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Port of Chittagong

The Chittagong Port (Bengali: চট্টগ্রাম বন্দর) is the main seaport of Bangladesh. Located in Bangladesh's port city of Chittagong and on the banks of the Karnaphuli River, the port handles over 90 percent of Bangladesh's export-import trade,[3] and has been used by India, Nepal and Bhutan for transshipment.[4][5] According to Lloyd's, it ranked as the 58th busiest container port in the world in 2019.[6] The port has a recorded history dating back to ancient Roman accounts.[7] It is the busiest container port on the Bay of Bengal.[8][9]

Chittagong Port
New Mooring Terminal
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
Location
CountryBangladesh
LocationChittagong, Chittagong Division
Coordinates22°18′47″N 91°48′00″E / 22.313°N 91.800°E / 22.313; 91.800
UN/LOCODEBDCXB[1]
Details
OpenedBefore 2nd century CE (historical)
1887 (modern)
Operated byChittagong Port Authority
Owned byGovernment of Bangladesh
Type of harbourArtificial / Natural
No. of berths19
Employees7246
ChairmanRear Admiral M Shahjahan
Statistics
Annual cargo tonnage100M (2019–20)[2]
Annual container volume3.097M TEUs (2020–21)
Website
cpa.gov.bd

Congestion is a major challenge in Chittagong port. The port had a congestion rate of 84.3 hours between January and July in 2017.[10]

History edit

 
Dutch ships visiting Chittagong during the Mughal period in 1702
 
Ships moored off Chittagong in the late 1820s.

In the 2nd century, Chittagong harbor appeared on Ptolemy's map, drawn by the Greco-Roman cartographer Claudius Ptolemy. The map mentions the harbor as one of the finest in the Eastern world.[7]

 
Chittagong harbour, 1800s

Arab traders frequented Chittagong since the 9th century.[7] In 1154, Al-Idrisi noted that merchants from Baghdad and Basra regularly travelled to Chittagong.[11] Arab traders played an important role in spreading Islam in the region. The port appears in the travelogues of Chinese explorers Xuanzang and Ma Huan. The Moroccan explorer Ibn Battuta and the Venetian traveler Niccolo De Conti visited the port in the 14th century. The historical port had ship trade with Africa, Europe, China and Southeast Asia.

The Portuguese settlement in Chittagong centered on the port in the 16th and 17th centuries. After the Portuguese were expelled, Chittagong came under the rule of the Mughal Empire and was named Islamabad.[12] It became an important shipbuilding center, catering to the Mughal and Ottoman navies. After the rise of British dominance in Bengal following the Battle of Plassey and Battle of Buxar, the Nawab of Bengal ceded the port to the British East India Company in 1772.[13]

Modern edit

 
Chittagong port in 1960
 
Chittagong Port Authority Administrative Building

The modern Chittagong port was organized in 1887 under the Port Commissioners Act in the British Indian Empire. The port began formal operations under a commissioner in 1888. Its busiest trade links were with British Burma, including the ports of Akyab and Rangoon;[14] and other Bengali ports, including Calcutta, Dhaka and Narayanganj.[15] In the year 1889–90 the port handled exports totalling 125,000 tons.[16] The Strand Road was built beside the harbour. Between 1905 and 1911, Chittagong was the chief seaport of Eastern Bengal and Assam. It was made the terminus of the Assam Bengal Railway. Hence, the port's hinterland included all of colonial Assam (modern Northeast India). Trade between British India and British Burma rapidly increased in the early 20th century. The Bay of Bengal became one of the busiest shipping hubs in the world, rivaling the traffic of ports on the Atlantic.[17] In 1928, the British government declared Chittagong as a "Major Port" of British India.[18] Chittagong was important for the petroleum industry that developed in Assam and Burma. It was used for jute and rice trading. During World War II, Chittagong port was used by Allied Forces in the Burma Campaign.

After the partition of British India, the governor general of the Dominion of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, visited Chittagong and stressed its importance and future potential.[19] The Chittagong Port Trust was formed in East Pakistan in 1960. 100 employees of the Chittagong Port were killed during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.[18] The Soviet Pacific Fleet was tasked with mine clearing and salvage operations in the port after the war.[20] The port has benefited from the growth of heavy industry and logistics in the Chittagong Metropolitan Area in the years following independence. Trade unionism was strong in the late 1990s.

A major expansion took place with the construction of the New Mooring Terminal in the first decade of the 21st century.[21]

Management edit

The Chittagong Port Authority is responsible for the port's management.

Facilities edit

Berths edit

 
The Karnaphuli River
 
Container handling in Chittagong Port
Type of berth Quantity of berths[22] Notes
General cargo berths 6
Container berths 14
Dolphin Oil Jetty 3 For handling crude and product oil vessels of up to 186 meters
Grain Silo Jetty 1 Vessels up to 186 meters
Cement Clinker Jetty 1 Cement Clinker Jetty
TSP 1 Vessel up to 175.25 meters
Chittagong Urea Fertilizer Jetty 1 Vessels up to 176 meters and can be loaded up to maximum draft of 8.5 meters
KAFCO Urea Jetty 1 Vessel having LOA of 186 meters will be allowed to take berth at KAFCO (Urea)
KAFCO Ammonia Jetty 1 Vessel having LOA up to 186 meters at KAFCO (Ammonia) jetties can be loaded up to a maximum draft of 9.2 meters.
Dry Dock Jetties 3
River Mooring No. 3 1 Vessels up to 182.9 LOA and 7.76 meters draft for edible oil and POL in bulk
River Mooring No. 8 1 Vessels up to 186 meters and 8 meters draft for vegetable oil carrier
River Mooring No. 9 1 Vessels up to 186 meters and 6 meters draft for repair of vessel / laying off.
River Mooring No. 10 1 Vessels up to 145 meters LOA and 7.5 meters draft for repair of vessel / laying off.
UTTJ (United Tank Terminal Jetty) 1 Commissioning for loading and unloading operation of oil tanker/vessel since July' 2020.
 
Industries along the port on the Karnaphuli River

Container terminals edit

 
Many private container terminals like this one have been set up near the port

The port depends on several container terminals, most of which are owned by private companies.

  • New Mooring Terminal
  • Chittagong Container Terminal
  • KDS Logistics Terminal[23]
  • Orient Overseas Container Line (OOCL) Terminal[24]
  • Summit Alliance Container Terminal[25]
  • Vertex Off Dock Logistic Terminal
  • QNS Container Terminal
  • Shafi Motors Terminal
  • K & T Logistic Terminal
  • Esack Brothers Terminal
  • Chittagong Container Transportation Company Limited Terminal
  • Port Link Logistic Terminal
  • M/s. Incontrade Terminal
  • M/s. Golden Container Terminal
  • M/s. Saber Ahmed Timber Terminal
  • M/s. Eastern Logistics Terminal
  • B. M. Container Terminal
  • Nemsan Container Terminal

Industrial terminals edit

 
The Eastern Refinery

Security edit

 
The BNS Somudra Joy is one of two cutters used by the Bangladesh Navy to patrol waters off the port

The Bangladesh Coast Guard is responsible for security in the vicinity of the port.

Naval and air base edit

The Bangladesh Navy's largest naval base, the BNS Issa Khan, and the Bangladesh Naval Academy are located in Chittagong port. The port is the home base of the most of the Bangladesh Navy fleet, including its submarine fleet. The Chittagong Naval Area often hosts joint exercises with the navies of other countries, as well as visiting foreign naval vessels. A missile launch pad is located near the port.[27] The Bangladesh Air Force maintains its BAF Zahurul Haq Air Base near the port. In addition, the Bangladesh Navy operates an airborne maritime surveillance wing.

Piracy edit

The year 2000 had the highest number of Piracy attacks in the recorded history of Chittagong. Many of the raids resulted in the theft of mooring lines and Zinc anode and other movable ship equipments. In 2005 it had the highest pirate attacks in a port area in the world. The Government of Bangladesh has increased Navy and Coast Guard presence in the area.[28] According to ICC International Maritime Bureau (IMB) Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships-2019 Report, incidents in Bangladesh have fallen significantly over the past few years because of the effort of Bangladesh Authorities.[29] There was no incident of piracy or armed robbery in 2019.[29]

Disasters edit

At night on 4 June 2022, the BM Inland Container Depot, a Dutch-Bangladesh joint venture broke out following explosions in a container full of chemicals. The fire continued to spread and the explosions shattered the windows of nearby buildings. It was felt as far as 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) away. At least 9 firefighters from Bangladesh fire service and civil defense were reported dead and the death toll reached to 49 by Sunday evening.[30]

See also edit

List of Ports in Bangladesh

References edit

  1. ^ "UN/LOCODE (BD) - Bangladesh". UNECE. Retrieved 3 January 2021.
  2. ^ চট্টগ্রাম বন্দরের কন্টেইনার হ্যান্ডলিং পরিসংখ্যান [Container Handling Statististics of Chittagong Port] (in Bengali). Chittagong Port Authority.
  3. ^ "Import, export through Chittagong Port up in May". The Business Standard. 6 June 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Nepal first to use Ctg port". The Daily Star. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  5. ^ "India and Bangladesh begin transhipment operations". Fairplay.ihs.com. 16 June 2016. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  6. ^ "Ctg Port 58th among 100 busiest ports". The Daily Star.
  7. ^ a b c Schellinger, Paul; Salkin, Robert M., eds. (2012) [First published 1996]. Asia and Oceania: International Dictionary of Historic Places. Routledge. p. 186. ISBN 978-1-136-63979-1.
  8. ^ "RSGT Nominated to Operate New Patenga Container Terminal at Chittagong Port | Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide".
  9. ^ Bose, Sohini (17 May 2022). "The Chittagong Port: Bangladesh's trump card in its diplomacy of Balance". Observer Research Foundation.
  10. ^ "Congestion paralyzes Chittagong port". Joc.com. 5 June 2012. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  11. ^ "Chittagong City". Banglapedia. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  12. ^ Stewart, Charles (1813). The History of Bengal, from the First Mohammedan Invasion Until the Virtual Conquest of that Country by the English, A.D. 1757. Black, Parry. pp. 245–.
  13. ^ "Chittagong | Bangladesh". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  14. ^ J. Forbes Munro (2003). Maritime Enterprise and Empire: Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network, 1823-93. Boydell Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-85115-935-5.
  15. ^ Willis's Current notes. London: G. Willis. 1886. p. 16.
  16. ^ Tauheed, Q S (1 July 2005). "Forum for planned Chittagong's search for its conservation -I". The Daily Star. Dhaka. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  17. ^ "The Bay of Bengal: Rise and Decline of a South Asian Region". 16 June 2014. Archived from the original on 22 December 2021. Retrieved 24 July 2017 – via YouTube.
  18. ^ a b "Chittagong Port Authority". Banglapedia. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  19. ^ Z. H. Zaidi; Quaid-i-Azam Papers Project (2001). Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers: Pakistan : pangs of birth, 15 August-30 September 1947. Quaid-i-Azam Papers Project, National Archives of Pakistan. p. 34. ISBN 978-969-8156-09-1.
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 January 2017. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  21. ^ New Mooring container terminal opens (19 October 2015). "New Mooring container terminal opens". Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  22. ^ "Chittagong Port Overview and Other Inland Transportation" (PDF). USDA Foreign Agriculture Service.
  23. ^ "KDS launches Tk 300cr ICD in Chittagong". The Daily Star. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  24. ^ "Terminals & Facilities". OOCL. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  25. ^ "FMO and IDCOL combine for port infrastructure loan in Bangladesh_N". TXF News. 7 July 2015. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  26. ^ "New oil storage terminal in BD". Banglanews24.com. 3 September 2013. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  27. ^ "Bangladesh building missile arsenal". The Times of India. 12 September 2008. Retrieved 24 July 2017.
  28. ^ Hill, Peter Corbet. Inclusions by: Peter (2009). A modern plague of pirates : modern piracy in the 21st Century ; protect your ship and your crew ; a practical guide for avoiding contemporary piracy on the high seas ([Version 1.3 updated February 2009] ed.). East Mersea: Offshore and Marine Publ. p. 27. ISBN 978-0-9562107-0-8.
  29. ^ a b "Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships" (PDF). ICC International Maritime Bureau. January 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  30. ^ Alam, Julhas (5 June 2022). "At least 49 dead in 2nd day of Bangladesh cargo depot fire". Washington Post.

External links edit

  • Article on Chittagong Port, Banglapedia
  • Chittagong Port Authority Website
  • Chittagong Port Ship Service

port, chittagong, chittagong, port, bengali, চট, টগ, বন, দর, main, seaport, bangladesh, located, bangladesh, port, city, chittagong, banks, karnaphuli, river, port, handles, over, percent, bangladesh, export, import, trade, been, used, india, nepal, bhutan, tr. The Chittagong Port Bengali চট টগ র ম বন দর is the main seaport of Bangladesh Located in Bangladesh s port city of Chittagong and on the banks of the Karnaphuli River the port handles over 90 percent of Bangladesh s export import trade 3 and has been used by India Nepal and Bhutan for transshipment 4 5 According to Lloyd s it ranked as the 58th busiest container port in the world in 2019 6 The port has a recorded history dating back to ancient Roman accounts 7 It is the busiest container port on the Bay of Bengal 8 9 Chittagong PortNew Mooring TerminalClick on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationCountryBangladeshLocationChittagong Chittagong DivisionCoordinates22 18 47 N 91 48 00 E 22 313 N 91 800 E 22 313 91 800UN LOCODEBDCXB 1 DetailsOpenedBefore 2nd century CE historical 1887 modern Operated byChittagong Port AuthorityOwned byGovernment of BangladeshType of harbourArtificial NaturalNo of berths19Employees7246ChairmanRear Admiral M ShahjahanStatisticsAnnual cargo tonnage100M 2019 20 2 Annual container volume3 097M TEUs 2020 21 Websitecpa wbr gov wbr bdCongestion is a major challenge in Chittagong port The port had a congestion rate of 84 3 hours between January and July in 2017 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Modern 2 Management 3 Facilities 3 1 Berths 3 2 Container terminals 3 3 Industrial terminals 4 Security 4 1 Naval and air base 4 1 1 Piracy 5 Disasters 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Dutch ships visiting Chittagong during the Mughal period in 1702 nbsp Ships moored off Chittagong in the late 1820s In the 2nd century Chittagong harbor appeared on Ptolemy s map drawn by the Greco Roman cartographer Claudius Ptolemy The map mentions the harbor as one of the finest in the Eastern world 7 nbsp Chittagong harbour 1800sArab traders frequented Chittagong since the 9th century 7 In 1154 Al Idrisi noted that merchants from Baghdad and Basra regularly travelled to Chittagong 11 Arab traders played an important role in spreading Islam in the region The port appears in the travelogues of Chinese explorers Xuanzang and Ma Huan The Moroccan explorer Ibn Battuta and the Venetian traveler Niccolo De Conti visited the port in the 14th century The historical port had ship trade with Africa Europe China and Southeast Asia The Portuguese settlement in Chittagong centered on the port in the 16th and 17th centuries After the Portuguese were expelled Chittagong came under the rule of the Mughal Empire and was named Islamabad 12 It became an important shipbuilding center catering to the Mughal and Ottoman navies After the rise of British dominance in Bengal following the Battle of Plassey and Battle of Buxar the Nawab of Bengal ceded the port to the British East India Company in 1772 13 Modern edit nbsp Chittagong port in 1960 nbsp Chittagong Port Authority Administrative BuildingThe modern Chittagong port was organized in 1887 under the Port Commissioners Act in the British Indian Empire The port began formal operations under a commissioner in 1888 Its busiest trade links were with British Burma including the ports of Akyab and Rangoon 14 and other Bengali ports including Calcutta Dhaka and Narayanganj 15 In the year 1889 90 the port handled exports totalling 125 000 tons 16 The Strand Road was built beside the harbour Between 1905 and 1911 Chittagong was the chief seaport of Eastern Bengal and Assam It was made the terminus of the Assam Bengal Railway Hence the port s hinterland included all of colonial Assam modern Northeast India Trade between British India and British Burma rapidly increased in the early 20th century The Bay of Bengal became one of the busiest shipping hubs in the world rivaling the traffic of ports on the Atlantic 17 In 1928 the British government declared Chittagong as a Major Port of British India 18 Chittagong was important for the petroleum industry that developed in Assam and Burma It was used for jute and rice trading During World War II Chittagong port was used by Allied Forces in the Burma Campaign After the partition of British India the governor general of the Dominion of Pakistan Muhammad Ali Jinnah visited Chittagong and stressed its importance and future potential 19 The Chittagong Port Trust was formed in East Pakistan in 1960 100 employees of the Chittagong Port were killed during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 18 The Soviet Pacific Fleet was tasked with mine clearing and salvage operations in the port after the war 20 The port has benefited from the growth of heavy industry and logistics in the Chittagong Metropolitan Area in the years following independence Trade unionism was strong in the late 1990s A major expansion took place with the construction of the New Mooring Terminal in the first decade of the 21st century 21 Management editThe Chittagong Port Authority is responsible for the port s management Facilities editBerths edit nbsp The Karnaphuli River nbsp Container handling in Chittagong PortType of berth Quantity of berths 22 NotesGeneral cargo berths 6Container berths 14Dolphin Oil Jetty 3 For handling crude and product oil vessels of up to 186 metersGrain Silo Jetty 1 Vessels up to 186 metersCement Clinker Jetty 1 Cement Clinker JettyTSP 1 Vessel up to 175 25 metersChittagong Urea Fertilizer Jetty 1 Vessels up to 176 meters and can be loaded up to maximum draft of 8 5 metersKAFCO Urea Jetty 1 Vessel having LOA of 186 meters will be allowed to take berth at KAFCO Urea KAFCO Ammonia Jetty 1 Vessel having LOA up to 186 meters at KAFCO Ammonia jetties can be loaded up to a maximum draft of 9 2 meters Dry Dock Jetties 3River Mooring No 3 1 Vessels up to 182 9 LOA and 7 76 meters draft for edible oil and POL in bulkRiver Mooring No 8 1 Vessels up to 186 meters and 8 meters draft for vegetable oil carrierRiver Mooring No 9 1 Vessels up to 186 meters and 6 meters draft for repair of vessel laying off River Mooring No 10 1 Vessels up to 145 meters LOA and 7 5 meters draft for repair of vessel laying off UTTJ United Tank Terminal Jetty 1 Commissioning for loading and unloading operation of oil tanker vessel since July 2020 nbsp Industries along the port on the Karnaphuli RiverContainer terminals edit nbsp Many private container terminals like this one have been set up near the portThe port depends on several container terminals most of which are owned by private companies New Mooring Terminal Chittagong Container Terminal KDS Logistics Terminal 23 Orient Overseas Container Line OOCL Terminal 24 Summit Alliance Container Terminal 25 Vertex Off Dock Logistic Terminal QNS Container Terminal Shafi Motors Terminal K amp T Logistic Terminal Esack Brothers Terminal Chittagong Container Transportation Company Limited Terminal Port Link Logistic Terminal M s Incontrade Terminal M s Golden Container Terminal M s Saber Ahmed Timber Terminal M s Eastern Logistics Terminal B M Container Terminal Nemsan Container TerminalIndustrial terminals edit nbsp The Eastern RefineryEastern Refinery Terminal Karnaphuli Fertilizer Company KAFCO Terminal Jamuna Oil Company Terminal Padma Oil Company Terminal Meghna Petroleum Terminal Omera Fuels Limited Terminal 26 Security edit nbsp The BNS Somudra Joy is one of two cutters used by the Bangladesh Navy to patrol waters off the portThe Bangladesh Coast Guard is responsible for security in the vicinity of the port Naval and air base edit The Bangladesh Navy s largest naval base the BNS Issa Khan and the Bangladesh Naval Academy are located in Chittagong port The port is the home base of the most of the Bangladesh Navy fleet including its submarine fleet The Chittagong Naval Area often hosts joint exercises with the navies of other countries as well as visiting foreign naval vessels A missile launch pad is located near the port 27 The Bangladesh Air Force maintains its BAF Zahurul Haq Air Base near the port In addition the Bangladesh Navy operates an airborne maritime surveillance wing Piracy edit The year 2000 had the highest number of Piracy attacks in the recorded history of Chittagong Many of the raids resulted in the theft of mooring lines and Zinc anode and other movable ship equipments In 2005 it had the highest pirate attacks in a port area in the world The Government of Bangladesh has increased Navy and Coast Guard presence in the area 28 According to ICC International Maritime Bureau IMB Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships 2019 Report incidents in Bangladesh have fallen significantly over the past few years because of the effort of Bangladesh Authorities 29 There was no incident of piracy or armed robbery in 2019 29 Disasters editMain article 2022 Sitakunda fire At night on 4 June 2022 the BM Inland Container Depot a Dutch Bangladesh joint venture broke out following explosions in a container full of chemicals The fire continued to spread and the explosions shattered the windows of nearby buildings It was felt as far as 4 kilometers 2 5 miles away At least 9 firefighters from Bangladesh fire service and civil defense were reported dead and the death toll reached to 49 by Sunday evening 30 See also editList of Ports in BangladeshReferences edit UN LOCODE BD Bangladesh UNECE Retrieved 3 January 2021 চট টগ র ম বন দর র কন ট ইন র হ য ন ডল পর স খ য ন Container Handling Statististics of Chittagong Port in Bengali Chittagong Port Authority Import export through Chittagong Port up in May The Business Standard 6 June 2020 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Nepal first to use Ctg port The Daily Star 17 July 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2017 India and Bangladesh begin transhipment operations Fairplay ihs com 16 June 2016 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Ctg Port 58th among 100 busiest ports The Daily Star a b c Schellinger Paul Salkin Robert M eds 2012 First published 1996 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 186 ISBN 978 1 136 63979 1 RSGT Nominated to Operate New Patenga Container Terminal at Chittagong Port Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide Bose Sohini 17 May 2022 The Chittagong Port Bangladesh s trump card in its diplomacy of Balance Observer Research Foundation Congestion paralyzes Chittagong port Joc com 5 June 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Chittagong City Banglapedia Retrieved 24 July 2017 Stewart Charles 1813 The History of Bengal from the First Mohammedan Invasion Until the Virtual Conquest of that Country by the English A D 1757 Black Parry pp 245 Chittagong Bangladesh Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 24 July 2017 J Forbes Munro 2003 Maritime Enterprise and Empire Sir William Mackinnon and His Business Network 1823 93 Boydell Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 85115 935 5 Willis s Current notes London G Willis 1886 p 16 Tauheed Q S 1 July 2005 Forum for planned Chittagong s search for its conservation I The Daily Star Dhaka Retrieved 22 January 2015 The Bay of Bengal Rise and Decline of a South Asian Region 16 June 2014 Archived from the original on 22 December 2021 Retrieved 24 July 2017 via YouTube a b Chittagong Port Authority Banglapedia Retrieved 24 July 2017 Z H Zaidi Quaid i Azam Papers Project 2001 Quaid i Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers Pakistan pangs of birth 15 August 30 September 1947 Quaid i Azam Papers Project National Archives of Pakistan p 34 ISBN 978 969 8156 09 1 Soviet Naval Presence In The Indian Ocean PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 January 2017 Retrieved 24 July 2017 New Mooring container terminal opens 19 October 2015 New Mooring container terminal opens Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide Retrieved 24 July 2017 Chittagong Port Overview and Other Inland Transportation PDF USDA Foreign Agriculture Service KDS launches Tk 300cr ICD in Chittagong The Daily Star Retrieved 24 July 2017 Terminals amp Facilities OOCL Retrieved 24 July 2017 FMO and IDCOL combine for port infrastructure loan in Bangladesh N TXF News 7 July 2015 Retrieved 24 July 2017 New oil storage terminal in BD Banglanews24 com 3 September 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Bangladesh building missile arsenal The Times of India 12 September 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2017 Hill Peter Corbet Inclusions by Peter 2009 A modern plague of pirates modern piracy in the 21st Century protect your ship and your crew a practical guide for avoiding contemporary piracy on the high seas Version 1 3 updated February 2009 ed East Mersea Offshore and Marine Publ p 27 ISBN 978 0 9562107 0 8 a b Piracy and Armed Robbery Against Ships PDF ICC International Maritime Bureau January 2020 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Alam Julhas 5 June 2022 At least 49 dead in 2nd day of Bangladesh cargo depot fire Washington Post External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port of Chittagong Article on Chittagong Port Banglapedia Chittagong Port Authority Website Chittagong Port Ship Service Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Port of Chittagong amp oldid 1182957999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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