
Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's "Ashrayan Project",
under which homes are built for homeless and displaced people, has played a key
role in achieving the goals of poverty eradication, hunger eradication, gender
equality and women's empowerment, among others, India's leading
English-language magazine India Today writes. Her innovative Shelter Scheme to transform Bangladesh into a
developed and prosperous country by 2041, has been able to bring about positive
changes in inclusive development by aiming to provide houses for landless,
homeless, and marginalised people in 64 districts of the country, writes the
magazine in its April 15 issue. Whereas examples of low-interest loans for land
purchase are found in several countries around the world, Bangladesh becomes
the first country to offer free land ownership with houses to its marginalised
citizens in order to bring its backward communities into the mainstream, India
Today notes."Beneficiaries under this scheme are not only provided with
accommodation, but they are also provided with various training, daily
allowances during training, and loans after training to make them economically
self-reliant," the report states. "The scheme includes empowering
women by giving them half ownership of land and houses, providing free
electricity connection, providing clean water by installing one shallow tube
well for every 10 families, and providing food assistance under three months of
VGF to the resettled families initially," it reads.The India Today report
also lauded PM Hasina's development model, known as the "Sheikh Hasina
model".The "Ashrayan Project" is a unique example of how a house
can be a major tool for overall family welfare and social development.In its
report, India Today highlighted the experience of two beneficiaries of the
project.For 30 long years, Moksedul, a brick kiln labourer, waited for a house
that he could call his own.His long-held desire has been granted, as he has
been assigned a semi-furnished house in his own name.Moksedul told India Today
that he can live very well with his family now. Meanwhile, sixty-five-year-old
Piara Begum is a resident of Patharghata in Barguna who lost her family home to
the river 30 years ago.She used to live with her husband on the banks of the
river until he died of cancer 16 years ago."Finally, Piara Begum's misery
has come to an end after she is allotted a house built by the Bangladesh
government on the occasion of 'Mujib centenary' under the 'Ashrayan'
scheme'," India Today writes."I have been suffering all my life. I
never dreamed of a house. Now, I have got a semi-furnished house with land. The
prime minister has given me a house. I am very happy. As long as I live, I will
pray for the prime minister," she told India Today. The
"Ashrayan" project was undertaken in 1997 under the leadership of Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina. And since its inception, approximately 5,07,244
landless and homeless families have been rehabilitated at various stages under
this shelter initiative.
Through this
initiative, landless people have been given access to semi-finished housing and
two decimals of land