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Rampal Power Plant: Protesters appeal Narendra Modi to scrap deal

Witnesses Said Police Allowed Five Representatives Of The Group To Hand Over Their Letter To The High Commission As Over 200 Activists Marched Towards The Mission At Upmarket Gulshan Diplomatic Enclave.

PTI | Updated on: 19 Oct 2016, 08:12:46 PM
Rampal Power Plant: Protesters appeal Narendra Modi to scrap deal

Dhaka:

A leading pro-left civil society group appealed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday to scrap a deal with Bangladesh for building a coal-fired power plant near the fragile Sundarbans even as UNESCO warned against the project it says threatens the world’s largest mangrove forest.

“We have sent the Indian premier an open letter reiterating our demand to scrap the Rampal power project to save the Sundarbans through the Indian High Commission in Dhaka,” National Committee to Protect Oil, Gas, Mineral, Resources, Power and Ports spokesman Anbu Mohammad said.

He said the letter was sent as construction process of the plant being built with Indian assistance near the World Heritage Site of Sundarbans was underway despite widespread criticism and protest from national and international experts and general public.

Witnesses said police allowed five representatives of the group to hand over their letter to the High Commission as over 200 activists marched towards the mission at upmarket Gulshan diplomatic enclave.

The protesters submitted the letter a day after police stopped them on their way to the Indian mission.

The UN’s culture and science agency UNESCO, meanwhile, issued a second statement in the past month yesterday urging Bangladesh to halt construction of the huge coal-fired power plant reiterating its fears that it posed a serious threat to the delicate ecosystem of the Sundarbans forest.

“The Sundarbans in Bangladesh is part of the world’s largest mangrove forests, home to the famous Bengal Tiger and a hotspot for dolphins, turtles, and birds. Millions of people depend on this labyrinth of tidal rivers for food, homes, and flood protection,” the UNESCO statement read.

It added, “The proposed Rampal power plant, a 1,320 megawatt super-thermal power plant located just 65 kilometres from the World Heritage property, poses a serious threat to the site”.

UNSECO identified “pollution from coal ash by air, pollution from wastewater and waste ash, increased shipping and dredging, and the cumulative impact of industrial and related development infrastructure” as four key concerns related to the plant’s construction.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina earlier denounced protests against the proposed coal-fired power plant. “Let me tell you one thing, I would have been the first person to oppose the power plant had there been the slightest chance of damage to the Sundarbans,” she had said. 

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First Published : 19 Oct 2016, 08:03:00 PM

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