Upper Chitral residents laud decision to set up district headquarters in Kagh Lusht

Published August 29, 2019
The proposed site of district headquarters in Kagh Lusht, Upper Chitral. — Dawn
The proposed site of district headquarters in Kagh Lusht, Upper Chitral. — Dawn

CHITRAL: The residents of the newly-created Upper Chitral district have expressed joy over the decision to establish the district headquarters at the Kagh Lusht plateau.

They noted that if the district headquarters was developed as per a master plan it would be a model city for the whole country.

Presently, Booni town has been made the makeshift district headquarters of Upper Chitral.

Hameedur Rahman Lal of Reshun said the proposed site was situated on the confluence of three valleys, Mulkow, Torkhow and Biyar, and was presently uninhabited for want of water as it was situated at a greater height from the Mulkhow and Biyar rivers.

He suggested that solar-powered and electric water pumps should be used to bring water from the rivers, saying a hydropower generation and irrigation project was soon going to be started in Terich valley, which would provide the proposed district headquarters with abundant water, satiating its needs for drinking and irrigation.

Rahman Lal noted that the government won’t have to pay a single penny for acquisition of land because Kagh Lusht was a state-owned property.

Bashir Hussain Azad, a social worker, said there was no better use of the Kagh Lusht land than making it the district headquarters, which was also the demand of the local people as it would become a centre for the people coming from the remote valleys of Baroghil, Yarkhoon, Terich, Oveer and Torkhow.

District nazim Maghfirat Shah said it would be a modern city second only to Islamabad provided it was built on the principles of modern town planning. He said due to the proximity of the area to the Central Asian state of Tajikistan, Kagh Lusht would become a hub for contact with the neighbouring state because a flight taking off from here would take about half-an-hour to touch down on the Dushanbe airport.

Mr Shah said the new city would be a great attraction for tourists due to its unique location in the foothold of Hindukush mountains with a panoramic view of more than 100 peaks. He said due to the climate change phenomenon, a number of villages in upper Chitral were prone to natural disasters, but a district headquarters in Kagh Lusht could provide accommodation to thousands of affected families on a permanent basis.

The district nazim warned that if the project was executed without proper planning it would prove ruinous for the area and a sheer wastage of vast space.

District development advisory committee chairman Wazir Zada, when contacted, told Dawn that he had already sent a proposal to the government for preparing a master plan for building the district headquarters of Upper Chitral.

Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

Forgotten inmates
26 Feb, 2025

Forgotten inmates

PAKISTAN’S jails are an embarrassment to any notion of justice and rehabilitation. A report prepared by the...
Controlling crypto
26 Feb, 2025

Controlling crypto

THOUGH Pakistan’s official position on cryptocurrencies has evolved considerably over the years, there still seems...
Deadly roads
26 Feb, 2025

Deadly roads

DRIVING in Karachi can be hazardous, with chaos on the roads, and very little by way of following rules and...
All out
Updated 25 Feb, 2025

All out

PAKISTAN cricket captain Mohammad Rizwan’s assessment was brutal — it could not have been any other way. At ...
Bearing the brunt
25 Feb, 2025

Bearing the brunt

FOR the past several months, we have repeatedly been told by the prime minister and his cabinet that the government...
Afghan resettlement
25 Feb, 2025

Afghan resettlement

AFGHAN refugees who fled their country after the Taliban took over in 2021, and who hoped to resettle in the West,...