Bandarban Hill District is the most remote and least populated district in Bangladesh.
The lure of the tallest peaks of Bangladesh, treks through virgin
forests and chance to meet more than 15 tribes of the region up close is
growing both among Bangladeshis and tourists from other countries.
Since the insurgency ceased in the Chittagong Hill Tracts
(a cluster that includes all three hill districts of Bangladesh) it has
opened up for tourists more than a decade back, though some of the
western tourist guides may still describe the area as a major security
risk.Bandarban is a district in South-Eastern Bangladesh, and a part of the Chittagong Division. It is one of the three districts that make up the Chittagong Hill Tracts, the others being Rangamati District and Khagrachhari District. Bandarban is regarded as one of the most attractive travel destinations in Bangladesh. Bandarban (meaning the dam of monkeys), or in Marma or Arakanese language
as "Rwa-daw Mro" is also known as Arvumi or the Bohmong Circle (of the
rest of the three hill districts Rangamati is the Chakma Circle, Raja
Devasish Roy and Khagrachari is the Mong Circle, Raja Sachingprue
Marma). Bandarban town is the home town of the Bohmong Chief (currently
King, or Raja, U Cho Prue Marma) who is the head of the Marma
population. It also is the administrative headquarters of Bandarban
district, which has turned into one of the most exotic tourist
attractions in Bangladesh since the insurgency in Chittagong Hill Tracts has ceased more than a decade back. In the late 1970s, a policy of forced settlement of Bengalis into hills
was pursued, which later gave rise to much violence against the hill
people and the insurgency led by Shanti Bahini, the military wing of
Parbatya Chattagram Jana Sanghati Samiti. There have been an attempt to
create divide among tribal cultural lines between the Chakmas, who led
Shantibanhini, and the Mrus, by creating an anti-Shantibanhini militia
out of them. Now, after the peace treaty, Bandarban stands as a locally
governed ethnic region together with the two other hill districts.
Representation of numerous tribes of the district in the Hill Council
now stands as a thorn of dispute here.
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