Burning the collected garbage
It is a very easy work to be done, collect and burn.
Next day these are the interviews shown on the television channel, and newspaper of how and where they are going to set up their new project. Innocent citizens feel that a great change is on its way, they can now have electricity, manure for their fields, cheap products made from recycled and reuse able garbage collected. And thus the government separates budgets of certain amount for it.
Days get passed and so gets months and years. The project on papers get covered by dirt and dust. The budget gets spend, but no one knows where. Government fall and rise and rise and fall and so on. The officers appointed for the project blame the government for not being stable. The citizens swing like pendulum on the clock. Some say this party is good some says that party is good. But no one cares about where the garbage is going, what do they do with it.
At the time of the 2011 Nepal Census, Nijgadh had a population of 19,614 persons (9,525 male and 10,089 female) living in 3,982 individual households.
The town has been targeted as a site for an international airport that could handle 15 million passengers and even accommodate the super-jumbo Airbus A380 after the first phase of construction. As of April 2011, a feasibility study of the report was completed. The report stated that the airport would cover 3,000 hectares of land: 2,000 hectares for airport and the remaining 1,000 for the airport city.
No comments:
Post a Comment