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      There Is No Tourism Without Transportation: The Case for Railways in Meghalaya

      HP News Service by HP News Service
      June 16, 2026
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      By Balakmen Suting

       The Axiom That Built Civilisations

      There is no tourism without transportation. This is not a slogan but an axiom as old as the first pilgrim who walked a dirt road to a sacred mountain. Every great destination became great not only because of what it offered, but because people could reach it. Rome had the Via Appia. Switzerland has its mountain railways. And Meghalaya, the Abode of Clouds, one of the most breathtakingly beautiful places on the Indian subcontinent has had, for most of its modern history, only one answer to how to get there: a winding, landslide-prone road.

      That may be about to change. For those of us who love this land and its waterfalls, living root bridges, sacred forests, and warm people, the arrival of the railway is not merely a matter of infrastructure. It is a matter of opportunity, identity, and economic justice for a state that has long given the world its beauty while receiving little in return.

      A Forgotten Chapter: Meghalaya’s Lost Railway Heritage

      Few people know that Meghalaya had railway connectivity as far back as 1886. On 16 June of that year, villagers in Tharia, near present-day Sohra, boarded a train bound for Company Ganj in Sylhet for the first time. The Cherra Companyganj State Railway (CCSR) covered 7.5 miles across the foothills of the Khasi Hills, connecting the plateau to the navigable Piyain river. In its first year of service, the CCSR earned Rs. 4,734, proof that people wanted to travel and goods needed to move.

      The mastermind behind this engineering marvel was British Executive Engineer H. Kench, who envisioned a wire-rope tramway system hauling passengers and goods up the 4,100-foot escarpment separating the Khasi plateau from the Bengal plains. His concept preceded the Nilgiri hill railway (1899), the Simla railway (1903), and the Matheran railway (1907). He was ahead of his time.

      The great earthquake of 1897 destroyed what remained of the CCSR, and it was formally abandoned by 1901. Local folklore in Sohbar village still speaks of “Alan Sahep,” the European promoter who dreamed of bringing the “Drum” (as the train engine was called) all the way up to Cherrapunji. Old rail tracks from that era are still found repurposed as lamp posts in Sohbar village, a melancholic monument to what was and what could have been. Had that railway succeeded, the Cherra Companyganj line would today stand alongside the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway as a UNESCO World Heritage site. History did not allow it then. But history is giving Meghalaya a second chance.

      The Present: One Station, One Dream

      Today, Meghalaya has precisely one functioning railway station: Mendipathar, in the North Garo Hills district, inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in November 2014. It is widely regarded as one of the cleanest railway stations in Northeast India, no trivial detail. As any tourism professional will confirm, cleanliness is a primary driver of tourist satisfaction. If Meghalaya can export that standard to future railway infrastructure, a railway connection to the Khasi and Jaintia Hills becomes not just an economic project but a brand statement.

      The Pending Future: Projects That Must Not Fail

      The most politically charged railway story in Meghalaya is the Tetelia–Byrnihat project, a 22-km broad-gauge line connecting Guwahati’s suburb of Tetelia in Assam to Byrnihat in Meghalaya, with 108 km planned onward to Shillong. As of April 2026, reports in The Shillong Times confirm that the project is effectively dead in its current form, with allocated funds at risk of diversion to other states. Shillong remains one of the very few state capitals in India without a single railway connection. While indigenous communities’ concerns about demographic influx are legitimate and must be addressed, the absence of rail connectivity continues to impose a real economic and tourism cost on Meghalaya’s people.

      A more promising development is the proposed 180-km broad-gauge line from Chaparmukh Junction in Assam to Jowai in the Jaintia Hills, included in the 2024–25 railway budget for preliminary surveys. The proposed alignment opens up not just Jowai but the broader region, connecting visitors to the spectacular Nartiang Monolith Park, Thadlaskein Lake, the sacred Syndai caves, and PhePhe waterfall; none of which presently receive the tourist footfall they deserve, partly because reaching Jowai by road is long and uncomfortable.

      The Mizoram Mirror: What Meghalaya Can Learn

      The story of Mizoram’s Bairabi–Sairang railway line, inaugurated by Prime Minister Modi on 13 September 2025, is the most compelling regional case study available. The 51.38-km line, built at Rs. 8,000 crores over 26 years through extraordinarily difficult terrain, finally gave Aizawl its first-ever rail connection. Journey time from Guwahati dropped from roughly 18 hours by road to under 12 hours by rail, with fares around Rs. 450, a fraction of airfare.

      Most significantly for tourism, IRCTC signed a two-year agreement with the Mizoram government to promote tourism under the ‘Discover NE Beyond Guwahati’ initiative. This partnership includes curated travel experiences, joint promotional campaigns, and enhanced logistics specifically aimed at boosting local hospitality employment. Rail connectivity did not just give Mizoram transport; it gave Mizoram a story and a marketing platform. That is the blueprint Meghalaya must study.

      Tourism Economics: From Leakage to Livelihood

      Meghalaya, despite significant tourist inflows to Shillong, Cherrapunji, Mawlynnong, and Dawki, suffers from high economic leakage. Visitors arrive by car, may stay in externally-owned hotels, and often return to Guwahati before nightfall. The money they spend leaves the state with them. A railway changes this at multiple levels.

      Direct income flows to railway employees, station masters, porters, catering workers, and platform vendors. Each station becomes a micro-economy. Indirect income reaches hotels, local farmers supplying canteens, taxi drivers shuttling passengers, and souvenir vendors. Induced income is the multiplier effect, when railway workers spend wages locally, cycling money through shops, schools, and markets in a virtuous loop. A railway also makes Meghalaya accessible to budget tourists, students, solo travellers, and senior citizens currently priced out by flights or private cars. The train is, by definition, the most democratic mode of transportation.

      The Bullet Train at the Door: A Wake-Up Call

      On 7 June 2026, Union Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw announced an ambitious bullet train corridor connecting New Delhi to Siliguri via Lucknow, Varanasi, and Patna, slashing travel time from nearly 20 hours to just six. A second corridor via Patna is planned with eventual extension to Guwahati.

      When a bullet train reaches Siliguri in six hours from Delhi and eventually extends to Guwahati, the Northeast will be six hours from the national capital. Tourists from Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, and Bihar, states with hundreds of millions of potential domestic travellers — will find the Northeast dramatically accessible. From Guwahati, they will want to reach Meghalaya. If Meghalaya has a working railway connection by then, those travellers will flow in. If it does not, they will go to Assam, to Mizoram (which already has Sairang), to Arunachal Pradesh, and to Sikkim instead. The bullet train is not Meghalaya’s direct concern today. But it will be tomorrow.

      Addressing the Concerns: Regulation, Not Rejection

      The concerns of indigenous communities about unchecked migration must be taken seriously. But it is worth noting what the evidence shows: Mendipathar station has been operational since 2014 over a decade and there is no documented evidence that it caused a migration crisis in North Garo Hills. Tourism and migration are different phenomena, managed differently through policy. The answer to legitimate fears is not the absence of infrastructure but the presence of regulation. A robust entry permit system, regulated commercial activity near stations, and community profit-sharing arrangements can ensure that railway-led tourism benefits the indigenous population first. Mizoram, which has the Inner Line Permit, inaugurated its railway without abandoning demographic protections. Meghalaya can design similarly intelligent safeguards.

      A Vision Worth Fighting For

      Imagine a tourist in Guwahati booking a morning train to Byrnihat, boarding a clean coach that winds through the Meghalaya hills, arriving at Shillong, and spending three days exploring Cherrapunji, Dawki, and Mawlynnong staying in local homestays, eating local food, hiring local guides, and buying local handicrafts. None of that economic activity leaks out of the state. Now multiply that tourist by a million.

      That is what a railway makes possible. That is the vision the Cherra Companyganj State Railway was reaching for in 1886 when the first “Drum” blew its whistle in Tharia. That dream was buried by an earthquake and the limits of Victorian engineering. But it was never wrong. It was only ahead of its time. Meghalaya deserves its railway. Its people deserve the jobs it will create, the tourists it will bring, and the economic dignity it will deliver. The hills have waited long enough.

      HP News Service

      HP News Service

      An English daily newspaper from Shillong published by Readington Marwein, proprietor of Mawphor Khasi Daily Newspaper, who established the first Khasi daily in 1989.

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