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On the second and final day of his Bangladesh visit, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday, 27 March, addressed the Matua community in Orakandi, which is a sizeable population in both West Bengal and the neighbouring country.
“I was waiting for this opportunity for many years. During my 2015 visit to Bangladesh, I expressed my wish to visit Orakandi. Today, that wish has come true,” Modi said.
In his address, Modi stated that both India and Bangladesh want to see “stability, love, and peace in the world instead of instability, terror, and unrest”. He also spoke about the fight against the pandemic by India and Bangladesh and stated that Indian COVID-19 vaccines will reach Bangladesh soon.
MoUs were exchanged between India and Bangladesh in Dhaka, in the presence of PM Modi and Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, ANI reported.
Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla reportedly said that a decision was taken to “celebrate our ties jointly in 19 countries identified by the two sides (India and Bangladesh). This is a reflection of our desire to sustain the legacy of 1971.”
He said, PM Modi and his Bangladesh counterpart have agreed to celebrate 6 December, the day on which India formally recognised Bangladesh, as ‘Maitri Diwas’.
The two Prime Minsters also virtually inaugurated ‘Mitali Express’ that will run between Dhaka and New Jalpaiguri.
“Today, I got the opportunity to visit this Shaktipeeth to pay obeisance to Maa Kali. I prayed to her to free the human race from COVID-19,” the PM said at Jeshoreshwari Kali Temple.
PM Modi also payed tribute to Sheikh Mujibur Rahman at the Bangabandhu Mausoleum Complex, Tungipara, in the presence of Bangladesh PM Sheikh Hasina.
On Friday, PM Modi attended an event at the National Martyrs’ Memorial and the National Day programme in Dhaka, commemorating 50 years of the country’s liberation.
The Matua community is said to have influence over 70 Assembly constituencies in the state, spread across the districts of North 24 Parganas, South 24 Parganas, Nadia and other smaller pockets of North and South Bengal.
While no official count is available, community leaders put their population at 3 crore. A state minister from India said there were 1.75 crore Namasudra voters.
Matuas trace their ancestry to Bangladesh and large chunk of the community moved to West Bengal following the Partition and specially after the 2001-02 anti-Hindu pogroms when the Khaleda Zia government was in power.
While Matuas voted for the BJP in 2019, the community soon started expressing their dissent against the party after the CAA was passed. But no talks on citizenship for Matuas surfaced thereafter.
(With inputs from ANI, IANS)
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