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Opinion


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Extreme heat threatens child growth

BANGLADESH has made significant progress in reducing childhood stunting over the past decade, thanks to improvements in healthcare, nutrition and public health initiatives. However, a new and silent threat is emerging that could jeopardise these hard-won gains: climate change. Recent research has highlighted a troubling link between extreme heat and stunted...

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Small farmers, big water choices

FOR millions of smallholder families, water remains a daily negotiation between hope and hardship. Whether tending boro rice on the dry soil of the Barind or collecting water for home use in flood-prone villages, such farmers balance survival against scarcity. Their water use reflects the resilience of rural Bangladesh and exposes systemic inefficiencies and an urgent need for smarter, equitable management...

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IMF and World Bank: legacy in flux

MULTILATERAL donors and lenders are international financial institutions that provide loans and other forms of financial assistance along with policy support for developing countries. The institutions, known as multilateral development banks, are...

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July: when sky broke open

THE July uprising in Bangladesh marked a dramatic rupture in the political landscape. At first glance, it signalled a resounding victory: the collapse of a long-entrenched fascist regime. Yet beneath the euphoria lies a more complex and unsettling reality...

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Uttara disaster and nation’s betrayal

On July 21, the unthinkable happened. A Bangladesh Air Force F-7 jet — a relic of Cold War-era military hardware — fell from the sky and slammed into Milestone School and College in Uttara, Dhaka, killing at least 33 people, most of them children. In a...

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Will second republic be déjà vu?

ONE of the most corrosive legacies of Bangladesh’s political misrule has been its transformation into a toll state — where power is monetized and citizens are coerced into paying for what should be theirs by right. Toll extortion — coerced payments...

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Israel’s genocide is big business

THE Financial Times revealed this month that a cabal of Israeli investors, one of the world’s top business consulting groups and a think-tank headed by former British prime minister Tony Blair had been secretly working on plans to exploit the ruins of Gaza as prime real estate...

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Politicisation of human suffering

I teach literature, a subject that is closely related to everyday life and hence cannot be divorced from political happenings. When interpreting literary texts, I often draw examples from political contexts...

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Climate crisis to legal battles

IN A quiet courtroom in the Hague, history stirred. A legal ripple, as gentle as a sigh from the Pacific, reached the shorelines of global governance. The International Court of Justice declared, in an advisory fashion though, that one country may, indeed, sue another for climate change. The words hung heavy in the air, stirring both celebrations and scepticism. Rightly so...

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Israel’s expanding war, West’s silent endorsement

JUST weeks after a temporary pause in the Israel-Iran war through a fragile ceasefire, Israel has attacked Syria, under the pretence of protecting the Druze community. The Israeli attack denotes Israel’s ambition to expand and perpetuate its war in the Middle East...

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Transforming tragedy into meaningful change

THE Milestone School and College jet crash of July 21, 2025, is a national tragedy of unspeakable proportions — one that transcends the conscience of the entire nation. The tragic and untimely deaths of our children have plunged the country into profound grief. For the families affected, the loss is irreparable, and those who survived will undoubtedly carry the trauma...

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Is it ending?

IT IS hard to decide what is more surreal: that the United States is threatening 50 per cent tariffs on Brazilian imports in the name of ‘reciprocity’ or that global markets, once jittery at the mere whisper of Trumpian trade tantrums, are now brushing off these ultimatums with a shrug and record-breaking rallies...

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Pretend play area for pre-primary classes

WE HAVE all seen children dress up as their heroes or pretend to be doctors, teachers, or other professionals during playtime. What seems like simple fun is actually something far more significant. It is how children make sense of their world, acting out experiences, ideas, or stories. Imagination, which lies at the heart of children’s role play, is even more vital than simply acquiring knowledge...

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Rebuilding trust

DEMOCRACY is not a one-time achievement secured through the ballot box; it is an ongoing process of institutional development, civic engagement and the constant renegotiation of power and accountability. In Bangladesh, the democratic journey has been both inspiring and turbulent. While the country has made notable strides in economic development and social...

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Using mathematics in climate change models

CLIMATE change stands as one of the most pressing global challenges of the twenty-first century, with its impacts reverberating through both the natural environment and human societies. To understand, predict and potentially mitigate these impacts, scientists depend heavily on climate models. At the very core of these models lies mathematics, an indispensable...