Diamer protest continues despite govt cajoling
By Jamil Nagri
2025-03-10
ISLAMABAD: The protest organised by the people affected by the DiamerBhasha dam continued on Sunday despite a meeting between a federal committee formed by the prime minister and the protesters in Chilas to break the deadlock.
The 20-day-long protest in Chilas is seeking the implementation of a 31-point charter of demands, which pertain to their rehabilitation, and the allotment of agricultural land, among other things.
In his meeting with the protesters, Federal Minister for Kashmir Affairs Amir Muqam said that the government has included the rehabilitation of the affected people of Bhasha and Dasu dams, and the development of the area in its top priorities. He assured that their demands concerning a financial package for the affected households, aresettlement programme, health, education, and infrastructure would be resolved on a priority basis. He also promised a `Danish School` for the area.
The minister directed Wapda officials to ensure payment of land compensation along with the construction of 23 schools.
Earlier, the dam-affected people presented their problems to the specialcommittee. The committee issued instructions to the technical committee to prepare recommendations and send them to the federal government.
In the meeting, Hazratullah, a representative of the protesters, presented their charter of demands and said the protesters were not asking to implement all of their demands at once, but the government could express its seri-ousness by enforcing basic demands, such as a financial package for the households that had not received any.
`If you are serious about solving the demands, you can solve some demands, for example, the financial package for the missing households, six kanal agricultural land each for the affected people, CBM schemes, including health, education, development, and resettlement of affectees,` he added.
He suggested that the committee could promptly announce the measures it can in the meeting and for the remainder, it could provide a written assurance that these would be fulfilled as well.
`...[S]o that we can tell people that your demands have been solved and will call off` the sit-in, Hazratullah said, adding that the people who were protesting had `sacrificed everything for the dam` and justice should be ensured. Diamer people are peaceful, but that does not mean everything should be imposed on them, he warned.
Sources said after the meeting, the organisers did not decide to calloffthe protest.
However, Chief Minister Haji Gulbar Khan, GB ministers Rehmat Khalig and Shah Baig continued negotiations with the protesters to convince them to end the protest. However, there was no further word until going to press.