Rangpur is hit by floods as Teesta river water swells. Fazlul Haque heads towards safe place with his belongings as the flood inundates his house at Kolkond area of Gangachara. This picture was taken on 9 July
Rangpur is hit by floods as Teesta river water swells. Fazlul Haque heads towards safe place with his belongings as the flood inundates his house at Kolkond area of Gangachara. This picture was taken on 9 July

'Move to implement Teesta plan with China’s support a timely step'

Leaders of the International Farakka Committee have extended their support to the government’s initiative to implement the Teesta Master Plan with China’s support, saying it is a proper and timely move.

Expressing its grave concerns over the recent flooding, the committee said an untimely flood along the Teesta in Bangladesh has caused extensive damages to the people and their properties.

Thousands of houses and farms have been washed away with riverbank erosion. Standing crops on thousands of acres of land have been damaged while roads and embankments have been eroded snapping road-links among the districts of the greater Rangpur region.

“In this context, we consider the initiative taken by the government to implement a Teesta master plan with the help of China is a proper and timely one,” the statement said.

“Although this project is no substitute for keeping the river alive by ensuring its natural flow, it’s expected to help reduce the damages caused by floods and help improve the lot of the people of the region through coordinated development activities. The river will get a new life when time will come to restore its natural flow,” it said.

The committee said the disaster has been caused by the discharge of floodwater through the Gajoldoba Barrage floodgates following excessive rainfall along the upper catchment of the Teesta in Sikkim.

Embankments at about 17 places in the upper Teesta were damaged by the floods. But the Bangladesh authorities were not alerted before releasing the water. Only two weeks before, the Teesta in Bangladesh was a dry barren land as all water was diverted from Gajoldoba Barrage in West Bengal, added the statement.

The Teesta River in Bangladesh is a dead river during the dry season. Despite repeated assurances, no treaty has been signed for the management of the river’s water. People now can walk on foot from one side of the river to the other, according to the statement.

Only outflow from the Gajal Doba barrage flows into Bangladesh. During the monsoon, the river causes disastrous floods, the statement pointed out.

According to one account, five waves of flood came down the Teesta in 2021 but a disastrous flood in as late as October was never experienced before.

The statement said last week’s flood disaster has caused extensive losses to at least 80,000 families, according to a preliminary estimate. The damaged property include ripe paddy, onion, garlic, maize, animal fodder, homesteads, clothes, preserved winter garment and household crockery and utensils.

Bangladesh must do something to pull out 30 million people of the Teesta basin from this helpless situation, protect their lives and property and maintain its environmental balance. Bangladesh cannot sit idle in the face of people’s miseries, the statement added.

The committee leaders suggest the Teesta Master Plan can be expanded to cover other rivers – Atrai, Korotoa and Punarbhaba, including Chalan Beel which lie in the old Teesta Basin – to ensure overall socio-economic development of the Northwestern region of Bangladesh. This will help recharge groundwater and keep all the tube-wells functional throughout the year.

The signatories to the statement were – Atiqur Rahman Salu, chairman, Sayed Tipu Sultan, secretary general, IFC, New York; professor Jasim Uddin Ahmad, president, SI Khan, senior vice-president, Syed Irfanul Bari, general secretary of IFC Bangladesh and Mostafa Kamal Majumder, coordinator of IFC.