Dreaming of a road trip to Vietnam via Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos? It might become a reality in the near future.
Against
the backdrop of Beijing flexing its muscles after the South China Sea
verdict, India is seeking to increase its last-mile connectivity to
southeast Asia by extending the trilateral highway, planned by the
six-member Mekong–Ganga Cooperation (MGC) group, to Vietnam via Cambodia
and Laos. Earlier, the highway was to stop at Thailand.
“The
Ministers welcomed the consultation between ASEAN Connectivity
Coordination Committee and India and agreed to discuss the extension of
the Trilateral Highway through Cambodia, Lao PDR and the new highway to
Vietnam,” the MGC member countries — India, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia,
Laos, Vietnam —- said in a joint statement.
The
highway would be pivotal to the Mekong-India Economic Corridor passing
through the fertile river basins of the Brahmaputra and the Mekong.
Amid the increasing Chinese influence in the region,
the trans-Asian railway project under the United Nations Economic and
Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP) to create an
integrated freight railway across Europe and Asia has been already
agreed upon by 17 countries.The Trilateral Highway would bring the
land-locked Northeast of India closer to the mainland by increasing the
connectivity with South East Asia and the ease of doing business. India
has already built 160 km of this highway and invited a tender for
upgrading bridges and roads.
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