The shift to open tender triggered delays, stalled immunisation and left Bangladesh facing a widening measles crisis, it says ...
Capitalist exploitation and wealth inequality in Bangladesh highlight why the May Day legacy remains vital for labour rights.
Inside the glass walls of my hourglass, I have always felt the inevitability of decline, yet I never realised that even falling is beautiful.
Forest's win stretched their unbeaten run to nine games in all competitions as the 1979 and 1980 European champions enjoy some momentum after battling relegation from the Premier League all season.
May Day, thus, needs to move beyond symbolic celebration.
What unfolded on that green carpet that day may, in the record books, be reduced to a few numbers. But for those who witnessed it, it remains etched in a far deeper dimension. Like a line from a poem ...
If this is how official inspections work, perhaps future ministers should be given arrival guidelines. Visit before the water leaves. Speak to people who have suffered. Check the drains, not just the ...
In Bangladesh, labour history is often narrated as chronology—laws, uprisings, collapses, reforms. From the 1881 Factories Act to Swadeshi in 1905, through 1971 and beyond, the working class appears ...
Even for those who manage to switch tracks, the social environment rarely welcomes what is seen as an anomalous choice. Their decision is treated as a betrayal of their potential and a slight against ...
Perched face-to-face on a sunlit branch in Rangamati’s Kaptai upazila, two Asian glossy starlings are locked in what feels like an intimate conversation.
Bangladesh’s new labour law reflects hard-won gains, yet key gaps persist, leaving workers’ rights and protections incomplete.
Before I start, let me acknowledge something our beloved Dhaka does with unsettling efficiency: it turns almost anything into a competition.
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