India extends biggest ever LOC worth USD 2 billion to B'desh

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Press Trust of India Dhaka
Last Updated : Mar 09 2016 | 6:42 PM IST
India today signed a landmark agreement with Bangladesh extending USD 2 billion to the country in its biggest ever overseas credit line, five years after it inked a credit agreement worth USD 1 billion with its neighbour.
"The USD 2 billion LOC (line of credit) is the biggest credit line India has so far extended to any country," said an Indian High Commission statement here as chairman and managing director of Exim Bank Yaduvendra Mathur signed the deal with senior secretary in Bangladesh's Economic Relations Division Mohammad Mesbahuddin.
The agreement was inked in line with Prime Minister Narendra Modi's announcement during his visit here in June, 2015 while Bangladeshi officials familiar with the process said this credit would be used in a wider range of areas including the social sector while the previous 2010 credit line was mostly concentrated on communication infrastructure.
"Bangladesh-India friendship now reached at its peak but we want to set it to a higher trajectory. The signing of the agreement is the manifestation of the friendship," Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's principal secretary Abul Kalam Azad said at the signing ceremony.
Bangladesh foreign secretary Shahidul Haque and Indian High Commissioner in Dhaka Harsh Vardhan Shringla, among others, witnessed the ceremony at the National Economic Council complex.
In a media briefing following the signing ceremony Mesbahuddin said that 14 projects so far were planned to be implemented with the second Indian LOC covering power, railways, roads, transportation, information and communication technology, shipping, health and technical education sectors.
He said apart from infrastructure projects, a special focus on social sector cooperation pertaining to health and technical education aiming to further integrate economies of both countries and strengthen mutual cooperation.
"All the 15 projects under the First LOC have received financial concurrence of EXIM Bank of India. Seven of the total 15 projects have been completed and the rest are at various stages of implementation," the Indian High Commission statement said.
REOPENS FGN 17
The Indian credit line bears an interest rate of 1 per cent to be re-payed in 20 years with a five-year grace period, it said.
Bangladesh's ERD in a statement said the "soft loan" committed under the second Indian LOC "will play a significant role in the socio-economic development of Bangladesh, which will be congenial for fostering the ongoing development partnership between the two countries".
The first "Dollar Credit Line Agreement" for USD 1 billion was signed between the two countries in 2010 for developing infrastructure projects, mostly in the communications sector.
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First Published: Mar 09 2016 | 6:42 PM IST

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