HomeNewsOpinionThe rising risk of India’s waning influence in the neighbourhood

The rising risk of India’s waning influence in the neighbourhood

The agreements which Prachanda signed in Beijing after meeting Premier Li Qiang do not constitute any threat to Indian interests in the short run. But New Delhi has to be watchful. India's biggest concern in its neighbourhood, though, should be Bangladesh, where a general election is due in January 2024

October 06, 2023 / 12:02 IST
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india neighbourhood
India's neighbourhood is on the boil.

India's neighbourhood is on the boil. The Maldives is in the process of getting a new government, not entirely to India's liking because of its professed tilt towards China. Nepal signed a dozen agreements with China 10 days ago, when its prime minister Pushpa Kamal "Prachanda" Dahal flew to Hangzhou and Beijing after addressing the United Nations General Assembly in New York. Sri Lanka is on the mend after its colossal economic and political crisis last year, but the island nation descended into political football in an unseemly quarrel between the ruling Trinamool Congress and the opposition BJP in West Bengal over ties with Colombo.

India's biggest concern in its neighbourhood, though, should be Bangladesh, where a general election is due in January 2024. The Joe Biden administration in Washington has launched a psychological war against Dhaka, announcing that it will begin "to impose visa restrictions on Bangladeshi individuals responsible for, or complicit in, undermining the democratic election process in Bangladesh.". As if Bangladesh was like the Congo, Mali or Haiti! The big surprise is that the United States announced sanctions a fortnight ago, only hours after its undersecretary of state for civilian security, democracy and human rights, Uzra Zeya, met prime minister Sheikh Hasina Wazed in what was supposed to be a reconciliation meeting coinciding with the ongoing UN General Assembly in New York.

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The Bangladesh Factor

India had invited Hasina to the G20 Summit in New Delhi last month, partly in the hope that her meeting with President Joe Biden could prepare the ground for a rapprochement between the two countries. India felt it needed to apply balm on what was rapidly developing into an ugly fight between two of its good friends, both democracies and facing difficult elections next year. The meeting between Biden and Hasina did take place, but its follow-up talks in New York appear to have produced the opposite result of what was intended. Zeya was unusually harsh even by her standards as a hardline human rights and democracy crusader in Foggy Bottom, the seat of the US State Department. "The US is committed to supporting free and fair elections in Bangladesh that are carried out in a peaceful manner."