Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 6th July 2026, 11:46 PM

The local administration has enacted a complete prohibition on public entry across all tourist spots in the hilly district of Bandarban. Issued in response to relentless monsoon downpours and severe environmental risks, the emergency directive remains active until 10 July. This preventative intervention temporarily halts all domestic holidaying, tour operations, and wilderness trekking across the region.
The executive public notice, signed by the Deputy Commissioner, Md. Saniul Ferdous, emerged on the district authority’s official communication channels late on Monday evening. Regional administrative teams deployed the travel ban after multi-day torrential rains significantly heightened the risk of flash floods and catastrophic mudslides along major alpine transport arteries.
According to the administrative order, the continuous deluge over recent days has compromised structural stability across the district, making key mountain roads and river crossings highly hazardous. Given the extreme unpredictability of current weather fronts and the heightened potential for structural accidents, officials decided that immediate closures were paramount to protect both visitors and local rural communities.
The coverage of the emergency restriction is absolute. Beyond traditional managed viewpoints and parks, the prohibition strictly debars domestic holidaymakers, local guiding agencies, and the general public from entering all major natural waterfalls, high-altitude hiking trails, riverine navigation paths, and geographically isolated terrains. These environments are prone to sudden, violent surges of water and slope collapses during peak seasonal rains, factors that render emergency medical or rescue operations logistically impossible.
The district authority has issued a direct appeal to all relevant commercial stakeholders, instructing tour operators, transport unions, and hotel managements to adhere closely to the emergency safety protocols. Local hospitality providers are expected to hold new room reservations and liaise with currently lodged guests regarding safety guidelines, whilst law enforcement agencies deploy personnel to main entry checkpoints to turn back incoming recreational traffic.
This pre-emptive travel freeze underscores a cautious protective strategy implemented by regional officials to eliminate the possibility of visitors being stranded by flash floods in the Chittagong Hill Tracts. By closing off deep-forest trails and active waterways, the local government intends to completely eliminate accidental casualty risks. Administrative heads concluded their notification by clarifying that ongoing safety assessments will dictate whether regular travel programmes can safely resume once the Friday deadline expires.
Comments