Sunday, November 17, 2024

Still no facilities for cyclists

World Bicycle Day today

Shahin Akhter

Star Mail photo

Bicycles are the cheapest and most environment-friendly mode of transport in easing traffic congestion and reducing environmental pollution in the capital city, said green activists and entrepreneurs.

Absence of separate lanes on roads and increased value added tax on spare parts, however, are hindering this mode of transport from becoming more popular in the country, they added.

Against this backdrop, World Bicycle Day is going to be observed today (Saturday) in Bangladesh along with different countries to make people aware of social benefits of using this vehicle.

Bicycle was a popular mode of transport in Bangladesh before recent expansion of different three-wheeler vehicles like easy bikes and motorcycles.

In Dhaka city, the vehicle is popular among young people for avoiding the traffic gridlock.

The National Integrated Multimodal Transport Policy 2013 puts provisions for separate bicycle lanes on urban roads.

But there is no separate lane for this vehicle in the city.

Most recently, finance minister AHM Mustafa Kamal in his budget speech on Thursday proposed to impose a value added tax and additional tariffs on a number of products to raise the tax-GDP ratio.

He also proposed to increase the customs duty from 10 per cent to 15 per cent on the import of freewheel sprocket wheels for bicycles.

Institute of Wellbeing, a non-government organisation working on health and environmental issues, on Friday observed the World Bicycle Day with other organisations by holding rally and sit-in programmes in the capital demanding withdrawal of increased tax on the bicycles.

The institute policy officer Talukder Rifat Pasha told New Age on Friday that currently due to price hike of essentials bicycles could be a way out for the common people to save some money.

‘This vehicle is highly environment-friendly and plays a role in reducing air and noise pollution,’ he said, adding that bicycles can ease traffic gridlock by reducing number of other mass transports on roads.’

He said that earlier on the spare parts of the bicycles there was 58 per cent tax while in the proposed budget for FY23-24 new tax was imposed.

‘There is no separate lane for this vehicle in the Dhaka city and this increased tax will discourage more people to use bicycles,’ Rifat continued.

He urged the government to set up separate lanes for bicycles to facilitate people.

Kamaruzzaman Kamal, marketing director of local bicycle maker Pran RFL, told New Age on May 28 that the bicycle industry is expanding in Bangladesh.

In the past two to three years, new investments are coming and bicycle selling is on the rise, he said, adding that that there are ups and down in every industry.

He said that the primary share of the bicycles had been imported from India and China while in Bangladesh bicycles were assembled by some local manufacturers.

The local share in bicycle industry is increasing, Kamaruzzaman Kamal also observed.

For assembling of bicycles 70 to 75 per cent parts will be imported while the rest can be produced locally, he said.

‘There are no separate lanes for bicycles on our roads for which bicyclists here have to run by tackling different obstacles,’ he said, adding that if there are separate lanes then it will encourage more people to buy bicycles.

Road Transport and Highways Division secretary ABM Amin Ullah Nuri told New Age on Friday that they were discussing with different stakeholders to get opinions to make this vehicle popular.

‘Our capital has huge population and we need to think rationally for making any plans,’ he added.

Earlier on April 12, 2018 the United Nations General Assembly approved June 3 as the official day of awareness about multiple societal benefits of using bicycle for transport and leisure.

In the same year (2018) the Bangladesh government observed the day.

Dhaka Transport Coordination Authority officials confirmed that this year no programme was taken by them to observe the day.

Article originally appeared on New Age.

Related News

World Chocolate Day 2023: From history to celebration all you need to know

News Desk : dhakamirror.com World Chocolate Day, celebrated on July 7 each year, is a delightful occasion that brings people together. On World Chocolate Day, people indulge in a wide array of chocolate-infused delights, ranging from chocolate milk and hot chocolate to candy bars, cakes, and brownies. It is a time to revel in the ... Read more

Saudi Arabia: What happens to the 100 million Jamarat pebbles after Hajj?

World Desk : dhakamirror.com The annual Hajj pilgrimage, one of the five pillars of Islam, is a time of deep spiritual reflection for millions of Muslims. One of the most significant rituals during Hajj is the stoning at Jamarat, where pilgrims throw pebbles at three pillars, symbolising the rejection of evil. With over 1.84 million ... Read more

Which are the 10 largest airports in the world?

The scenario of the global air transportation sector has drastically changed over the last few decades that has been subject to many variables over the past decade. Air travel is not only the most sought after and popular means of travel for long-distance but has made a major contribution to the world economy. It may ... Read more

Celebrating World Samosa Day

September 5 is celebrated as World Samosa Day and the day is solely dedicated to the crunchy oily snack. Be it rains or winter or summer, samosas are our savour. For those unaccustomed to the humble street food item, it’s a triangular-shaped pastry that comes with a range of fillings. Different parts of the world ... Read more

BRAC University: The World Champions

On January 3, members of 400 participating teams along with distinguished guests gathered at the Main Hall of Technische University, Berlin. Thousands if not millions watched the live feed online, from all around the world, eagerly and anxiously waiting for an announcement, the results of the World Universities Debating Championship 2013(WUDC 2013). The tournament is ... Read more

The land of beauty

by Mahfuzul Haque Bangladesh, a South-Asian country wrapped up with great streaming rivers, is indeed a land of green and natural beauty. The land possesses the longest sea beach and is home to the Royal Bengal Tiger. Sundarbans is also the biggest mangrove forest in the world. The country, once part of undivided Bengal, is ... Read more

Tourism in Bangladesh: problems and prospects

by Ziaul Haque Howlader Forty years has elapsed of Bangladesh’s tourism industry, yet we still see it in a nascent position in comparison to our neighbouring countries. Despite having all the potential to flourish, tourism in this country has been growing at a very slow pace. Bangladesh is not known as a tourist destination in ... Read more

A brief life sketch of Sir Jagadish Chandra Bose

Obaidur Rahman Born on 30th November, 1858, in the Rarikhal village of Bikrampur during the British era, which is now under the Munshiganj district of Bangladesh; Sir Bose was all together a physicist, biologist, botanist, archeologist and the author of the very first major work in the arena of Bangla science fiction, Niruddesher Kahin, written ... Read more

Focusing on community strength for disaster preparedness

OP-ED Focusing on community strength for disaster preparedness We can mobilise all the communities at every corner of Bangladesh and we will discover that they all have the same potentials. They by themselves will find a way out of their problems, writes M Mizanur Rahman. INVESTMENT in disaster preparedness can save five times as much ... Read more

Tourism prospect of Bangladesh

OP-ED Tourism prospect of Bangladesh If tourism is given due honour of industry and if both government and private organisations equally come forward for its development then it would open doors of immense possibility for us. At present, in our gross domestic product, the role of tourism is below one per cent. If it could ... Read more

New policy to promote tourism industry

The Nepali government has brought new tourism policy to promote tourism industry, The Himalayan Times reports. Addressing a press meeting, Minister for Tourism and Civial Aviation Hisila Yami said the ministry is planning a curriculum regarding tourism and the development of a separate Tourism University. “European arrivals are declining due to the global financial crisis ... Read more

A 19th-century Bengali scholar

By Monty Siddique for The News Today Abu Saleh Mohammad Siddique, whose ancestral home was in Tetulia (Zamindar family), Satkhira, Bangladesh, studied English Language and English Literature at St. Xavier’s College, Kolkata. He breathed his last in June 2007 and is buried in the Muslim section of the Greenford Cemetery in the London Borough of ... Read more

A modern day kobiraj

Jawad Hossain Nirjhor for The News Today This article is about alternative medical practices that are adopted by poor people suffering from myriad illnesses, giving us a glimpse of the health conditions and sufferings of the underprivileged population in this country. Afsar Ahamed lay near a corner of a street in Hatirpool, huddled in pain. ... Read more

Infectious diseases and vaccine sciences

What does the Programme do? ICDDR,B is a vibrant institution with various experts actively engaged in research on infectious diseases. Microbiologists conduct fundamental research on the characteristics of pathogens. Immunologists study host defences, including potential vaccine candidates. Clinical scientists study the diseases caused by these infectious agents and evaluate optimum therapy in infected patients. Epidemiologists study ... Read more

The story & esoteric significance of Rath Yatra

By Dr. Subrato Ghosh for The News Today The story of the origin of Rath Yatra given by the Goswamis is practically unknown. As the gopis think and cry for Krishna, so He too was always immersed in their thought and would feel acute pangs of separation. HISTORY OF RATHA-YATRA Once Krishna was deeply thinking ... Read more

Rabindranath: The Contemporary Forever!

By Aly Zaker It was in August of 1971. I was on an official mission of the Swadhin Bangla Betar Kendra, escorting some foreign dignitaries to the refugee camp in the Salt Lake area ofCalcutta. After my official duty was over as I was getting ready to leave, I heard that the Mukti Shangrami’ Shilpi ... Read more

Struggle to Survive

By Jawad Hossain Nirjhor The ready-made garment industry employs around 3.5 million workers and accounts for 80 percent of the total export earnings is mainly depends on women workers .Following the countrywide demonstration last year, the minimum wage for the garment workers was slightly increased. On the eve of May Day, it is time to ... Read more

Junk science

Scientists are increasingly worried about the amount of debris orbiting the Earth, writes Dr K.H. Amin February 10th 2009 began like every other day in Iridium 33’s 11-year life. One of a constellation of 66 small satellites in orbit around the Earth, it spent its time whizzing through space, diligently shuttling signals to and from ... Read more

Agricultural breakthroughs

Khamin writes about the researches that have made positive differences to our agriculture sector Being mainly an agrarian economy with agriculture being the largest producing sector, the increasing performance in the sector in Bangladesh, has been fuelled by various scientific researches conducted over the past three decades. The fruition of the researches has brought about ... Read more

World’s largest mangrove forest

The Sundarbans, the largest single tidal halophytic mangrove forest in the world, is intersected by a complex network of tidal waterways, mudflats and small islands of salt-tolerant mangrove forests. The name Sundarban can be literally translated as “beautiful jungle” or “beautiful forest” in the Bengali language. The name may have been derived from the Sundari ... Read more