The government today said a pact is on anvil among India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Bhutan to provide seamless transit of passenger, personal and cargo vehicles among these four SAARC nations.

Once implemented, the agreement will reduce the costly and time-consuming unloading and loading of people and goods at border crossing points, making cross-border trade more efficient, the government said.

“Senior officials from India, Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal met... at Raichak near Kolkata to finalise Motor Vehicles Agreement (MVA) for seamless transit of passenger and cargo vehicles between their countries and draw up plans for its speedy implementation,” an official statement said.

The agreement will allow passenger, personal and cargo vehicles to travel along designated key routes in the four SAARC countries without the need for trans-shipment of goods and passengers at the border crossings.

It is expected to be signed at a meeting of Transport Ministers of the four countries to be held soon this year, the statement by Road Transport and Highways Ministry said.

The arrangements for implementing the agreement will be spelt out through protocols that the four neighbouring countries will negotiate separately under the framework of this agreement, it said.

“They agreed to set up individual national committees and a sub-regional joint committee for overall facilitation of land transport and to coordinate and monitor the agreement’s implementation,” it added.

The sub-regional pact would be a parallel initiative to the proposed SAARC transport agreement for which ongoing efforts to find early resolution would continue.

The government said the membership of this sub-regional agreement would be open to all other neighbouring countries, should they so desire.

The agreement would help transform transport corridors linking the four countries into economic corridors and enhance people to people contact, it said.

Building on the progress made in negotiating and finalising the SAARC Motor Vehicles Agreement, this agreement would facilitate the transit of all types of vehicles between the contracting parties as is prevalent in other common markets like the European Union.

The four-country representatives meeting was chaired by Road Transport and Highways Secretary Vijay Chhibber and attended by Md Faruque Jalil, Additional Secretary, Ministry of Road Transport and Bridges, Bangladesh; Kinley Dorji, Secretary, Ministry of Information and Communications, Bhutan; Sanjay Bandyopadhyay, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, India and Devendra Karki, Joint Secretary, Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport, Nepal, among others.