ID :
242053
Tue, 05/29/2012 - 10:25
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/242053
The shortlink copeid
No Progress In Developing Railway Link To Bhutan, Says Bhutan PM
From M. Saraswathi
THIMPHU (Bhutan), May 29 (Bernama) -- Bhutan has not made much progress in
developing a railway system although such links are very important for the
landlocked country, says Bhutan Prime Minister Jigmi Y. Thinley.
He said it has been extremely difficult to make any progress on that front
as the areas the railway could be built are either heavily populated or are
key agriculture land.
"The areas through which rail roads can be built are heavily populated or
these are very valuable tea plantations. So, it has been extremely difficult,
we have not had any success in setting up a railway system," he told Bernama.
Thinley said this when asked on the progress in the Trans Asian Railway
Project initiated by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia
and the Pacific which included Bhutan.
He said it was for the similar reason why the railway connection has been
difficult with India although there had been plans for it.
The Trans-Asian Railway was initiated in the 1960s with the objective of
providing a continuous 14,000KM rail link between Singapore and Istanbul, with
possible onward connections to Europe and Africa.
The "Iron Silk Road" offered the potential to greatly shorten the distance
and reduce transit times between countries and regions, while serving as a
catalyst for the notion of international transport as a tool for trade
expansion, economic growth and cultural exchanges.
-- BERNAMA