction completing by 2020),
- 40 in Sikkim under construction (Dec 2017).[25]
— 17 border rail and road tunnels: total length of 100 km,
- Arunachal (Nechipu Pass (near Bomdila) and Sela Pass tunnels on Bogibeel Assam to Sagalee to Tawang NH13),
- North Sikkim (578 meter Theng Pass tunnel on NH310A between Chungthang and Tung) (Dec 2017).[26][27]
- Northeast border roads:[22]
- Arunachal East-West Corridor along the Assam border in the lower foothills (marked in red) is being taken under Bharatmala project.
- 2,570 km approved NH (1917+653 in-progress and completed) in Arunachal, 36% road connectivity, 22 km per 100 km2 Arunachal road density including dirt tracks (c. Nov 2017).[28]
Other roads
edit- North Eastern Council inter-state projects and roads:[29]
- 47 new inter-state roads of 1,666 km costing ₹50,000 million (equivalent to ₹70 billion or US$840 million in 2023), of which 4 were taken within plan ending March 2017.[12]
- 2014 to Dec 2017:[15][16]
- ₹23,090 million (equivalent to ₹32 billion or US$390 million in 2023) projects executed,
- ₹5,790 million (equivalent to ₹8.1 billion or US$97 million in 2023) to ₹9,690 million (equivalent to ₹14 billion or US$160 million in 2023) rise in the annual budget.
- 56 to 138 increase in the number of projects, incl. Bramputra Study Centre established to research river ecosystem.
- PMGSY roads in NE, including border village roads].[30] Relaxation to be given to the minimum 250 people habitation in case of villages within 50 km of border.[12]
Railway
edit- Northeast railway connectivity projects
- Trans-Asian Railway
- NER railways,[31][32][33][34] In December 2017, 15 new NE railway projects of 1,385 km length were approved at the cost of ₹470,000 million (equivalent to ₹660 billion, US$7.9 billion or €8.1 billion in 2023).
- Sivok–Rangpo line, 44 km long, to Gangtok in Sikkim.[35]
- Teteliya–Byrnihat line, 22 km long, from Guwahati's suburb Tetelia to Byrnihat near Shillon in Meghalaya is likely to be completed by March 2022.[35]
- Dimapur–Kohima line, 82 km long, to Kohima In Nagaland is expected to be completed by March 2023.[35]
- Jiribam–Imphal line, 111 km long, to Imphal is likely to be completed by March 2022.[35]
- Bairabi–Sairang line, 51 km long, to Aizawl in Mizoram is likely to be completed by March 2023.[35]
Air
editAirports development
editNER Airports.[36] The Indian government upgraded 12 non-operational airports into operational airports in NE (May 2017, work started on 8 airports in 2014).[37][38] LGBIA Guwahati will operate as the inter-regional hub and Maharaja Bir Bikram Airport in Agartala, Dibrugarh Airport and Bir Tikendrajit International Airport in Imphal, will operate as intra-regional hubs by extending runways and apron, and by building terminal building and maintenance hangars at these airports.[38] Three new greenfield under-construction airports are Itanagar Holangi Airport, Pakyong Airport-Operationalized (Sikkim) and Chiethu Airport (Nagaland).[38]
Airports development phase-I (fy2016-17 to fy2019-20)
editAirports Authority of India (AAI) will spend ₹25,000 million (equivalent to ₹35 billion, US$420 million or €430 million in 2023) between 2018 and 2020, including the following will be completed by 2019-20 (c. Dec 2017):[39][40]
- Assam
- Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport, Guwahati modernisation–the Chief Minister of Assam, Himanta Biswa Sarma, is also pushing to the convert it into a hub for UDAN and connectivity to at least 9 ASEAN nations (c. Dec 2017).[41][39]
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Itanagar Holangi Airport new airport under construction[40]
- Tezu Airport upgrade[40]
- Tripura
- Maharaja Bir Bikram Airport in Agartala, currently ₹5,000 million (equivalent to ₹7.0 billion, US$84 million or €86 million in 2023) new terminal building upgrade to international airport,[39]
- Kailashahar Airport upgrade for UDAN flights, 138 km from Agartala.[39]
- Meghalaya
- Shillong Airport upgrade,[39]
Airports development phase-II (fy2018-19 to -)
editThe central government will invest a further ₹80,000 million (equivalent to ₹110 billion, US$1.3 billion or €1.4 billion in 2023) to develop more NR airports.[40] Several advanced landing ground heliports will be upgraded to dual army-civilian airports.[40] This likely includes the following:[42][37][38]
- Arunachal Pradesh
- Assam
- Sikkim
- Pakyong Airport (operationalized)
- Nagaland
- Chiethu Airport (under-construction)
Flights
editAmong airports in Northeast India, the following were connected under UDAN:
UDAN flights
editUDAN Phase-I flights started at Shillong Airport, Dimapur Airport, Bir Tikendrajit International Airport, Silchar Airport, Lengpui Aizawl Airport and Maharaja Bir Bikram Airport.[40]
UDAN Phase-II flights starting date–TBA
Other flights
edit2014–2017 NEC plan proposes to work towards starting the following flights:[12]
- Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose International Airport, Kolkata to
- Guwahati–Kunming
- Dimapur–Bangkok
- Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport, Guwahati to
- Imphal–Yangon
- Yangon–Bangkok
- Mandalay–Kunming
- Shillong–Dhaka
- Maharaja Bir Bikram Airport, Agartala to
- Dimapur–Yangon
- Dhaka
- Imphal Airport to Mandalay–Bangkok
- Silchar Airport to Imphal–Mandalay
Waterways
editInternational NE waterways
edit- India-Myanmar
- India-Bangladesh
- Waterways as per "Indo-Bangladesh Protocol on Inland Water Transit & Trade":
- Kolkata-Pandu, Guwahati-Kolkata
- Kolkata-Karimganj-Kolkata
- Rajshahi-Dhulian-Rajshahi
- Pandu-Karimganj-Pandu
- Seaports for inter-country trade
- India: Haldia Port (West Bengal), Syama Prasad Mookerjee Port (West Bengal), Pandu, Guwahati (Assam), Karimganj (Assam) and Silghat (Assam).
- Bangladesh: Port of Narayanganj, Khulna, Port of Mongla, Sirajganj and Ashuganj.
- Waterways as per "Indo-Bangladesh Protocol on Inland Water Transit & Trade":
Inland National waterways in NE
edit- NER Waterways: 20 National Waterways in NE
- National Waterway 2: Sadiya and Dhubri on Bangladesh-India border 891 km stretch of Brahmaputra River is already operational.
- 19 additional NE National Waterways under development (as of Dec 2017).[15][16][43]
- NW6: Aai River, Assam, 71 km.
- NW16: Barak River, Assam, 121 km.
- NW18: Beki River, Assam, 73 km.
- NW30: Dihing River, Assam, 114 km.
- NW31: Dhansiri River-Chathe River, Assam, 110 km.
- NW32: Dikhu River, Assam, 63 km.
- NW33: Doyans River, Assam, 61 km.
- NW38: Gangadhar River, Assam & West Bengal, 62 km.
- NW39: Ganol River, Meghalaya, 49 km.
- NW50: Jinjiram River, Assam & Meghalaya, 43 km.
- NW57: Kopili River, Assam, 46 km.
- NW61: Kumari River, Meghalaya, 28 km.
- NW62: Lohit River, Assam, 100 km.
- NW82: Puthimari River, Assam, 72 km.
- NW93: Simsang River, Meghalaya, 62 km.
- NW95: Subansiri River, Assam, 111 km.
- NW101: Tizu River-Zungki River, Nagaland.
- NW102: Tlawng River, Mizoram, 86 km.
- NW106: Umngot River, Meghalaya, 20 km.
- More potential NER National Waterwaysare being considered.[44][45]
Power
editAs of December 2017, ₹98,650 million (equivalent to ₹140 billion, US$1.7 billion or €1.7 billion in 2023) power transmission grid project approved in 2014 is being implemented of which 2,540 km lines already laid, and 16 hydro power projects of 5676 MW being implemented and additional 694 MW projects already implemented.[15][16]
Tourism
editProjects include approval of ₹2,070 million (equivalent to ₹2.9 billion, US$35 million or €36 million in 2023) in 2016 to prevent erosion of world's largest riverine island of Majuli, development of Spiritual Circuit in Manipur, Tourist Circuit in Sikkim, Tribal Circuit in Nagaland and Umiam Lake in meghalaya (Dec 2017 update).[15][16]
Look-East Connectivity
editCommerce with South and East Asian nations accounts for almost 45% of India's foreign trade.[5][6] Myanmar and ASEAN nations are part of India's Look East policy.[46][47][48] India is part of ASEAN+6, Asia Cooperation Dialogue, Asian Clearing Union, Asian Development Bank, Bangladesh Bhutan India Nepal Initiative, BIMSTEC, East Asia Summit, Mekong-Ganga Cooperation, SAARC, South Asia Subregional Economic Cooperation, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific, Asian Highway Network and the Trans-Asian Railway network.[10][11]
Seaport development
edit- Sittwe Port, Myanmar's multimodel port being developed by India
- Sabang Deepsea Port, jointly developed by India and Indonesia under strategic military and economic agreement, Indira Point, India's southernmost point, is close to Indonesia's Rondo Island and Aceh Province.
See also Extreme points of India
India-Myanmar-China Stilwell Road revival
editDiscussions are also proceeding on reopening the World War II-era Stilwell Road linking India's Assam state with China's Yunnan province through Myanmar.[11]
India–Myanmar–Thailand Trilateral Highway
editIndia–Myanmar–Thailand Trilateral Highway, also known as the East-West Economic Corridor,[49] is a 3,200 km (2,000 mi) from India to Vietnam highway under construction under India's Look East policy, that will connect Moreh, India with Mae Sot, Thailand via Myanmar.[50] It is AH1 of Asian Highway Network. The road is expected to boost trade and commerce in the ASEAN–India Free Trade Area, as well as with the rest of Southeast Asia. India has also proposed extending the highway to Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam.[51]
India and ASEAN have plans to extend this route to Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam as this connectivity will generate annually, an estimated US$70 billion in incremental GDP and 20 million in incremental aggregate employment by 2025, and India has offered US$1 billion line-of-credit for this project (c. Dec 2017).[52]
Imphal-Moreh-Mandalay national highway upgrade
editImphal-Moreh-Mandalay Highway currently exists. In May 2017, the Indian Ministry of Road Transport and Highway stated that it would spend an estimated ₹7,500 million (equivalent to ₹11 billion or US$130 million in 2023) to upgrade roads and highways in North East India in order to boost the region's connectivity with Myanmar and Bangladesh. Among these projects, the Ministry plans to widen the 108 km (67 mi) Imphal-Moreh highway in Manipur which currently serves as an important trade route between India and Myanmar.[53] This would provide the Manipur's capital city of Imphal with direct access to the trilateral highway.[53]
Zokhawthar-Mandalay road strengthening
editMizoram-Kalemyo Highway is a road widening and strengthening project planned by India. In May 2017, the Indian Ministry of Road Transport also plans to construct a 120 km (75 mi) highway linking Zokhawthar-Rikhawdar (also called "Rih") near Champhai, a border town in Mizoram, with the trilateral highway at Kalemyo. This will serve as a second route providing direct connectivity from Mizoram to the trilateral highway.[53]
Mago-Thingbu to Vijaynagar Border Road
editThe Mago-Thingbu–Vijaynagar Border Highway, also known as Arunachal Frontier Highway,[54] in Arunachal Pradesh India is a 2,000-kilometre-long (1,200 mi) road proposed to be built along the McMahon Line[55] (international border between India and China) by the Government of India at the cost of INR40,000 crore (approx. US$6.5 billion[18] as per 2014 prices).[19] Currently, along the alignment of this proposed road there is "little habitation" and there are only "small stretches of minor roads".[55] An assessment by the Ministry of Defence (India) in 2013 found that of the 503 stretches on the borders planned to be completed by 2022, only 17 were complete and work was underway on just 50.[citation needed] In 2014 October, Kiren Rijiju, Union Minister of State for Home Affairs of India was trying to expedite the project along with another proposed highway East-West Industrial Corridor Highway, Arunachal Pradesh[54] in Arunachal Pradesh[19] as he said "I am proposing to undertake this road along with another in the foothill areas of Arunachal Pradesh state from Bhairabkunda in Assam located at the tri-junction of Bhutan, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh to Ruksin in East Siang district of Arunachal Pradesh state which will serve as an industrial corridor for the people residing in the foothill areas of the state".[19]
Manipur-Mandalay bus service from 2018
editManipur-Mandalay bus service is pending subject to the signing of motor vehicle agreement. In September 2017, Indian ambassador to Myanmar announced that an Imphal-Mandalay India-Myanmar bus service will commence from 2018 after India and Myanmar sign the motor vehicle agreement.[56]
Imphal-Kalay-Mandalay flight
editImphal-Kalay-Mandalay flight is a proposed air service. In September 2017, Indian ambassador to Myanmar also proposed that a flight service from Imphal in Manipur to Mandalay via stopover in Kalay (Kalaymyo) in Sagaing Division of Myanmar could be started under UDAN regional connectivity scheme.[56] It was proposed to DoNER in 2012 and a successful trial run was conducted in December 2015.[57]
Tinsukia-Myitkyina railway
editTinsukia-Myitkyina railway is a proposed new railway link between the existing rail stations at Tinsukia-Doom Dooma in Assam state of India and Myitkyina in Kachin State of Myanmar, by laying new rail track via Shin Bway Yang and Sumprabum. Indian Railways uses broad gauge (1,676 mm or 5 ft 6 in) and Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia use narrow gauge (1 meter). In December 2017, India offered a US$1 billion line of credit to build connections to ASEAN nations.[58]
Imphal-Kalaymyo railway
editImphal-Kalaymyo railway is a proposed new railway link between the existing rail stations at Imphal in Manipur of India and Kalay in Myanmar. Indian Railways uses broad gauge (1,676 mm or 5 ft 6 in) and Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia use narrow gauge (1 meter). In December 2017, India offered a US1 billion line of credit to build connections to ASEAN nations.[58]
Aizawl-Wuntho railway
editAizawl-Wuntho railway is a proposed new railway link between the existing railway station at Wuntho in Myanmar and by extending the under construction Bairabi–Sairang line via Aizawl-Champhai in Mizoram of India to Wuntho in Myanmar which currently goes further north up to Myitkyina towards China–Myanmar border. These are to be taken up with assistance of India's 1 billion line of credit for connections to ASEAN nations.[58]
Aizawl-Kalaymyo railway
editAizawl-Kalaymyo railway is a proposed new railway link between the existing railway station Kalay in Myanmar and by extending the under construction Bairabi–Sairang line via Aizawl-Champhai in Mizoram of India to Kalay in Myanmar. These are to be taken up with assistance of India's 1 billion line of credit for connections to ASEAN nations.[58]
Aizawl-Kyauktaw-Sittwe railway
editAizawl-Kyauktaw-Sittwe railway is a proposed new railway link between the existing Kyauktaw-Sittwe railway in Myanmar and by extending the under construction Bairabi–Sairang line via Aizawl-Lunglei-Lawngtlai in Mizoram of India to Sittwe Port in Myanmar developed by India. Kyauktaw to Minbu is an under construction railway to link Sittwe with the exiting Myanmar railway network. These are to be taken up with assistance of India's 1 billion line of credit for connections to ASEAN nations.[58]
India-Myanmar-Thailand railway
editIndia-Myanmar-Thailand railway is a proposed new railway link, parts of which already exist, by constructing missing links between Aizawl and Imphal to Myanmar railway network and by linking existing railway lines in southern Myanmar to the Thailand rail network in 2 locations:
- Mongnai existing railway east in Myanmar to Chiang Mai in north-west Thailand
- Kyauk Shat or Dawei to Nam Tok near Bangkok
India-Myanmar-Thailand-Laos railway
editIndia-Myanmar-Thailand-Laos railway is a proposed new railway link, parts of which already exist, by constructing missing links between Aizawl and Imphal to Myanmar railway network and Myanmar-to-Thailand to connect railway in Laos. Laos only has one railway station in the whole nation, located 20 km east of Vientiane, that was built by State Railway of Thailand during 2007-09 by extending its metre-gauge network across the Thai–Lao Friendship Bridge from Thanaleng Railway Station in Thailand.[59] Test trains began running on July 4, 2008,[60] and Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn of Thailand formally inaugurated the line on March 5, 2009.[61][62] There is also an under-construction (2017) Keng Tung railway line in east Myanmar that can be extended to Laos in future.
Laos-Vietnam railway: In 2012, an agreement for the construction of 220-kilometre $5 billion line, from Savannakhet in south Laos to Port of Vũng Ang in Vietnam, via Mụ Giạ Pass and Tan Ap (intersects Vietnam railway network), was awarded to a Malaysian company "Giant Consolidated Limited" to complete the construction from 2013 to 2017.[63][64] By December 2016, installation of corridor posts along the proposed railway right-of-way was completed.[65] In future, Savannakhet is planned to be connected to the existing railway in Thailand at Khon Kaen or Ubon Ratchathani.
India-Myanmar-Thailand-Cambodia railway
editIndia-Myanmar-Thailand-Cambodia railway link is a proposed new railway link, parts of which already exist, by constructing missing links between Aizawl and Imphal to Myanmar railway network, to Thailand, to Combodia to connect the rail network in Cambodia. Cambodia has existing rail link with Thailand at Poipet (Krong Poi Pet), though train services is currently suspended (2017).
India-Myanmar-Thailand-Cambodia-Vietnam railway
editIndia-Myanmar-Thailand-Cambodia-Vietnam railway is a proposed new railway link, parts of which already exist, by constructing missing links between Aizawl and Imphal to Myanmar railway network, to Thailand, to Combodia to connect Vietnam Railways. Cambodia has existing rail link with Thailand at Poipet (Krong Poi Pet) though train services is currently suspended (2017) and Phnom Penh-Hoa Lu-Dĩ An connection with Vietnam is under construction (2017), while there is no current or planned rail connection to Laos. Indian Railways uses broad gauge (1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in)) and Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and Malaysia use meter gauge (1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in)).
India-Myanmar-Thailand-Malaysia-Singapore railway
editIndia-Myanmar-Thailand-Malaysia-Singapore railway is a proposed new railway link as part of the Trans-Asian Railway, parts of which already exist, by using existing metre-gauge connections of Thai railway network to railway network in Malaysia (at Palang Besar in north west and Tumpat in north east Malaysia) and Kuala Lumpur–Singapore high-speed rail (being constructed between 2017 and 2026[66]). Two rail crossings along the Malaysian-Thai border are:
- Padang Besar, Malaysia-Padang Besar, Thailand: Both the Malaysian and Thai towns where the crossing is located are known by the same name. This crossing connects to Malaysia's West Coast trunk line and Thailand's main southern line to Bangkok via Hat Yai. Both Malaysian and Thai customs, immigration and quarantine formalities are conducted at Malaysia's Padang Besar railway station.
- Rantau Panjang-Sungai Kolok: On the Malaysian side, this bridge crossing is on a branch line which is connected to Malaysia's East Coast line. In Thailand, the crossing is connected to the Su-ngai Kolok branch line which links up with the main southern line at Hat Yai. The crossing is currently not in use (January 2018).
India-Bangladesh Sabroom-Cox Bazar railway
editThis will extend the existing Sabroom in south Tripura on the border of Bangladesh to Khagrachari-Rangamati-Bandarban district headquarters in the tribal areas of Chittagong Hill Tracts, joining the existing Chittagong-Satkania track at Satkania and proceeding further on the new track to the Cox's Bazar which is one of the official port for transit to India.
India-Bangladesh Baraiya-Zokhawtar railway
editThis will extend the existing Sabroom in south Tripura on the border of Bangladesh to Baraiya (southwest Tripura)-Chaggalnaiya (Bangladesh)-Manu Bazar (South Tripura)-Sabroom-Khargachari-Magrum-Nunsri Lunglei-Aizawl-Zokhawtar-Kalemo.
India-Bangladesh Bandarban-Tuiping railway
editRoute for this will be Bandarban (Bangladesh)-Tuiping (Mizoram)-Niawhtlang (Mizoram-Burma border)-Gangaw (Myanmar).
India-Bangladesh Shillong-Sylhet railway
editRoute for this will be Shillong and Dawki in India to Sylhet in Bangladesh.
India-Bangladesh Dhubri-Jaria railway
editRoute for this will be Dhubri, Tura, Barengapara and Durgapur in India to Jaria in Bangladesh.
References
edit- ^ "About us". Mdoner.gov.in.
- ^ "New Ministers assume office; PM to hold 1st meeting of expanded cabinet". The Indian Awaaz. AMN. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
- ^ "Non-Lapsable Central Pool of Resources". Pib.nic.in. Retrieved 15 September 2018.
- ^ "Ministry of Development of North Eastern Region". Archived from the original on 23 July 2010. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
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