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The Financial Express

All illegal brick kilns in Chattogram ordered to closed by February 18

| Updated: February 01, 2021 18:49:27


File photo (UNB) File photo (UNB)

The High Court (HC) has directed the authority concerned to shut down all illegal brick kilns that do not have license within February 18.

The bench of Justice Md Mozibor Rahman Mia and Justice Kamrul Hossain Mollah passed the order after hearing a petition filed by Human Rights and Peace for Bangladesh (HRPB), reports UNB.

The HC also asked to file an affidavit after closing all the illegal brick kilns including 71 others which were fined previously by the mobile courts.

The court fixed February 22 for the next hearing over the matter.

Advocate Manzil Murshid stood for the HRPB, Deputy Attorney General Nowroz Rasel Chowdhury represented the state while Advocate Syed Kamrul Hossain moved for the Environment Department.

Last year, on December 14, the HC ordered to shut down all illegal brick kilns in Chattogram within a week to prevent pollution.

It also ordered them to submit a list to the court within 30 days of those authorized brick kilns which are using the soil of hills and arable land for making bricks and using wood as fuel in the kilns.

The court also issued a rule seeking explanation as to why the inaction of the government in shutting down illegal brick kilns would not be declared illegal.

But 71 illegal brick kilns were fined in spite of shut down in Lohagora and Chandanaish upazilas.

Pollution made by brick kilns

A research report by the DoE and the World Bank published in March last year on the sources of air pollution in Bangladesh identified three main sources –brick kilns, fumes of vehicles, and dust from construction sites.

“Brick kilns are responsible for 58 percent air pollution in the capital. Plans have been taken to shut [traditional] kilns currently in operation. We’re working to produce eco-friendly bricks,” Environment, Forests and Climate Change Minister Md Shahab Uddin had told UNB.

He said the government plans to stop burning bricks at kilns by 2025 and use block bricks to construct buildings under government projects.

Kiln owners have already been directed to produce 10 percent block bricks, the minister said, adding that it will be increased to 100 percent over time and the use of block bricks will gradually be made mandatory in private projects, too.

In a series of directives in January, the High Court had asked DoE to shut down illegal brick kilns within two months.

The DoE has been conducting drives against the illegal brick kilns for months now and slapping fines.

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