Dhaka, March 26: Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday met Bangladeshi political and community leaders in Dhaka, including representatives of minorities and 'Muktijoddhas', the fighters of the Bangladesh Liberation War. The Prime Minister is on a two-day visit to Dhaka, where he is slated to attend the celebrations of the golden jubilee of Bangladesh's independence, the birth centenary of ‘Bangabandhu’ Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, and hold talks with his counterpart Sheikh Hasina.
The fact that Modi met the country's freedom fighters, so named after 'Muktijuddho', sends a strong message of India-Bangladesh solidarity, which has its roots in the subcontinent's history. On March 25, 50 years ago, the Pakistan army led a genocidal crackdown in Dhaka, which had changed the course of the history of the Indian subcontinent. It led to the Liberation War, the division of Pakistan, and the creation of Bangladesh.
India, moved by the plight of millions of war-ravaged Bengali civilians, had initially been providing diplomatic, economic, and military support to Bangladeshi nationalists but later joined the war on December 3, 1971, following a series of preemptive airstrikes by Pakistan. The 'Mukti Bahini', the guerilla resistance movement, played a decisive factor in India’s quick victory and the liberation of Bangladesh: The Pakistan army surrendered on December 16, 1971, less than two weeks after the war broke out.
Sheikh Mujib earned the title of Bangabandhu' and India secured a permanent place in the history of Bangladesh's freedom struggle. As Prime Minister Modi begins his two-day visit to remember Mujib, the "father of the nation" of Bangladesh, and celebrate the golden jubilee of the 1971 liberation war, the optics puts forth a new frontier for diplomatic ties that India’s relations with Bangladesh have gone way beyond symbolism. It is now part of an integrated vision of the Prime Minister for the development of eastern India, particularly the North-East with the help and support of Bangladesh.
Modi, who is visiting Bangladesh on his first trip to a foreign country since the outbreak of the coronavirus, was received by the country's Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at Dhaka's Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport upon his arrival. A salute of 19 guns and a Guard of honour were accorded to Prime Minister Modi at the airport. In a statement, the Union Ministry of External Affairs MEA said that as part of his two-day visit to Bangladesh, Modi met the community leaders, including representatives of minorities in Bangladesh, the 'Mukhtijoddhas', friends of India and youth icons.
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