DEPUTY Minister for Transport and Communications U Aung Kyaw Tun, who is currently in India, attended the Fortifying Global Supply Chains event or­ganized by the Jawaharlal Neh­ru Port Authority on 28 October, together with India’s Minister of State of Ports, Shipping and Wa­terways, Shri Shantanu Thakur.

 

The event, aimed at strengthening India’s strate­gic position as a global logis­tics and manufacturing hub by enhancing maritime trade infrastructure, streamlining processes, and improving mul­ti-sector connectivity, opened with remarks from the Indian Minister of Ports, Shipping and Waterways.

 

The deputy minister deliv­ered a speech emphasizing that the event’s theme, ‘Logistics Reinvented’, is an essential issue, highlighting that strong supply chains underpin econom­ic growth and prosperity, and noting Myanmar’s strategic lo­cation at the crossroads of South and Southeast Asia – with its ex­tensive coastline along the Bay of Bengal and the Andaman Sea serving as a vital maritime link that facilitates trade between In­dia’s eastern seaboard and ASE­AN countries such as Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, thereby reducing transportation time and costs.

 

The deputy minister stat­ed that the Sittway Port and Kaladan Multimodal Transit Transport Project, jointly imple­mented by Myanmar and India, serves as a key route linking India’s eastern ports with its landlocked northeastern states through Myanmar, establish­ing Sittway as a major maritime gateway and new economic corridor, while the India-Myan­mar-Thailand Trilateral High­way provides a direct land route to ASEAN, adding that future efforts will focus on moderniz­ing domestic logistics and ports, implementing single-window systems and digital platforms, encouraging private sector participation, and promoting human resource development and technology transfer to build an efficient, cost-effective, and mutually beneficial logistics ecosystem.

 

The deputy minister then attended the signing ceremony of MOUs between departments and organizations under the Ministry of State of Ports, Ship­ping and Waterways and private companies for the development of India’s maritime sector.

 

After the ceremony, a bilat­eral meeting was held with the Indian officials led by the Minis­ter of Ministry of State of Ports, Shipping and Waterways, to dis­cuss the bilateral coastal ship­ping agreement and its standard operating procedures, the Mem­orandum of Understanding on seafarer training and certificate recognition, model demonstra­tion-based training and assess­ment systems for seafarers, a long-range tracking and sur­veillance system for ships, and matters related to protection and compensation insurance for Myanmar-registered vessels entering India. — MNA/TH