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The Financial Express

Only elevated way can be built in Haor: Cabinet

| Updated: April 20, 2022 20:03:18


File photo used for representation purpose (Collected) File photo used for representation purpose (Collected)

The Cabinet has made a clear instruction that no road except elevated ones can be constructed in the country’s Haors to ensure the water flow.

The instruction was given at the Cabinet meeting chaired by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at her office in Dhaka on Monday, reports UNB.

About Austagram-Mithamain Haor all-weather road, the meeting also asked the authorities concerned to assess whether the road causes any adverse effect regarding the water stagnation in the Hoar, said Cabinet Secretary Khandker Anwarul Islam while briefing reporters at Bangladesh Secretariat on Monday.

The Cabinet also asked to conduct a survey if the water stagnation problem would go in case of construction of a 150-200 meter bridge in the Hoar road maintaining a logical distance like in every half a kilometer, said the top bureaucrat.

In the meeting, it was informed that flash floods have so far damaged the crops on 5,000 hectares of land in the Haor region.

Crops are cultivated in a total of 270,000 hectares of Haor-land in the country, said the cabinet secretary.

Noting that the harvesting of paddy might be completed by April 30 next, he said it is expected that no crop would be damaged anymore there if there is no rain in the next 8-10 days.

Besides, the draft of Attia Forest (Protection) Act, 2022 was placed in the meeting, but the Cabinet directed the authorities concerned to bring it again after conducting a digital survey over its lands.

The Cabinet earlier approved in principle the proposed law on October 28, 2021.

The digital survey is essential as the nature of its lands changed in different areas. Otherwise, it would create problems, said the cabinet secretary.

The meeting was informed that the digital survey could be completed within 3-4 months after getting approval of the purchase committee, he said.

Anwarul Islam said the land comprising of some 59,000 acres in Tangail and Dhaka districts was first declared as reserved forest through a law in 1928. Since the law lost its effectiveness, the Attia Forest (Protection) Ordinance, 1982 was promulgated during the military regime.

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