Bangladesh is ready to hold trials of potential Covid-19 vaccines developed by India and will receive early supplies of any successful candidate.

New Delhi considers its eastern neighbour Bangladesh a strategic ally and is wary of Beijingโ€™s rising influence there.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi sent his foreign secretary to Bangladeshโ€™s capital Dhaka on Tuesday on a two-day visit to hold meetings with his Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina and officials.

โ€œBangladesh is ready to collaborate in the development of a COVID vaccine, including its trial, and looks forward to early affordable availability of the vaccine when it is ready,โ€ its foreign ministry said in a statement.

The release followed a meeting of the foreign secretary and his Indian counterpart Harsh Vardhan Shringla, during which Shringla had discussed Indiaโ€™s economies of scale in vaccine manufacturing with Bangladeshi officials, the statement said.

โ€œThey (India) positively responded, saying that they are developing vaccines not only for themselves but also for others,โ€ Bangladeshโ€™s Foreign Secretary Masud Bin Momen told reporters after the meeting.

โ€œIt will be made available for Bangladesh in the primary stage,โ€ he said.

India is home to the worldโ€™s biggest vaccine making company, the Serum Institute of India, and is currently holding trials for three potential coronavirus vaccines, including one licensed to AstraZeneca Plc by Oxford University.

The state medical research agency of Bangladesh, which has reported 285,091 coronavirus infections and 3,781 deaths, approved a third-phase trial of a potential Covid-19 vaccine developed by Chinaโ€™s Sinovac Biotech Ltd last month.