India names Modi party colleague envoy to Bangladesh as ties thaw

India's Railways Minister Dinesh Trivedi speaks with the media outside the parliament in New Delhi March 15, 2012. (Photo: Reuters/File)

NEW DELHI, April 27 (Reuters) – India named veteran politician Dinesh Trivedi as its next high commissioner to Bangladesh on Monday, in a ​rare appointment of a non IFS officer (non–foreign service officer) as New Delhi ‌seeks to reset ties with its eastern neighbour.

Ties between the countries soured after a popular uprising forced Bangladesh’s long‑serving Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to ​flee to New Delhi in 2024, where she remains. ​Trivedi’s appointment highlights India’s push to rebuild trust with ⁠Bangladesh as it faces stiff competition from China for influence and ​business.

Trivedi, 75, a former railways and health minister, joined Prime Minister ​Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party in 2021 from a regional party in West Bengal, a border state that plays a key role in India’s ties ​with Bangladesh and where Modi has been seeking to expand ​his party’s influence in ongoing local elections.

“He is expected to take up the assignment ‌shortly,” ⁠India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement about Trivedi.

Relations between the two countries began improving only after an election in February brought Tarique Rahman of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party ​to power, replacing ​an interim government ⁠that had veered strongly towards China.

Bangladesh was part of India in the colonial era and became ​East Pakistan at the end of British rule ​in 1947. ⁠New Delhi helped Bangladesh win independence from Pakistan in 1971.

Bangladesh’s foreign minister visited Delhi this month seeking increased fuel and fertiliser supplies, closer ⁠energy ​cooperation and eased travel restrictions, but ​one of the biggest sticking points remains India’s refusal so far to extradite Hasina.