Vice
President U Henry Van Thio inspected the development undertakings in Falam and
Haka townships of Chin State on 19 May. The vice president was accompanied by
Chin State Chief Minister U Salai Lian Lwal, Chin State Hluttaw Speaker U Zo
Bwe, Deputy Ministers Rear Admiral Myint Nwe, Maj-Gen Than Htut and U Soe Aung,
Chin State cabinet members and other officials.
The
vice president and his delegation visited the 200-bed hospital in Falam, where
they met patients and provided them with cash assistance.
After
viewing the sites for hospital staff quarters and the nurses training school,
the vice president said the upgrade of hospitals and the extension of nurses
training schools were being done to ensure effective public healthcare. Hence,
officials should work systematically to prevent financial wastage.
Later,
the vice president inspected the site near Talanzar Village in Falam Township,
where the Laiva Dam will be built.
At
the briefing hall, the vice president and his delegation heard a report on the
lower Dam Laiva project that will supply water to Falam, presented by an
official from the Irrigation and Water Utilization Management Department. The
vice president said special attention must be given to the project to prevent
financial wastage and ensure maximum public benefits.
The
feasibility study found that in the area, a dam with a storage capacity between
162 million gallons and 216 million gallons could be built. It can have a
2.5-squaremile watershed area and a 4,820-acre-feet of water annual inflow. The
dam can supply up to 800,000 gallons per day for a population over 25,000
residents in the township. The location of the Zeinhmutaung Mountain near the
dam paved the way for the development of nature tourism in the area, where
visitors can recreate and buy traditional goods, thus generating job
opportunities for locals. Director U Win Naing of the Forest Department of the
state explained plans to turn the Zeinhmutaung Mountain area into a national
park.
The
vice president studied the mountain and gave instructions on conducting field
surveys to build a tourism destination, national park, and set up embankments
and spillways to store water round the year at Laithili Lake on top of the
mountain.
The
Zeinhmutaung national park lies on the mountain, which is some 8,600 feet above
sea level, and where Haka Township and Thantlang Township, Haka District and
Falam Township, Falam District in Chin State meet.
The
view from Chin State’s third highest peak on a sunny day stretches from the
northern sector of Chin State to the Sagaing and Magway regions. On the
mountain lies Laithili, which is also called a fairy lake. An earth dam will be
built to turn Laithili into an all-weather natural lake, and the whole area
will be developed into an ecotourism site without harming the natural
environment. Laithili will be the first lake in Myanmar that is over 7,600 feet
high.
The
Forest Department is planning to build a 13.10-squaremile Kyeereeyantaung
national park and a 68.12-squaremile Bwaybartaung national park in Thantlang
Township, Haka District, a 31.15-squaremile Zeinhmutaung national park in Haka
Township, a 19.30-squaremile Miayepitaung national park in Thantalang Township,
a 2.20-squaremile Hmantaung national part in Haka Township, a 44.30-squaremile
Sarhmontaung national park in Thantalang Towsnhip, and a 36.66-squaremile
Laythataung national park in Tiddim Township, Falam District, in Chin State.
Regarding the Haka education college project, officials explained the progress
in building the lecture halls and hostels, future programmes and academic
matters. The vice president looked into the requirements and visited the
worksites of the education college and the midwifery school projects.
He
then inspected the building of a multi-purpose disaster shelter, where more
than 650 can stay and a four-storey district-level public healthcare office.
The
vice president said the facilities built with state funds should be beneficial
to the public, adding, every project must be environment-friendly.
At
the project site to conduct sports and physical education institute in Haka,
the vice president emphasised on the timely completion of the project and the
upgrading of the roads. The project aims to train a new generation of athletes
from among the youth talent in Chin State.
The
vice president also inspected the work of turning a natural creek into a
concrete channel, as a measure to prevent natural disasters; the 200-bed
hospital where he visited the patients; the Chin State Hluttaw office project,
which is up to 90 per cent complete; and the education college project in Haka.
Myanmar
News Agency
Ref;
The Global New Light of Myanmar


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