![]() BRING DOWN THE WALL: The remains of a half demolished wall in Bansbari. |
When Baburam Bhattarai came to power last August, he promised to give the choked roads of the Valley a major facelift. A year later, streets around Kathmandu have been dug up, houses built along roads have been demolished, sidewalks have vanished, and bulldozers are lined up along major thoroughfares. All that remains are heaps of bricks and rubble, and the city has turned into a dust bowl.
![]() PICS: CLIFF THREADGOLD RECYCLING: A man searches for useable bricks to rebuild near Gyaneshwor. |
![]() OPEN ALL HOURS: A shopkeeper in Budhanilkantha keeps his business running even after half the building was torn down. |
![]() ALMOST CHOKED: A boy clears the debris after houses in Gyaneshwor were bulldozed. |
Rita Rimal bought a piece of land above the Dhobikhola River in Buddhanagar. When the river threatened to wash away her holdings, she built retaining walls. Now her property has fallen prey to the KVTDC's river control program, another development scheme that is keen to ride the road expansion momentum.
![]() LAST ONE STANDING: A house in Gyaneshwor awaits its destiny. |
![]() RETURNING HOME: A boy searches through the remains of his house in Hattigauda. |
![]() HARD LABOUR: A construction worker sifts sand in Gairidhara. |
The American, Japanese, and French embassies lie along the Lazimpat road, and the former has asked the state to pay up to $5 million in damages should its walls be razed down. The Japanese embassy says it will cooperate with the Nepali government as long as diplomatic norms are observed.
![]() The BIG QUESTION: Locals of Hadigaun discuss where to move the rubble. |
![]() WHO CARES ABOUT SCHOOL: Children play with gate that was torn down in Budhanilkantha. |
But if the government decides to pay all or some part of these damages, it will open up a can of worms and everyone affected will be entitled to compensation on their own terms. According to KVTDC's Ramesh Kumar Kafle, compensation is given according to government estimates, which is lower than the market price.
People who depend on the roads for their livelihood, have an altogether different concern. Santosh Sah who owns a small restaurant on the Kamalpokhari-Ratopul section, says he is struggling to pay his bills because patrons have stopped visiting his shop due to the dust and grime. He had to sell his land in the Tarai just to keep his business alive. The next time the roads are widened, to ease traffic or otherwise, his shop will be gone.
See also:
Follow the river, PAAVAN MATHEMA
The development of link roads along the banks of the Valley's rivers could ease our traffic woes
Traffic travails, DEWAN RAI
A lack of coordination among plans and government agencies has contributed to the valley's traffic chaos
The real fast track, RATNA SANSAR SHRESTHA
We should be looking to electric trains, not another road, to solve our transport problems