DHAKA, May 1 (NNN-BSS) – The normally busy streets in the Bangladeshi capital saw less traffic while millions of people were on the move at bus terminals, train stations and river ports.
Dhaka dwellers are travelling to their hometowns this year, to join the Eid festival celebration with their kith and kin, in villages, after the annual exodus had been stalled for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Eid al-Fitr, which marks the end of the Islamic holy fasting month of Ramadan, will be celebrated in Bangladesh on or around May 3, based on the sighting of the new moon.
“I’m going to celebrate Eid at grandpa’s house,” said Sabikun Nahar, while getting onto a packed train with his family members, in Dhaka’s central Kamalapur Railway Station.
Traveller Tumpa Moni said, many were unable to go home in the last two years due to the pandemic, but now the station has seen a mad rush of home goers since last weekend.
“Being able to go home in this crowd is a great joy for me,” Moni said.
Some of the travellers have to sit on the rooftops of trains, as there are no more seats offered inside.
Traveller Naeem said, his feelings can’t be expressed in words. “Eid with family is something very special. We’re all happy. We’ll celebrate Eid with everyone.”
The travel rush of millions of home-bound people could impact Bangladesh’s entire transportation system during this Eid occasion, an expert at the Accident Research Institute, at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, said recently.
“We found that 11.5 million people left Dhaka for Eid in 2019, but it reduced to only six million during the pandemic,” said Professor Md Hadiuzzaman, director of the institute, noting, the number will be doubled again this time.
“Some three million people may leave Dhaka every day, in the four days before Eid,” he said.
According to the expert, trains, buses and ferries have the capacity to transport 1.3-1.4 million passengers daily. “Therefore, there is no transportation system for 1.6 million people,” he said.
Bangladeshi Railways Minister, Nurul Islam Sujan, earlier last month said, they would operate 92 intercity trains in a special arrangement and there would be no weekly break for seven days for train services before Eid.
Also, authorities have made the necessary arrangements to minimise inconvenience for travellers ahead of the busy period.
Bangladeshi Road Transport and Bridges Minister, Obaidul Quader said, roads and highways across Bangladesh are in much better shape for the holiday travel rush this Eid, than at any time in the past.
He said, they have settled some common problems for Eid travellers, in some places of mega highways in the northern part of the country, as the road condition in Bangladesh is better.– NNN-BSS