India’s plan to build two rail links into Bhutan is a wise and hopeful move. With a price tag of over ₹4,000 crore, the project will connect Gelephu and Samtse in Bhutan to Kokrajhar in Assam and Banarhat in West Bengal.
At its heart, this plan is about more than steel and sleepers. It is about trust, cooperation and a shared future. For years, Bhutan and India have been close friends. This railway will make that friendship stronger. Trade will become easier, journeys shorter and new business opportunities will open up on both sides.
Four years from now, when the first 89-km stretch is ready, people will see goods moving faster, farmers reaching new markets and towns along the route growing in activity. Also, regular people — students, workers, tourists — will feel the difference. Travel that once felt distant may now feel close.
From a larger view, this project shows India’s commitment to building together, not just for itself. In a world where connections matter, infrastructure becomes a language of peace and progress. India’s stepping in to help Bhutan with rail links sends a message: we choose friendship, we choose cooperation, we choose development that lifts lives.
This railway is more than tracks, it is hope made concrete. As plans turn into foundations and foundations into running trains, the tracks will tell a story: the story of two nations walking side by side toward a shared tomorrow. Let us watch with pride as those first trains roll out.