SECOND EDITION
TUESDAY, JUNE 7, 2016
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Jyoishtha 24, 1423, Shaban 30, 1437
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Regd No DA 6238, Vol 4, No 45
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A quiet exodus
www.dhakatribune.com | 32 pages | Price: Tk10
T H E N E W S YO U WA N T, N O M O R E N O L E S S
RAMADAN
A food crisis in the CHT is driving migration to Myanmar, the Dhaka Tribune’s Nure Alam Durjoy reports Jhum peoples in the hinterland of Bandarban district’s Thanchi upazila are abandoning their ancestral homesteads and going east in search of deliverance from starvation and debt. The Jhum peoples of Thanchi upazila have been migrating to Myanmar since 2013, driven by harsh financial conditions, poor harvests and official neglect. News of the food crisis in the south-eastern highlands, and the government’s deployment of helicopters laden with food grains, has been picked up by news agencies. What has been missed is the exodus that the Dhaka Tribune witnessed first-hand in Thanchi’s remotest villages.
The hinterland A Jhum farming family in Thanchi upazila plants for the coming harvest NURE ALAM DURJOY
To get to the hinterland of the Chittagong Hill Tracts district of Bandar-
ban, land transportation must be abandoned in Thanchi and exchanged for rivercraft. Several measures of rice are bought to ensure that the beleaguered residents of Loyakre Para village in Remakree union are not burdened by another mouth to feed. Loyakre Para is three days away from Thanchi Bazar on the Sangu River by boat. The Sangu River, locally called the Shankha, is the only means of communication for residents of the area. Thanchi, located in south-eastern Bangladesh, borders Myanmar. It has three unions: Bolipara, Tindu and Remakree. Remakree, on the Myanmar border, is the remotest of the three. Tourists are not allowed beyond Remakree Bazar, a day away by boat from Thanchi. PAGE 2 COLUMN 1
SEHRI & IFTAR Ramadan 01 02 03
June 07 08 09
Sehri 3:38 3:38
Iftar 6:48 6:48 6:49
Source: Islamic Foundation