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Opinion


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Realities and politics

IN THE political history of Bangladesh, election periods have always been of paramount importance. From the Pakistan Movement to the birth of Bangladesh, the mass uprising of the 1990s, or the aftermath of the 2024 ‘July Uprising’, the right to vote has consistently been at the centre of political discourse. Although the three elections after 1990 were considered free...

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From Easter justice to wider justice

THERE has long been speculation that the Easter bombing of April 2019 had a relationship to Sri Lankan politics. The near simultaneous bombings of three Christian churches and three luxury hotels, with a death toll of 270 and over 500 injured, by Muslim suicide bombers made no sense in Sri Lanka where there has been no history of conflict between the two religions...

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Cybersecurity and human resource management

IN TODAY’S digital world, cyber threats don’t always hide behind complex codes or technical tricks. Often, they come through the front door — disguised as job applications, resignation letters, or support requests. While organisations spend heavily on cybersecurity technology, they often overlook a more critical entry point: the human resources department...

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Bystander psychology in transitional Bangladesh

LAST week in Mitford, Dhaka, a horrific video made rounds on social media: a man was beaten to death with stones in broad daylight while hundreds of people stood by — watching, recording whispering — but doing nothing. Some even filmed the killers as they danced on the lifeless body. According to reports, members of the Ansar were nearby. Yet, they too did not intervene...

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Advancing sexual, reproductive health rights

SEXUAL and reproductive health and rights lie at the foundation of bodily freedom, gender justice and fair development. They are not limited to medical access but stretch into the right to decide — freely and safely — about one’s body, one’s relationships and one’s future. For Bangladesh, which has made remarkable socio-economic progress in recent decades, ensuring...

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The ‘economy of genocide’ report: reckoning beyond rhetoric

FRANCESCA Albanese, the United Nations special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in occupied Palestine, stands as a testament to the notion of speaking truth to power. This ‘power’ is not solely embodied by Israel or even the United States, but by an international community whose collective relevance has tragically failed to stem the ongoing genocide in Gaza...

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Bangladesh needs to fund early action, not just response

ANYONE living in Bangladesh knows how disasters feel. The rivers swell, the winds rise, the water comes fast and heavy. Cyclones, floods, landslides, river erosion — they are part of life. Families flee with children on their shoulders. Fields go underwater. Homes are washed away. This is not a one-off event. It is a yearly pattern that’s only getting worse...

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Inclusive definition of ‘worker’ matters

IT HAS been more than two months since the Labour Reform Commission released its report, outlining the reformation of labour law in Bangladesh. Although the reform proposals have not yet been enacted into statutory law, the commission’s report offers insight into the changes that should be made to the existing legal framework...

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Silent mental health crisis among young men

IN THE long corridors of Bangladesh’s educational institutions — be it a public school in Barishal, a madrasa in Sylhet, or an elite English-medium school in Dhaka — there’s a silence louder than the morning assembly bell. It’s the silence of boys not crying, not speaking, not asking for help. The silence of boys being boys—stoic, invulnerable, ‘strong.’ And buried...

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Follies of dumping US bonds

THE title is a deliberate intrigue, meant to evoke the inevitability of both Fallout and Fallin — a duality often at play in real-life events, particularly those with global repercussions. Fallout symbolises the aftermath: the economic tremors, unintended spillovers, and long-term disruptions that trail major geopolitical or financial decisions. Fallin’, on the other hand, captures...

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Bangladesh must embrace start-ups, tech-driven entrepreneurship

INNOVATION, automation and the rapid digitisation of life are changing economies across the world, and Bangladesh is right in the middle of that shift. Every year, more than two million young people enter the workforce here, but most find themselves up against a job market that’s shrinking in real terms. The public sector is already full, and many private sector jobs are...

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Rethinking irrigation economics

IN BANGLADESH’S parched boro fields, water is not just a resource; it is the currency of food security and rural prosperity. With over 80 per cent of the country’s cropland now irrigated, primarily during the dry season, irrigation has doubled rice yields since the 1970s and propelled near self-sufficiency in staple foods. Yet this achievement carries hidden economic and...

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Bangladesh’s next leap in pharmaceuticals

BANGLADESH’S pharmaceutical industry has long been a success story of transformation. Originating in the early 1980s as an import-dependent sector, it has evolved into a thriving hub for the production of generic medicines that reliably meet the needs of its domestic population while serving over 100 export markets. With a current market valuation of around...

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Is BRICS way forward?

I RETURNED to the US from Cuba just a few hours before president Donald Trump signed a memorandum on June 30 tightening the long-standing US economic blockade. The memorandum includes a statutory ban on US tourism to the neighboring island...

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Architecture of upward redistribution in US

NAMES can and do mislead. Especially when they are deployed to disguise betrayal as benevolence. The US Senate has just passed what Donald Trump hails as ‘one big, beautiful bill’ — a sweeping tax package projected to add $3.7 trillion to the national debt over a decade. Upon narrowly passing the Senate in a 50–50 tie, broken only by the vice president’s vote...