Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Chittagong Seaport

Chittagong:Chittagong is the main seaport and second largest city of Bangladesh, and the administrative capital of the greater Chittagong Division. It is located on the northern banks of the Karnaphuli River in southeastern Bangladesh, along the coast the Bay of Bengal. The Chittagong Metropolitan Area is home to an estimated population exceeding 5.5 million people. It is one of the fastest growing cities in the world. An ancient and historic gateway to Bengal, Chittagong was a major port in Indian Ocean trade and attracted merchants from Arabia, Persia, China and Southeast Asia, as well as numerous historic travellers, including Admiral Zheng He, Ibn Battuta, Wang Dayuan and Niccolò de' Conti.The Portuguese arrived in the 16th century and established the settlement of Porto Grande De Bengala. Chittagong also became a trading post of the Dutch VOC and the French East India Company. After the collapse of the Principality of Bengal, the British East India Company gained control of the port in the late-18th century.
The modern city of Chittagong emerged during the British Raj as key transportation hub of Bengal, Assam and Burma. It underwent rapid urban and commercial expansion from the early-20th century as the chief port of eastern Bengal and Assam. It was the site of the Chittagong armoury raid of Surya Sen in 1930. During World War II, it served as a major base for Allied Forces engaged in the Burma Campaign, and witnessed several Japanese air raids. After the Partition of British India in 1947, Chittagong became part of East Pakistan. In 1971, at the onset of the Bangladesh Liberation War, the declaration of Bangladesh’s independence was proclaimed from Chittagong by Bengali political and military leaders on behalf of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
Chittagong is a major commercial and industrial center, generating more than 40% of Bangladesh's industrial output and 80% of international trade. The city is home to many of the oldest and largest companies in Bangladesh, as well as many of Bangladesh's leading business families. In recent years, neighboring countries and international investors have looked to the port city as a future regional gateway to the eastern subcontinent and landlocked southern Asia (including northeast India, southwest China, Burma, Nepal and Bhutan).Due to its strategic position at the crossroads of the two burgeoning economic communities of SAARC and ASEAN, Chittagong intends to emerge as a regional economic hub in South and East Asia. Bangladesh is undertaking various megaprojects and infrastructure development schemes in the city, including the construction of a deep sea port.