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dhaka rivers - Dhaka Mirror https://dhakamirror.com/tag/dhaka-rivers/ Latest news update from Bangladesh & World wide Mon, 08 Oct 2012 05:28:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.4 https://dhakamirror.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/cropped-dm-favicon-32x32.png dhaka rivers - Dhaka Mirror https://dhakamirror.com/tag/dhaka-rivers/ 32 32 210058712 Stop polluting Dhaka rivers https://dhakamirror.com/news/other-headlines/stop-polluting-dhaka-rivers/ Mon, 08 Oct 2012 05:28:50 +0000 http://www.dhakamirror.com/?p=45916 Task force gives 2-month time to plug sewage lines The Inter-ministerial Task Force on rivers has served on the capital’s house owners a two-month ultimatum to stop discharging excreta into the river and to make their own septic tanks. At present a large number of house owners link their sewage lines with the storm sewerage system, ... Read more

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Task force gives 2-month time to plug sewage lines
The Inter-ministerial Task Force on rivers has served on the capital’s house owners a two-month ultimatum to stop discharging excreta into
the river and to make their own septic tanks.
At present a large number of house owners link their sewage lines with the storm sewerage system, making the rivers around the capital flow with wastes.
In a bid to make the capital’s rivers pollution free, the taskforce earlier formed a committee to identify the major sources of the ongoing pollution.
“We have set a two-month time period to stop discharge of sewage into the rivers. Following this, the authorities will take action against those house owners,” said
Shipping Minister Shahjahan Khan after the meeting at his ministry’s auditorium yesterday.
The taskforce also decided to take stern action against those industries which were yet to set up any effluent treatment plant (ETP) or had left their ETPs
dysfunctional after installation, said the minister.
At the meeting, officials of the districts around the capital presented reports on the installation of boundary pillars. They said out of 5,041 pillars in Narayanganj
only 322 pillars were left to be pitched while in Dhaka, only 3,273 were installed out of 6,584.
The district administration of Gazipur informed the meeting that it had completed the pillar installation work while the Munshiganj authorities said there were only 17
pillars left out of 604 pillars designated.
However, green campaigners present at the meeting said the way the pillars had been set up was nothing but killing those rivers by shrinking them officially.
“If we destroy the rivers in this way, the next generation will not forgive us for such heinous acts,” Architect Iqbal Habib, vice-president of Bangladesh Paribesh
Andolon (BAPA), told the meeting.
Another green campaigner present at the meeting said the district administrations had recorded the rivers’ boundary in a manner as if those were “private property”.
However, the minister said it was very tough to maintain the pillar installation work properly as “the river-line changes due to erosion”.
He said all the allegations and concerns were being addressed accordingly

Courtesy of The Daily Star

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Rivers officially made thinner https://dhakamirror.com/news/headlines/rivers-officially-made-thinner/ Tue, 25 Sep 2012 15:36:05 +0000 http://www.dhakamirror.com/?p=45081 Faulty demarcation encourages encroachers; ministerial recommendations for pillar relocation ignored The rivers of Dhaka are destined to remain narrow as the shipping ministry has expressed its inability to fully rectify the faulty demarcation of the streams despite a High Court order and subsequent ministerial decision. An extensive visit revealed that relevant district administrations and officials ... Read more

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Faulty demarcation encourages encroachers; ministerial recommendations for pillar relocation ignored
The rivers of Dhaka are destined to remain narrow as the shipping ministry has expressed its inability to fully rectify the faulty demarcation of the streams despite a High Court order and subsequent ministerial decision.
An extensive visit revealed that relevant district administrations and officials of Bangladesh Inland Water Transport Authority (BIWTA) had demarcated the Turag, Balu and Buriganga rivers, leaving out the foreshores at many places.
As a result, land grabbers have embarked on massive river filling, cashing in on the foreshore exclusion at Sinnirtek, Amin Bazar and from Mirpur embankment to Ashulia along the Buriganga.
Shipping minister Shajahan Khan, who leads the national taskforce on river conservation, in reply to a question after a taskforce meeting on August 1 said the authorities had relocated most of the wrongly placed pillars along the Turag River.
“But we could not reclaim all the foreshores, as we had to give them up in many cases due to various reasons,” he said, adding, “We have requested the land ministry to take legal action against those responsible for the exclusion of the foreshores.”
The foreshore is the part of the shore between the lowest water level in the dry season and the highest level of water during the monsoon.
Shipping Secretary Abdul Mannan Howlader said, “We have repeatedly informed the land ministry of the anomaly in river demarcation, as it is the one to take legal action in this regard.
The national taskforce has no authority to compel a ministry to act, he said.
Sources said a section of unscrupulous officials had facilitated exclusion of foreshores during the demarcation in exchange for money.
One example of the gross destruction of the Balu is marking off a land-filling on a shoal in the middle of the river near Ichhapur Bridge as “private land”. The land has a boundary with pillars set up in an extremely irregular alignment.
River grabbing has also been going on at different locations, including one near Kamarpara Bridge along the Ashulia-Tongi embankment link road of the Turag.
The relevant authorities, however, have been silent about the earth-filling on such low-lying land, although the wetland conservation law prohibits such filling-up even on private land.
The district administrations of Dhaka and Gazipur along with the BIWTA have drawn the boundary line of the Turag, Balu and Buriganga during the dry season, excluding foreshore land in violation of a High Court order.
In 2009, the HC directed the deputy commissioners (DCs) concerned to demarcate the rivers as per Cadastral Survey (CS) and Revised Survey (RS), retaining the eroded areas and shoals and in order to protect them with pillars, walkways and plantations.
Now, with most of the foreshores left out, the government has to earth-fill into the rivers for walkways and trees, narrowing down the rivers further, said a BIWTA official.
They have neither followed the CS or RS records accordingly nor the definition of river, as outlined in the river port laws, said a BIWTA deputy director, who has worked extensively on the issue, wishing anonymity.
“They have only attempted to establish the lean water flow in the dry season as a river conveniently accommodating the anomalous leases and grabbing of foreshore lands,” he said.
Following reports on faulty demarcation, the government in May last year formed a committee headed by state minister for land Mostafizur Rahman. Subsequently the committee visited the Turag and Balu rivers.
It decided that the district administration along with BIWTA and directorate of land records had to resurvey and reset the pillars to demarcate the foreshores during monsoon high tide (August-September).
Rafiqul Islam, Dhaka river port officer, however, said they had relocated the pillars from Ashulia to Tongi in the right places.
When it was pointed out that pillars were still well into the river at many places, including in the Balu near Ichhapur Bridge, he said, “It may seem so to you, but it is actually not.”
Md Nurul Islam, deputy commissioner of Gazipur, said they had realigned the pillars along an 18-kilometre stretch but could not reclaim foreshore in all the cases.
“We tried to include foreshore with the river as much as possible. We hardly found land free as much as it should be,” he said, “I cannot readily say how foreshores were leased out to private individuals.”
Syeda Rizwana Hasan, chief executive of Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association (Bela), said excluding the foreshores in the process of saving rivers was a deviation of the HC order, as it would further shrink the rivers.
As per Land Management Manual, the district administration had no authority to lease out river foreshores, which is khas land, she said.

Courtesy of The Daily Star

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