The 67 years old popular agitation for railway services to Tripura finally culminated in Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu on Sunday flagging off the Agartala-Delhi passenger train services on the newly laid broad gauge track.
The much awaited weekly passenger train named “Tripura Sundari Express” would run between Agartala and Anand Vihar station of Delhi and Anand Vihar and Agartala covering a distance of around 2,480 km in 47 hours.
Bangladesh Railway Minister Mazibul Hoque, Tripura Governor Tathagata Roy, Chief Minister Manik Sarkar, Minister of State for Railways Rajen Gohain and top officials of the Indian and Bangladesh government were present at the flagging off ceremony held at the Agartala railway station.
This railway connectivity is the lifeline for millions in Tripura, western Manipur and Mizoram besides southern Assam.
With the launch of the passenger train, the mountainous border state of Tripura has now been connected with the national capital via Guwahati, Assam’s main city which is about 600 km from Agartala.
The extension of then existing metre gauge track up to northeastern state capital of Agartala brought the city on India’s rail map for the first time in October 2008 since the advent of the railways in this subcontinent in 1853. The single-track 227 km metre-gauge link – Badarpur (south Assam) to Agartala – was converted into broad–gauge track earlier this year spending Rs 2,016 crore.
“Though a veteran journalist Amiya Deb Roy first wrote a letter to the central government to extend railway network in Tripura in 1949, the formal agitation for rail had begun in December 1951 through a mass gathering addressed by veteran communist leaders Jyoti Basu, Muzaffar Ahmad and S.A. Dange,” said writer and journalist Tapas Debnath.
He said: “Former parliamentarians and top Tripura Left leaders Dasaratha Deb and Biren Datta had first raised the demand in the Lok Sabha for an extension of railway network to Agartala in 1952.”
The stir got a new impetus after the CPI(M) (Communist Party of India-Marxist) led Left Front government headed by former Chief Minister Nripen Chakraborty assumed office first time in 1978. Chakraborty met then railway minister Madhu Dandavate on January 12, 1978, and put up a strong demand to put Agartala on the railway network.
A series of movements had been organised in Tripura, Guwahati and New Delhi for extension of railway network to Tripura. Incumbent Chief Minister Manik Sarkar, Revenue and PWD Minister Badal Choudhury among many other leaders were actively involved in these agitations.
“Agartala is the first state capital in independent India connected with rail network in October 2008,” said S.S. Narayanan, a senior official of Northeast Frontier Railway (NFR).
Thousands of cheerful people gathered at the Agartala railway station on Sunday to witness the historic moment, with some women blowing conch shells to wish the formal launch of the train services a successful one.
“It took more than four decades to connect the capital city after northern Tripura’s business hub Dharmanagar came on the railway map in 1964,” said Choudhury. Dharmanagar is about 200 km from here.