By Dipak Kurmi
The complex intersection of subcontinental geopolitics, national security imperatives, and regional infrastructure development has taken a defining turn in eastern India. In one of its most consequential opening policy moves, the newly installed government of West Bengal has officially cleared the transition of management for seven critical stretches of national highway. This decision effectively transfers administrative and execution authority from the National Highway wing of the State Public Works Department over to central agencies, specifically the National Highways Authority of India and the National Highways & Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited. This administrative shift transcends routine bureaucratic reorganization; it represents a profound realignment of governance designed to fortify the fragile arterial links that bind the eight states of Northeast India to the rest of the mainland. By addressing a multi-layered logistical bottleneck, the transition carries profound implications for international trade, domestic tourism, disaster resilience, and, most crucially, the defense posture of the nation along its highly sensitive northern and eastern frontiers.
At the absolute center of this logistical restructuring is the Siliguri Corridor, colloquially and evocatively known as the “Chicken’s Neck.” This narrow, highly vulnerable sliver of land spans roughly sixty kilometers in length and constricts to a mere twenty to twenty-two kilometers at its narrowest point. Wedged precariously between the sovereign territories of Nepal to the west and Bangladesh to the south, with the kingdom of Bhutan and the heavily militarized Tibetan frontier of China positioning themselves just to the north beyond the state of Sikkim, the corridor is one of the most sensitive geopolitical choke points on the planet. Any significant physical or hostile disruption to this hyper-condensed passage would instantly isolate the entire northeastern landmass from the Indian union, effectively cutting off millions of citizens and halting the movement of vital military logistics. Recognizing this profound vulnerability, security analysts and military strategists have long advocated for a radical upgrading of the region’s transportation network, championing the construction of wider, more fortified highways capable of sustaining heavy armor, rapid troop deployment, and resilient supply chains during times of crisis.
The urgency underpinning this infrastructure overhaul is informed by recent historical precedents and an evolving regional threat matrix. The prolonged 2017 Doklam standoff, which played out at the sensitive India-Bhutan-China tri-junction, underscored the critical need for flawless, rapid-deployment logistical capabilities to the high-altitude frontier. Beyond the ever-present specter of conventional military confrontation, the region faces an annual war of attrition against severe environmental vulnerabilities. The topography of north Bengal and Sikkim is notorious for its fragile geological formations, which trigger chronic, devastating landslides and severe road subsidence during the annual monsoon season. This volatile mix of external geopolitical pressure and internal ecological vulnerability means that the degradation of existing roadways is not merely an inconvenience for local commuters, but a recurring threat to national readiness that frequently snaps the lines of communication and supply to forward military positions and civilian populations alike.
The political backdrop to this decision is equally intricate, reflecting a long-running, bitter ideological feud between the Bharatiya Janata Party, which commands power at the Centre and now leads the state administration in Bengal, and the erstwhile Trinamool Congress government led by Mamata Banerjee. For nearly a year, proposals to hand over these seven critical highway stretches remained gridlocked within the state apparatus despite repeated, urgent solicitations from central infrastructure agencies, resulting in a total standstill of vital expansion and repair works. During its period in opposition within the state, the Bharatiya Janata Party routinely launched fierce political offensives against the previous state administration, alleging that the stalling of these projects compromised national security. The political narrative was further intensified by allegations concerning shifting demographic patterns in north Bengal’s border districts due to illegal immigration from Bangladesh, a phenomenon the central ruling party argued compounded the vulnerability of the Siliguri Corridor. This sense of urgency was exacerbated in the wake of the political upheaval and subsequent collapse of the Sheikh Hasina regime in Bangladesh, as radical and anti-India factions within the neighboring country openly discussed leveraging the geographical fragility of the Chicken’s Neck to undermine India’s territorial integrity, thereby turning a local infrastructure debate into a high-stakes national security talking point.
The resolution of this administrative impasse is expected to fast-track long-delayed civil engineering interventions across the region. Among the seven transferred stretches, National Highway 10 occupies a position of supreme importance, serving as the literal lifeline for the landlocked state of Sikkim and the primary conduit for military movements toward the Line of Actual Control. For decades, National Highway 10 has been plagued by catastrophic monsoon-induced disruptions, frequently washing away along the banks of the Teesta River and paralyzing the flow of essential commodities and defense assets. Similarly, National Highway 110, which winds its way to the strategically situated hill station of Darjeeling, has historically suffered from severe traffic bottlenecks and persistent road subsidence, throttling the economic potential of the region’s world-famous tea and tourism industries while complicating defensive maneuvering along the adjacent international borders.
Viewed through a broader macroscopic lens, the comprehensive modernization of these seven highway stretches promises to weave a seamless, high-capacity transport web across eastern and northeastern India. According to formal declarations issued by the state chief secretary’s office, the scope of these impending projects will systematically upgrade the road spine running through the vital border districts of Murshidabad, Nadia, and North 24-Parganas, extending all the way to the critical international land customs station at Ghojadanga on the Indo-Bangladesh border. Furthermore, the planned interventions will drastically improve the vital Bihar-Bengal transit corridor traversing Malda and Murshidabad, while simultaneously consolidating the complex highway network that links the Darjeeling hills, the vast plains of the Dooars, and the broader North Bengal region with the overarching national grid. This multifaceted development is poised to transform the economic landscape by facilitating smoother sub-regional trade under India’s Act East Policy, lowering transit costs for goods heading toward neighboring South Asian nations, and providing a robust foundation for regional economic integration.
Ultimately, the transition of these highways from state-level stewardship to specialized central agencies represents a pragmatic synthesis of development and defense. By placing these routes under the direct control of bodies like the National Highways & Infrastructure Development Corporation Limited, which possesses specialized expertise in constructing robust infrastructure across treacherous, high-altitude, and border terrains, the governance model shifts toward long-term strategic resilience. This structural transformation effectively validates the central government’s long-standing institutional philosophy that fragile border regions require centralized, well-funded, and rapid-response administrative mechanisms to ensure absolute sovereign continuity. As heavy machinery and enhanced capital investments are deployed along these long-neglected corridors, the focus shifts from political rhetoric to physical execution, marking a decisive chapter in India’s ongoing efforts to permanently secure its most vulnerable geographical bottleneck against both external hostility and internal environmental fragility.
(The writer can be reached at dipakkurmiglpltd@gmail.com)
























