A group of around 10 employees of Darjeeling Himalayan Railway have
conducted a cleanliness drive last week and removed hoardings and
garbage between the Kurseong railway station and the loco shed.
The cleanliness drive led by DHR director M.D. Bhutia was conducted
because the stretch between the railway station and the loco shed had
turned into a dumping yard with huge piles of garbage being thrown on
either side of the tracks.
The drive was carried out by hill railway employees, members of the
local community, civic body, forest department and NGOs for three days
from June 10 to 12.
"The Kurseong station of the DHR with huge hoardings of private
companies on railway property just beside the tracks had turned the
tracks into a dumping yard and vehicles used to be parked on them. This
did not conform to the aesthetic value of the railway and had to be
removed. So, I along with some employees of the DHR, decided to take the
initiative of cleaning the stretch from the railway station and the
loco shed which was carried out last week," said Bhutia.
"The members of the local community, NGOs, civic body and the forest
department have helped us in the process. More than 250 saplings of
trees and flowers have been planted in the 300 metre stretch. To prevent
people from littering and parking on the stretch in future we have put
up 'no parking' and 'no littering' signs," Bhutia said.
The DHR urged support of the local community in their efforts to
conserve the heritage railway and said similar activities would be
carried out every month in other stretches along the hill railway that
are in a similar state.
Established in 1881, the DHR was accorded the Unesco World Heritage status in 1999.
It is the second railway in the world to be given the heritage status after the Semmering Railway in Austria in 1998.
"The intention behind the drive is to make the railway station
visually attractive so that its appearance is in sync with the heritage
status. We want to convert Kurseong railway station into a model station
and draw more tourists to the hill town," Bhutia said.(TT)

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