A boy collects rubbish on the Buriganga river in Dhaka.—Reuters/Andrew Biraj

DHAKA It was once the lifeline of the Bangladeshi capital. But the once mighty Buriganga River, which flows by Dhaka, is now one of the most polluted rivers in Bangladesh because of rampant dumping of industrial and human waste.

'Much of the Buriganga is now gone, having fallen to ever insatiable land grabbers and industries dumping untreated effluents into the river,' said Ainun Nishat, a leading environmental expert.

'The water of the Buriganga is now so polluted that all the fish have died, and increasing filth and human waste have turned it into black gel. Even rowing across the river is now difficult because it smells so bad,' he told reporters.

The plight of the Buriganga symbolises the general state of many rivers in Bangladesh, a large flat land criss-crossed by hundreds of rivers. These rivers face an uphill battle to keep them navigable and their waters safe for human and aquatic lives.

Bangladesh has about 230 small and large rivers, a large chunk of the countrys 140 million people depend on them for living and for transportation. But experts say many of them are drying up or are choked because of pollution and encroachment.

A World Bank study said four major rivers near Dhaka—the Buriganga, Shitalakhya, Turag and Balu—receive 1.5 million cubic metres of waste water every day from 7,000 industrial units in surrounding areas and another 0.5 million cubic metres from other sources.

Unabated encroachment that prevents the free flow of water, dumping of medicinal waste and the waste of river passengers has compounded the problem, making the water unusable for humans and livestock.

'Unfortunately, all these things—encroachment, dumping of industrial waste and other abuses—occur in full knowledge of the authorities,' said Professor Abdullah Abu Saeed, an eminent campaigner for 'Save Buriganga, Save Lives'.

Among the top polluters are the dozens of tanneries on the banks of the Buriganga. The government has initiated a move to relocate the tanneries outside the capital, they have also asked illegal encroachers to vacate the river. But environmental groups say they defy such orders by using their political links or by bribing people.

'SEPTIC TANK'
Environmentalists say the Buriganga, or the 'Old Ganges' once famous for spectacular cruises, is the worst affected.

The river flows by the capital Dhaka, a city of 12 million people, which largely depends on the Burigangas water for drinking, fishing and carrying merchandise.

'The pollutants have eaten up all oxygen in the Buriganga, we call it biologically dead. It is like a septic tank,' said Khawaja Minnatullah, a World Bank specialist on the environment and water management.
'There is no fish or aquatic life in this river apart from zero oxygen survival kind of organisms.'

Chemicals such as cadmium and chromium, and other elements such as mercury carried by the industrial waste are also creeping into ground water, posing a serious threat to public health. 'If the pollution is not controlled, we will face a serious health crisis in a year or two or at best three years,' said Minnatullah.

Bangladesh enacted a law in 1995 making it compulsory for all industrial units to use effluent treatment plants in a bid to save river waters from pollution, but industry owners often flout the rule.

'Many of them have this treatment plant. But they dont use it as it is expensive,' said M.A. Matin, general-secretary of Bangladesh Paribesh Andolon or the Bangladesh Environment Movement.

'We want the rivers fully dredged, their illegal occupation ended and the laws strictly enforced to prevent abuse of waterways,' said Nishat. Environmentalists say they are hopeful. 'Not many days ago Singapore River was also like our Buriganga. But they cleaned it up and turned it into a great resource,' he said.—REUTERS

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