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Rivers

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Rivers and other surface water bodies

Relevant facts at the national level

BEN’s recommendation at the national level regarding rivers

  1. Bangladesh has to abandon the Cordon approach and adopt the Open Approach to rivers and uses the Open Approach to ensure river flow throughout the year;
  2. Bangladesh needs to take steps to reduce dependence on chemical fertilizer and pesticides by adopting various methods of their more efficient use, such as Granular System of Fertilizer Application (GSFA), Integrated Plant Nutrition Management (IPNM) and Integrated Pest Management (IPM), and by promoting organic agriculture;
  3. Bangladesh should take urgent steps to stop industrial pollution of rivers and other water bodies by forcing all industrial enterprises install Effluent Treatment Facility (ETF);
  4. The government needs to take vigorous steps to free rivers, Khals, and other water bodies from encroachment;
  5. While demarcating the boundaries of rivers, the government has to go by the width that rivers attained during their historic peak summer flows and not by the width they have during the lean season;
  6. The government should erect appropriate structures to secure and make the river boundaries permanent, in order to minimize future encroachment, making sure that the design of these structures allow free flow of water between rivers and adjoining floodplains;
  7. The government needs to enact and enforce laws forcing polluters to pay, in addition to heavy penalties, for the cost of cleaning and encroachers pay for the cost of demolition;
  8. The government has to take special care to protect the Beels, Haors, and Baors, to reserve the ecology and biodiversity of the areas where these are located, to make them serve as reservoirs for drinking water (with minor treatment like sedimentation with coagulation followed by disinfection), and to allow them continue to serve as sanctuaries for guest birds in winter;
  9. The government should accept the recommendations of the Chalan Beel Rokkha Andolon (CBRA) and takes immediate steps to free up Baral river and engages in a sustained effort to save this largest Beel of the country;
  10. The government should take particular measures to preserve the health and beauty of Hakaluki Beel and other Beels of the Bhati area;
  11. The government has to take prompt steps to remove the river obstructing structures that have caused permanent water-logging in some parts of south-western part of the country;
  12. Bangladesh should include in school curriculum the topic of rivers in order to make its future generations aware about the role of rivers in Bangladesh economy, ecology, and society and develop in them respect for rivers;
  13. The government should encourage consolidation of rural dwellings in order for the country to cope better with floods, economize on scarce arable land, and to provide various services better;
  14. The government needs to consider the use of water hyacinth for phytoremediation of waste water and removal of heavy metals such as Cu, Cd, Cr, and Pd; the use of activated palm ash for removal of lead from water; and the use of chemical oxidation for treatment of wastewater containing diazinon;
  15. Bangladesh should campaign for use of water sealed sanitary latrines for ensuring proper sanitation in rural areas is further intensified and a target for full coverage by 2004 is achieved and discharge of untreated urban sewage is stopped;
  16. The citizens, media, judiciary, and all sections of the society should become more involved in the river movement and various river saving efforts.

Relevant facts at the regional level

BEN’s recommendation at the regional level

  1. Bangladesh should advocate the adoption of the Open Approach to rivers and abandonment of the current Cordon Approach by all countries of the region;
  2. Bangladesh should advocate the basin-wide approach in management and use of the regional rivers;
  3. Bangladesh has to oppose resolutely all diversionary river intervention projects undertaken by any of the upper riparian countries;
  4. Bangladesh needs to advocate decommissioning of all diversionary river intervention projects that have been already implemented, including the Farakka barrage on the Ganges and the Gozaldoba barrage on the Teesta;
  5. Bangladesh should demand that cross-season river flow stabilization projects, such as the proposed Tipaimukh dam, cannot be undertaken on an unilateral basis and that all such projects have to be agreed jointly and put under joint jurisdiction, and furthermore there has to be guarantee that such projects will not be used for diversion purposes in future;
  6. Bangladesh has to raise the river pollution issue in various bilateral and regional forums and ensures that her river flows are unaffected by pollution by upper riparian countries.
  7. River activists of Bangladesh have to take steps to establish more civil society contacts among river activists of different countries of the region and try to develop a united regional civil society movement in support of the Open Approach to rivers and against the current Cordon Approach.