Indian vessel leaves Ctg port after 34 days

Economy

TBS Report
19 October, 2022, 08:00 pm
Last modified: 19 October, 2022, 08:03 pm

Indian vessel MV Trans Samudera left the Chattogram Port on Wednesday, 34 days after it came to Bangladesh under the transit agreement, as it could not sail towards the Shyama Prasad Mukherji Port in Kolkata due to a technical glitch and required repair works. 

Officials of Mango Line, local agent of the MV Samudera, said the vessel is carrying a consignment of eight tonne tea. 

Mango Line Managing Director Mohammad Habib told The Business Standard that the vessel left the Chattogram Port on Wednesday morning with 130 Twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) including eight tonne tea.  

On 6 September, MV Trans Samudera, reached Chattogram port with a test consignment of transit goods under the transit agreement signed between the two neighbouring countries.

The container loaded with TMT Steel, weighing 25 tonnes, has been transported to the northeastern state of Assam via a land port in Sylhet.

The consignment of tea as return cargo was loaded in the container at Dawki LC station, and reached the Chattogram Port on 15 September through Tamabil LC station for further shipment to its final destination in Kolkata.

With transshipment of these two consignments, the trial run of five routes for transiting Indian goods from Kolkata to north eastern states of India using the seaports of Bangladesh will be completed.

On 25 October 2018, India and Bangladesh signed an agreement to allow India to use Bangladesh's two seaports – Chattogram and Mongla – as transit points to carry goods to-and-from India's north-eastern states.

A standard operating procedure (SOP) was signed in this regard – one year after a meeting between Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her Indian counterpart Narendra Modi – in New Delhi on 5 October 2019.

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