Need more open spaces for kids: Radwan Mujib

Publish: 5:08 PM, November 24, 2019 | Update: 5:08 PM, November 24, 2019

DHAKA, – Trustee of Centre for Research and Information (CRI) and Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s grandson Radwan Mujib Siddiq stressed more open spaces here for children to increase their scope of games and keep them healthy.

In a Facebook post today, Radwan Mujib Siddiq,(also known as Bobby), drew attention to the open space in the place of Gulshan where previously stood the Wonderland amusement park and called for turning it into a dedicated sports hub.

He added that even in its current unfinished state, the Wonderland site and the Gulshan Youth Club (GYC) field are “brimming with young people, doing sport, having fun, being active”.

Radwan also called for striking a balance between the number of walking parks and all-weather sports pitches for children and youth.

“Why can’t the old wonderland site be a dedicated sports hub? Just build some all-weather multi-purpose pitches and let the children play” reads the
post.

In another post today, he highlighted how according to the World Health Organization (WHO), Bangladeshi children took position in the list of most
active kids physically in the world. But the same study also showed that 2 out of 3 children in the country do not take an hour of exercise per day.

Radwan, who regularly plays football himself and is known to be a sports enthusiast, then asked parents not to force their children to study all the
time at the expense of physical activities and called for creating more open spaces for children.

Over the last ten years, the Awami League Government has put special focus on the development of sports in Bangladesh.

The project to develop a mini stadium in every Upazila (sub-district) is ongoing following the direction of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

To promote sports at the local level, the government is distributing sports materials to educational and sports institutions alongside arranging
regular sports competitions up to school levels. Financial grants for expansion of games and sports have also been extended.