HomeNewsOpinionBangladesh-India Relations: Teesta treaty is a bridge too far and even a reset can’t redeem it

Bangladesh-India Relations: Teesta treaty is a bridge too far and even a reset can’t redeem it

Talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart, Sheikh Hasina, over the sharing of the waters of trans-border rivers has revived the possibility of the signing of the Teesta River water-sharing treaty.

June 26, 2024 / 13:04 IST
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Teesta treaty needs a thorough overhaul to serve any purpose today.

Talks between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Bangladeshi counterpart, Sheikh Hasina, over the sharing of the waters of trans-border rivers has revived the possibility of the signing of the Teesta River water-sharing treaty hanging fire since 2011 because of West Bengal chief minister and Trinamool Congress supremo Mamata Banerjee’s stiff opposition citing her state’s water requirements.

Predictably, Banerjee lost no time in criticising the Modi-Hasina discussions in New Delhi on Sunday as “unilateral deliberations” which are “neither acceptable nor desirable” because the West Bengal government was not consulted -- she even threatened in writing to launch a movement if the Centre went ahead bypassing her!

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But the bitter truth is that even if Banerjee were to miraculously fall in line clearing the decks for Modi and Hasina to put their signatures on the much-hyped Teesta pact and formalising it at long last, the best Dhaka can hope for is a hollow victory.

The situation on the ground on the Indian side has changed so much in 13 years that the original Teesta treaty needs a thorough overhaul to serve any purpose today. It has to be renegotiated and redrafted – and such a reset is well-nigh impossible.