
Mohammad Al-Masum Molla
Multimedia journalist with nearly 10 years’ experience in mainstream media in Bangladesh with a background in investigative journalism and environmental, political and human rights reporting.
Multimedia journalist with nearly 10 years’ experience in mainstream media in Bangladesh with a background in investigative journalism and environmental, political and human rights reporting.
Dhaka and Delhi are likely to sign seven MoUs during Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s visit to India.
Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen did not accompany Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on her four-day state visit to India, sources said.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today begins a four-day New Delhi visit, which is expected to take the 50-year diplomatic ties between India and Bangladesh to a new height amid global and regional crises fuelled by the Ukraine war and the Covid pandemic.
With the ruling Awami League and opposition BNP unwavering in their stances, the country’s politics seems set on a path towards confrontation, one and a half years away from the next general election.
Planting of Aman seedlings has suffered a setback this season as it is so far 14 percent less than the target set by the government.
Inflation, and food and energy insecurity, triggered by the war in Ukraine, have become major concerns for Bangladesh and many countries across the world.
The average maximum temperature in Bangladesh for the month of August was a three-decade high.
After a long time, the BNP seems determined to shake off its inertia as leaders and activists are turning up in droves to protest the recent hike in prices of fuel and daily essentials.
Dhaka and Delhi are likely to sign seven MoUs during Bangladeshi Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s visit to India.
Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen did not accompany Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on her four-day state visit to India, sources said.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today begins a four-day New Delhi visit, which is expected to take the 50-year diplomatic ties between India and Bangladesh to a new height amid global and regional crises fuelled by the Ukraine war and the Covid pandemic.
With the ruling Awami League and opposition BNP unwavering in their stances, the country’s politics seems set on a path towards confrontation, one and a half years away from the next general election.
Planting of Aman seedlings has suffered a setback this season as it is so far 14 percent less than the target set by the government.
Inflation, and food and energy insecurity, triggered by the war in Ukraine, have become major concerns for Bangladesh and many countries across the world.
The average maximum temperature in Bangladesh for the month of August was a three-decade high.
After a long time, the BNP seems determined to shake off its inertia as leaders and activists are turning up in droves to protest the recent hike in prices of fuel and daily essentials.
Instead of making the 20-party alliance functional, the BNP plans to forge a “greater unity” among the opposition forces to realise the demand for the next national election under a non-partisan administration.
Police have been used regularly to muzzle the opposition in Bangladesh