Post-Sit-Ins: Bangladesh Nationalist Party weighing up options
Bangladesh Nationalist Party high-ups are now reevaluating if they should press on with tougher programmes after recent sit-ins, or go slow for the time being instead.
Bangladesh Nationalist Party high-ups are now reevaluating if they should press on with tougher programmes after recent sit-ins, or go slow for the time being instead.
The problem in Bangladesh is that politicians consider compromise as a weakness and a sign of defeat, says the writer.
The writer says an absence of political will or concern for the city's residents is what leads to houses to continue being tinderboxes that are nothing but death traps.
Experts said the greed of building owners is a key reason for such disasters.
The nomination of a president is not to be taken lightly.
Whenever the BNP announces a programme, the ruling Awami League calls for a counter programme, the party's leaders also said.
The violence has caused the entry of at least 500 Rohingyas to enter Bangladesh and take refuge at a school in the area of Naikhongchhari upazila.
The 11.1 million children are among the almost 350 million children across Asia, who are gripped by both grinding poverty and climate disaster.
Experts have stated that a continued rise in life expectancy of women could be a reason for males to have become outnumbered.
The writer says people expect political leaders to look out for them, especially when they are in distress, and leaders should think about leading their people.