Arunachal Frontier Highway

Arunachal Frontier Highway (AFH), officially notified as the National Highway NH-913 and also called Bomdila-Vijaynagar Highway (BVH), connecting Bomdila Airstrip ALG & HQ in northwest to Vijaynagar Airstrip ALG & HQ in southeast via Nafra HQ-Sarli HQ-Huri Helipad ALG & HQ-Nacho HQ-Mechuka Airstrip ALG & HQ-Monigong HQ-Jido (Tuting Airstrip ALG & HQ)-Hunli HQ-Hayuliang Airstrip ALG HQ-Chenquenty-Hawai HQ-Miao HQ (with Miao-Kharsang HQ spur) including 800 km greenfield section and network of new tunnels & bridges, is a 2-lane paved-shoulder under-construction national highway along the India-China LAC-McMahon Line border in the Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh. The 1,748 km-long (1,086 mi) highway itself will cost 27,000 crore (equivalent to 290 billion or US$3.6 billion in 2023) and total cost including 6 additional inter-corridors is 40,000 crore (equivalent to 420 billion or US$5.3 billion in 2023). In some places, this highway will run as close as 20 km from the LAC. To be constructed by MoRTH in 9 packages, all packages will be approved by the end of fy 2024-25 (March 2025) and construction will be completed in 2 years by 31 March 2027.[1][2][3][4][5][6] Of the total route, 800km is greenfield, rest brownfield will be upgraded and tunnels will be built.[7] This highway in the north & east Arunachal along the China border, would complement the Trans-Arunachal Highway (through the middle of Arunachal) and the Arunachal East-West Corridor (in south Arunachal in foothills along the Assam border) as major highways spanning the whole state, pursuing the Look East connectivity policy.[8]

Arunachal Frontier Highway
Route information
Length1,748 km (1,086 mi)
Major junctions
West endBomdila
East endVijaynagar in Changlang district
Location
CountryIndia
StatesArunachal Pradesh
Major citiesNafra, Sarli, Huri, Mechuka, Tuting, Hunli, Hayuliang, Hawai, Miao, Kharsang,
Highway system

History

In 2016, empowered committee on border infrastructure asked the MoRTH to prepare the detailed project reports (DPR) as per the alignment agreed by the home ministry, defence ministry & Arunachal state government. In 2018, Home ministry enhanced the alignment for the additional connectivity.[1][2] MoRTH identifies the highway as one of the 29 corridors close to the 3,600 km international border, to be undertaken as a NHDP (which has been subsumed by the Bharatmala project), though there is "little habitation" along the proposed route and only "small stretches of minor roads".[4]

Benefits

Various sources in the Government of India and media have mentioned the following reasons to build the highway:[4][5][6][9]

  • Highway will generate employment and increase tourism in these hard-to-reach areas.
  • Highway will check Chinese incursions into Indian territory. China has built an extensive road and railway network on its side, posing a security risk to India as the region is relatively inaccessible on the Indian side.

Construction

It will be constructed in nine packages, all approvals and land acquisition will be progressively completed by March 2025, and the construction will be progressively completed by March 2027.[1][2]

Route alignment

The high-altitude highway will originate from Mago-Thingbu in Tawang district and meander through the following border areas of Arunachal Pradesh along the McMahon Line: West Kameng district; East Kameng district; Upper Subansiri district; Mechuka in West Siang district; Tuting in Upper Siang district; Dibang Valley district; Desali in Lower Dibang Valley district; Chaglagam, Kibithu, Dong and Hawai all in Anjaw district; and end at Vijaynagar in Changlang district at the junction of Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Nagaland and Myanmar.[5][10] The map of alignment can be seen here.[10]

Alignment by district, from west to east:[1][2]

  • West Kameng district (capital Bomdila)
    • Bomdila - aviation ministry is planning an airport in Dirang just northeast of Bomdila
    • Thembang HQ, north of Bomdila.
    • Nafra Heliport ALG & HQ, east of Thembang & Bomdila.
    • Dishing, north of Nafra in Nafra circle.
    • Wothung, northeast of Dishing in Nafra circle.
  • East Kameng district (capital Seppa)
    • Nissangjang in Lada circle, northeast of Wothung & Nafra.
    • Lada Heliport ALG & HQ, north of district HQ Seppa.
    • Bameng Heliport ALG & HQ, southeast of Lada.
    • Sawa Heliport ALG & HQ, northeast of Bameng
    • Chayangtajo Heliport ALG & HQ, northeast of Sawa.
  • Kurung Kumey district (capital Koloriang)
    • Koloriang Heliport ALG & district HQ, northeast of Chayangtajo.
    • Sarli Heliport ALG & HQ, northwest of Koloriang.
    • Huri Heliport ALG in Huri-Damin circle, northeast of Sarli.
    • Damin Heliport ALG in Huri-Damin circle, east of Huri.
  • Dibang Valley district (capital Anini under-construction Airport ALG)
    • Cheppe, in Anelih circle and southeast of Singa.
    • Anelih HQ, southeast of Singa.

Spurs

Also proposed is a 100 km long western spur from Tawang to Yongphulla Airport in Bhutan (upgraded by India and jointly used by the Indian Army and Bhutan Army)[11] in eastern Bhutan via Lumla-Yabab in India and Trashigang in Bhutan.

Six Inter-corridor highways

To providing missing interconnectivity between three horizontal national highways across Arunachal Pradesh - Frontier Highway, Trans-Arunachal Highway and East-West Industrial Corridor Highway - following six vertical and diagonal national highway corridors of total 2178 km length will be built, which will also provide faster access to geostrategically important areas on India-China LAC.[12][13]

Listed west to east.

  • Akajan-Jorging-Pango Highway: 398 km.[13]

Other wider connectivity

The highway will intersect with the proposed East-West Industrial Corridor Highway in the foothills of Arunachal Pradesh from Bhairabkunda, the tri-junction of Bhutan, Assam and Arunachal Pradesh to Ruksin in East Siang district.[3]

The highway will pass through the BCIM Economic Corridor proposed by the Bangladesh-China-India-Myanmar Forum for Regional Cooperation (BCIM Forum),[3][4] a multi-mode corridor that includes a highway from Calcutta in India's West Bengal state to Kunming in China's Yunnan province. As well as Arunachal Pradesh, the highway passes through the Indian states of Manipur and Assam.[9]

The highway will cross the Dibang Wildlife Sanctuary, which may raise environmental issues.

Current status

  • 2016 Dec: Govt asked MoRTH to undertake route survey and prepare the DPR.[1][2]
  • 2022 Nov-Dec: Construction already commenced on 192 km and the whole highway route notified as the National Highway NH-913. MoRTH announced that all approvals and land acquisition will be progressively completed by March 2025, and the construction will be progressively completed by March 2027 in the overlapping phases.[1][2]

See also

Arunachal Pradesh connectivity projects
Northeast connectivity projects
National highways

References

  1. "Eye on China, govt plans a 1,700-km 'frontier highway'". Times of India. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  2. "As LAC skirmishes increase, India to build a 1,700-km highway in Arunachal Pradesh". WION. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  3. "Narendra Modi government to provide funds for restoration of damaged highways". Diligent Media Corporation Ltd. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  4. Dash, Dipak Kumar. "Top officials to meet to expedite road building along China border". The Times of India. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  5. "Indian Government Plans Highway Along Disputed China Border". Ankit Panda. thediplomat.com. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  6. "Govt planning road along McMohan line in Arunachal Pradesh: Kiren Rijiju". Live Mint. 14 October 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  7. नॉर्थ ईस्ट में चीन के साथ लगी सीमा होगी और सुरक्षित, 27000 करोड़ खर्च कर बनेगा 1748 KM लंबा 'फंटियर हाईवे', News18, 19 Dec 2022.
  8. Arunachal Dy CM Lays Foundation Stone of Bridge over Bari River Archived 22 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine, North East Today, 11 Dec 2017.
  9. "Why India is planning a new road near the China border". BBC News. BBC. 16 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  10. "China warns India against paving road in Arunachal". Ajay Banerjee. tribuneindia.com. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  11. "Dantak". Border Roads Organisation. Government of India. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 1 November 2011.
  12. Arunachal Pradesh: Inter-corridors between two highways proposed, Economic Times, 20 Oct 2022.
  13. Centre Clears Construction Of 6 Corridors In Arunachal Near China Border, NDTV, 20 Oct 2022.
  14. "Top officials to meet to expedite road building along China border". ipanewspack.com. Archived from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
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