Iran trip: India to sign Iran port contract

New Delhi: India would sign a commercial contract with Iran to build and run a strategic port on Iran’s southern coast, the Indian government said on Friday.

Talks to build the Chabahar port were being discussed on for years but since the scaling back of Western sanctions against Iran, India has pushed hard for the project so that it doesn’t lose out to others such as China, who are keen to invest.

India will develop two terminals and cargo berths at Chabahar, on the Gulf of Oman. This deal will be signed during a visit by Prime Minister Narendra Modi to Iran beginning on Sunday.

Gopal Baglay, a foreign ministry official in charge of Iranian ties, said India would make an initial investment of more than $200 million in the port, of which India’s Exim Bank would provide a credit line of $150m.

India, Iran and Afghanistan to sign separate agreement to build a trade and transport corridor that will have Chabahar as the hub.

Road and rail links are to be built so that landlocked Afghanistan can get access to the Iranian port as an alternate to the port of Karachi.

“The trilateral agreement will be a game changer for regional connectivity especially for Afghanistan which can find an assured and reliable alternate access to India via sea,” Baglay said.

Chabahar is about 100km from the Gwadar seaport which China is developing as part of a $46 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor. The Chinese project prompted faster movement on the Iranian project.