India, Bangladesh foreign secretaries meet in Dhaka
It is the first high-level visit by an Indian official since 5 August when Hasina was ousted
PTI
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Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri with his Bangladeshi counterpart Mohammad Jashim Uddin in Dhaka on Monday. PHOTO: PTI
Dhaka, 9 Dec
Foreign Secretaries of India and
Bangladesh met here Monday for the high-level talks between the two nations
amid strained bilateral ties following the ouster of prime minister Sheikh
Hasina in August.
Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri
arrived in Dhaka earlier in the day on an Indian Air Force jet for a day-long
visit.
Soon after his arrival here, Misri
met his Bangladeshi counterpart Mohammad Jashim Uddin and held one-on-one talks
before the formal meeting with delegates from both sides.
It is the first high-level visit by
an Indian official since 5 August when Hasina was ousted. "The meeting
between our foreign secretary Jashim Uddin and his counterpart Vikram Misri is
taking place as scheduled at the state guest house Padma. They first held brief
one-on-one talks and then the formal meeting began with delegates from both sides,”
a Bangladeshi foreign ministry official said.
The official added that the
Bangladeshi side would hold a media briefing later Monday about the talks,
which were expected to feature all issues of bilateral ties.
The close ties between India and
Bangladesh came under severe strain after Hasina was forced to leave the
country in the face of a massive anti-government protest in August. Nobel Peace
laureate Mohammad Yunus came to power days after Hasina fled to India.
The relations deteriorated further
in recent weeks over attacks on Hindus and the arrest of Hindu monk Chinmoy
Krishna Das.
There have been a spate of
incidents of violence against Hindus and other minorities, as well as attacks
on temples in Bangladesh in the last few weeks that triggered strong concerns
in New Delhi.
Analysts speculated that recent
incidents, including the arrest of the Hindu monk in Bangladesh, the alleged
harassment of the minority community and attacks on Hindu temples in
Bangladesh, and the attack on the Bangladesh mission in Agartala are likely to
figure in the FS-level talks.
Interim government head Yunus
earlier said India might not have liked the “revolution” ousting a “fascist
regime. Members of his interim Cabinet said Indian media was largely
exaggerating the harassment of minorities.
Dhaka said the sporadic violence
was a manifestation of an outburst of anger against the leaders and activists
of the ousted Hasina regime and the Hindus who were harassed were related to
her Awami League party and violence had nothing to do with their religious
faith.
In September, foreign affairs
adviser Mohammad Touhid Hossain met briefly with his Indian counterpart S
Jaishankar in New York on the sidelines of a UN general assembly meeting.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi and
Yunus led their respective delegations at the UN summit of heads of state and
government in September but had no meeting.
Misri is scheduled to meet Hossain
and pay a courtesy call on Yunus.
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