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Tags : democracy


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Muhammad Yunus’ eyes hold tears of tens of millions

THOSE who are currently students at universities in Bangladesh came of age during the autocratic rule of the now fallen prime minister Sheikh Hasina (2009–2024). They never had a taste of democracy; they never saw any credible election in their country. All they saw was political repression and corruption at every tier of the government and at every level...

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Bangladesh’s future hangs in the balance

BANGLADESH has been transformed into a mausoleum of democracy under the iron fist of Sheikh Hasina. Her reign, a protracted nightmare for the Bangladeshi people, has been marked by a relentless erosion of institutional integrity, a cancer that has metastasised through body politic. With each passing year, the democratic fabric of this young nation...

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ICC must act now

THIS is not the piece I intended to write just 24 hours ago (August 4). As Dinah Washington once famously sang, lyrics taken from the 1934 original ‘Cuando vuelva a tu lado’ by the Mexican songwriter Maria Grever, ‘what a difference a day makes’...

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Sajeeb makes U-turn, says Hasina to return home

Awami League president and former prime minister Sheikh Hasina will return to the country once democracy is restored, said her son Sajeeb Wazed, according to a report of the Press Trust of India...

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Int’l financial institutions’ culpability

THE International Monetary Fund, World Bank and Asian Development Bank are complicit in the gross human rights violations and death of democracy in Bangladesh. They continued to supply financial blood line to the regime, well-documented for its corruptions, human rights violations — such as forced disappearances and tortures...

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Democracy now, democracy always

The fall of a dictator is always destined. So it was with Sheikh Hasina, who ruled the country for the last 16 years, destroyed all public institutions, and became an absolute authoritarian...

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Crisis over Lanka IGP sets dangerous precedent

THE inspector general of police Deshabandu Tennakoon finds himself at the centre of a controversy that goes to the heart of Sri Lanka’s democracy. The Supreme Court has directed that he should be restrained from acting in the position of head of police until the court has fully considered all the petitions submitted against his appointment...

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I took a bullet for democracy: Trump

Donald Trump, holding his first camp, surviving an assassination attempt, rejected concerns that he is a threat to America’s democratic system, triumphantly telling the crowd, ‘I took a bullet for democracy.’...

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Inner democratic contradiction

ARE elections overplayed as a tool of representative democracy, as some claim? Or they are about getting past the post in each seat making the issue of public representation fluid but keeping a system going which many are used to and comfortable...

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Pope deplores state of democracy

Pope Francis decried the state of democracy and warned against ‘populists’ during a short visit to Trieste in Italy’s northeast on Sunday ahead of a 12-day trip to...

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Critical days for Modi and rivals

THE underplayed defeat for his government by 32 seats in the parliamentary elections, with a whopping loss of 63 BJP MPs from the previous tally, may have reined in prime minister Modi’s self-obsessed march on Indian democracy for now. His new and untested experiment with a coalition government has just begun, with the opening of the 18th Lok Sabha on June 24...

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RWPB observes 20th anniversary

The Revolutionary Workers Party of Bangladesh, a partner of Ganatantra Mancha, observed 20th founding anniversary with the vow to restore democracy on Friday...

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Democracy won’t come through compromise, fear

HALF of the world’s population will have the opportunity to vote by the end of this year as 64 countries and the European Union are scheduled to open their ballot boxes. No previous year has been so flush with elections. Among these countries is India, where a remarkable 969 million voting papers had to be printed ahead of the elections...

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Modi’s election debacle and aftermath

THERE is no doubt that the 2024 general elections in India, concluded over a week ago, will be long remembered for bringing back Indian politics to normal, thanks to the tested electorates of the largest democracy in the world. Undoubtedly, this election delivered a shocking blow to Modi’s dominance and will likely curb his autocratic tendencies...

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Gaza matters and democracy is functional

THE Democracy Perception Index issued its 2024 report on May 8, revealing important and interesting shifts in global perceptions about democracy, geopolitics and international relations...

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Restoration of democracy demanded

Leaders of Rastra Sanskar Andolan, on Friday at a joining programme in Dhaka, said that their party would work for restoration of democratic rule in the country...

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More ‘Moditva’

THE impressive logistics of India’s nat­io­nal elections inspire considerable internati­onal coverage. This year, the process initiated last Friday will culminate at the start of June, and the potential electorate inclu­des...

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Both AL, BNP must practise democracy within party

THE stand that the ruling Awami League and the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, the largest in the opposition camp, have taken on participation in the staggered upazila council elections, the first phase of which involving...