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Safari Park: A safe haven for
wildlife
Most interesting and recreational leisure spot for the visitors
Shahidul Islam
The Daily Star, 29-06-2005
Dulahazra Safari Park is the most interesting
and recreational leisure spot for the visitors. Once been, one
would surely feel like visiting it again.
The park project was started in 1998-1999 at a cost of Tk 9.90
crore on a 300 hectares of land. Later, 600 more hectares of land
were included in second phase, which was completed this year.
The park is now a beautiful sanctuary for wildlife
in the country. With good road communications from Chittagong
city and beach city Cox's Bazar, it is located at a serene place
of Dulahazara at Chokoria Upazila.
Wide varieties of herbivorous and carnivorous
animals like lion, tiger, deer, bear and elephant have now found
their safe haven here over an area of 900 hectares of land in
natural environment.

A huge sculpture of dinosaur, left, greets visitors
at Safari Park and clockwise from top left are bear, owl, hippopotamus
and snake bird in Safari Park at Dulahazra. PHOTO: STAR
Separate spacious enclosures were set up for different animals.
Sixty hectares of grazing field were allocated for tigers and
lions. Besides, enclosures on 50 hectares of land for different
types of deer (sambar, spotted, hog) and goyal, eight water reservoirs
on 50 hectares for amphibians and guest birds, 20 hectares for
bears, 100 hectares for elephant and 10 hectares for crocodiles
were also established.
The park has large varieties of trees, shrubby
plants, bamboo, climbers and a large orchid house. Colourful collection
of orchids is put on show in the orchid house. The park has many
observation towers to have a glance of the animals grazing in
their enclosures. Riding on a protected minibus, visitors can
take the opportunity to see live those ferocious animals. There
is also a natural history museum few yards inside the main gate.
The remains, specimen and stuffing of about 2000 animals and birds
were kept in this museum.
Another attraction of the park is its 'Nature
Interpretation Centre. The visitors can get the thrill of an artificial
dense forest, once they enter it. At the entrance, there are few
murals. Of them one is of a gigantic dinosaur, enough to remind
one the 'extra terrestrial' (ET) world. The park has nice accommodation
for visitors to stay at night.
More features: background
The evergreen forests of Cox's Bazar once enriched with lofty
Dipterocarps, Boilum, Telsur, Civit, Chapalish, Champa and various
climber and medicinal plants were endowed with enormous rare wildlife
species like elephant, leopard, deer, bear, wild boar, monkeys,
flying squirrel and various reptiles. The reptiles include python,
fauna like Black Drongo, Hair Crested Drongo, Rufous Nickel Hornbil
and White Breasted Kingfisher.
Ever increasing population pressure and poaching
resulted in adverse impact on the bio-diversity including wildlife
community. The Royal Bengal Tiger became extinct in the forests
of Cox's Bazar in far sixties. A team of Bangladesh Civil Service
Forest Association called on the then Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
for setting up of such a park on November 26 in 1996. She responded
positively and ordered the concerned ministry and department to
take necessary steps in this connection, sources said.
This safari park was built with a view to saving the wildlife
from extinction and helping them in reproduction. It will contribute
to research and education as well. In addition, it will also help
expand eco-tourism as out-door recreational spots and contribute
to protecting the environment through creation of employment opportunities.
Objectives
To help breeding of major animals like
tiger, cheetah, deer, elephant and Hog Deer by conserving them
into the park;
- To conserve the extinct or near-extinct animals
like ox, lion, bear, crocodiles, gharial, zebra, impala and
spring duck;
- To create sanctuary for guest birds;
- To create natural food sources for herbivorous
animals by creating grazing ground for them and
- To create scope for eco-tourism, education
and research.
Lone hog deer
The Dulahazara Safari Park is now gifted with a rare animal --
country's only Hog Deer (known as Pera Hareen / scientific name
Axis porcinus).
"It was collected from Khagrachhari in
2002 and probably it came from India," said Dr Tapan Kumar
Dey, project director of the park.
Latest arrival
Twenty-nine freshwater crocodiles of an endangered species, out
of 40 collected from Madras Crocodile Bank Trust (MCBT) in India
on Friday last, were released on Saturday and these crocodiles
added new attraction to the park.
The park authorities, as Dr Tapan said, are
contemplating to breed this rare species here in a planned way
to enrich the world of wildlife.
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