(Commonwealth_India) India–Bangladesh relations have entered another uneasy phase, with ordinary travelers once again bearing the brunt of diplomatic strain. The Yunus-led administration in Dhaka has sharply scaled back visa services for Indian nationals across several key missions, a move announced late Wednesday by the Bangladesh Foreign Ministry and set to take effect on Thursday. Many on both sides of the border perceive this as a subtle closure of a relationship that was previously characterised by easy mobility and daily exchanges.
The new rule has put virtually all visa groups for Indian citizens on hold, leaving only business and employment visas intact. A statement by the Dhaka Tribune proposes the decision, which reflects growing concern in Dhaka about the safety situation as political strains continue to simmer between the two neighbours.
On the ground, the consequences are immediate and personal. At the Bangladesh Deputy High Commission in Kolkata, all consular and visa services have come to a complete stop. For many applicants, the delay means cancelled holidays, delayed medical treatment, and postponed family reunions. In Mumbai and Chennai, tourist and other non-essential visa services have also been suspended, leaving people who had carefully planned trips now unsure when—or if—they will be able to travel.
Representatives in Dhaka have mentioned “security considerations” as the motive for the restriction, but for students hoping to join classes, patients seeking reasonable healthcare, or families divided by an international border, the description offers little comfort. What they experience instead is doubt and frustration, as timelines dissolve and plans are put on unspecified hold.
The latest restrictions are not an isolated step. They build on earlier decisions taken on 22 December, when Bangladesh halted visa issuance and consular services at its High Commission in New Delhi, the Assistant High Commission in Agartala, and a visa application centre in Siliguri. Consular operations were later suspended in Guwahati as protests flared around diplomatic missions in both countries, adding to an already tense atmosphere.
India, too, has responded with its own security-driven measures, closing two visa application centres in Bangladesh’s Khulna and Rajshahi amid concerns over protests and staff safety. These actions point to an upsetting cycle of distrust, where political caution gradually shrinks the space for people-to-people connection. For two nations bound by history, trade, culture, and family ties, the rising barriers are a reminder that political strains rarely stay limited to official corridors—they swell outward, reshaping everyday lives on both sides of the border.




