HomeNewsOpinionTeesta Water Sharing: An Indian failure allows China to play knight in shining armour

Teesta Water Sharing: An Indian failure allows China to play knight in shining armour

GoI’s failure to convince Mamata Banerjee to share Teesta waters equitably has allowed China to win Bangladeshi hearts by proposing to revive the river even without the due share of upper riparian water from West Bengal flowing in 

January 04, 2024 / 09:51 IST
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teesta
The water-sharing formula of the Teesta River was finalised in 2011 itself.

China is suddenly centrestage in Dhaka, capital of poll-bound Bangladesh, after publicly announcing that the Sheikh Hasina government has sought Beijing’s assistance to execute mega projects in the Teesta River basin – and Dhaka lost no time in confirming that it indeed has.

Beijing’s move has two implications for India which has a bigger stake in Bangladesh than any other foreign power – so much so that getting Hasina re-elected is the Number 1 priority of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government, especially its diplomatic and security establishments headed by S Jaishankar and Ajit Doval, respectively.

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China’s Teesta Opportunity

Firstly, the unexpected announcement by China’s ambassador in Dhaka, Yao Wen, in late December shines a torch ahead of the January 7 general elections on India’s failure to sign the Teesta River water sharing agreement with Bangladesh and how New Delhi has kept Dhaka waiting for 13 long years since 2011.