Dhaka, Sept. 6 (PTI): The failure to sign a deal on Teesta water-sharing has cast a shadow over the two-day visit of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh here as Bangladesh summoned the Indian high commissioner and bluntly conveyed its unhappiness on the issue.
Bangladesh foreign secretary Mijarul Qayes called Indian envoy Rajeev Mitter to the foreign ministry this morning and sought a clarification on media reports about India deciding “at the last minute” not to sign the accord, sources here said.
Mitter is understood to have told Qayes that the “internal discussions” on Teesta water-sharing in India were yet to be completed and New Delhi was not in a position now to ink the pact.
He is understood to have expressed regret over the Teesta deal not coming through.
Mitter, however, conveyed to Qayes that as soon as the internal discussions were over in India, the deal would be signed, the sources said.
Qayes, on his part, conveyed to the Indian envoy that the “last-minute” scrapping of the move to sign the Teesta deal was “not acceptable”.
A spokesman for the Bangladesh foreign ministry said Qayes conveyed to Mitter that India’s decision not to ink the “crucial and long-awaited” Teesta pact is “very frustrating”.
Bangladesh, for which the Teesta pact would have been the most vital event of Singh’s two-day visit, also reportedly threatened to retaliate by not signing the transit accord with India.
Private television channels quoting “sources concerned” ran scrolls saying Dhaka would also postpone a crucial deal on the cross-border transit that would have allowed India to use Bangladesh’s southern seaports of Chittagong and Mongla.
The meeting between Qayes and Mitter took place shortly before Singh arrived here on his maiden bilateral visit during which the two sides are to sign several deals on a range of sectors, including border demarcation and exchange of enclaves.
Earlier, highly-placed Indian sources made it clear that India and Bangladesh will not sign a deal on sharing of waters of Teesta river during Singh’s visit to Dhaka in the wake of strong reservations to the move voiced by Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee.
“The deal on Teesta will not be signed in this visit. Unless we find something which is acceptable to everybody, there is no point signing the agreement,” the sources told journalists accompanying Singh to Dhaka this morning.
They said “there is no point of having an agreement just for the sake of agreement and the Centre has to engage the West Bengal government more intensively and sit with the Bangladesh government to thrash out a deal”.
“We need more time and need to sit with both the West Bengal government and Bangladesh to arrive at an acceptable agreement,” one source said.
Asked about reports that Mamata Banerjee had objected to giving Bangladesh 33,000 cusecs of water, as mentioned in the final draft of the interim treaty for Teesta water-sharing instead of 25,000 cusecs in the initial draft, the sources made it clear that no figure was mentioned in any draft.
The chief minister opted out of the visit to Bangladesh with Singh as she was stated to be upset with the final draft of the Teesta water-sharing treaty, creating a diplomatic embarrassment for the Prime Minister on his bilateral visit to Bangladesh.
The sources said there was no question of having arrived at any agreed quantum of water-sharing between India and Bangladesh because the two countries have not undertaken any joint measurement of the availability of water in Teesta.
While India and Bangladesh had separate figures about the water availability, no joint survey was done so that they could decide on the quantum of sharing the waters, particularly during the lean season from October to April, the sources said.
The idea behind an interim accord was that a joint survey is undertaken and criteria finalised about availability of water in catchment areas of Teesta before going for a permanent agreement.
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