Counterpoint

Bangladeshi Chicken Farmers are About to get Slaughtered

The ART agreement is against the interest of tens of thousands of families in Bangladesh whose livelihood depends on chicken farming. For their sake, the ART should be re-negotiated. It is shocking that the interim government signed this agreement without consulting representatives of the poultry industry.

The Silent Threat Beneath Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is more than a regional flashpoint; it is the definitive laboratory for the 21st century maritime warfare.

When the Law Fails Women

The problem is not only that laws fail after harm occurs, but that outdated laws make women unsure whether what they are facing is legally recognized as harm or not.

Bangladeshi Chicken Farmers are About to get Slaughtered

The ART agreement is against the interest of tens of thousands of families in Bangladesh whose livelihood depends on chicken farming. For their sake, the ART should be re-negotiated. It is shocking that the interim government signed this agreement without consulting representatives of the poultry industry.

When the Law Fails Women

The problem is not only that laws fail after harm occurs, but that outdated laws make women unsure whether what they are facing is legally recognized as harm or not.

ART Is Not Perfect. But Bangladesh Must Stop Dreaming of a Permanent GSP.

Global trade politics are changing. Reciprocity now matters far more in Washington than it once did.

West Bengal, A Month Later: It's Time to Get Real

It has been exactly a month since the BJP emerged the winner in the Bengal assembly elections. Some changes are more visible than others.

A Monopoly on Violence

Sovereignty is not maintained by lines drawn on a map or by seats held at the United Nations. It is maintained by the absolute certainty that if you attack the forces of the state, the state will break you.

The Importance of Being Accurate

The protection of life and liberty is a core constitutional and operational mandate of the Home Minister in Bangladesh. He directs key security forces, including the Border Guards Bangladesh, to ensure the physical safety and security of citizens.

A Dangerous Corporate Trend

Corporate success is increasingly measured by size rather than substance.

Assessing the Real Impact of the New Stimulus Package

Injecting fresh credit into such entities risks creating 'zombie firms' -- businesses that survive on subsidized finance but fail to generate sustainable returns.

Regulatory Flexibility In Banking: Growth Support or Risk Build-Up?

In structural terms, the policy reflects an ongoing evolution in Bangladesh’s financial regulatory framework -- from rigid quantitative controls toward more dynamic, risk-sensitive calibration.

The Deadly Cost of Reckless Eating Habits

The future health of Bangladesh depends not only on hospitals and medicine, but also on kitchens, schools, policies, awareness, and everyday choices made by ordinary people.

AI and Global Job Disruption

AI systems still require human oversight, localization, compliance handling, data verification, exception resolution, and cultural adaptation. These are precisely the areas where developing countries may retain relevance.

The Collapse of Elderly Care

What is at stake is not only the health of individual patients, but the dignity of an entire ageing generation.

The Silent Threat Beneath Hormuz

The Strait of Hormuz is more than a regional flashpoint; it is the definitive laboratory for the 21st century maritime warfare.

What Does Dr. Khalil's Victory Mean for Bangladesh?

At a time when Bangladesh has often found itself on the defensive internationally, this victory offers a welcome opportunity for national confidence and unity.

The Cat Who Wasn't Impressed

The images of her with the cat and the milk aren't just pictures. They are a manifesto for a very specific kind of dignified living -- a life where glamour and domestic intimacy sit side-by-side, looking off into the middle distance, accepting the world exactly as it is.

The Assassination of Ziaur Rahman and its Echoes

Ziaur Rahman deserves to be remembered not as a symbol of one side of a political divide, but as a leader who, in a period of genuine national crisis, demonstrated that Bangladesh was capable of stability, economic progress, diplomatic sophistication, and democratic aspiration.

Republic vs State

If South Asia wants its uprisings to mean more than a change of management, it has to stop mistaking collapse for transformation.

Mnemonicide of a Crocodile

When a person dies at a railway crossing, we do not abolish the railways. When a pilgrim is trampled at a religious gathering, we do not demolish the shrine. We install gates. We create safety protocols. We manage risk. In Bagerhat, none of this was attempted.

Republic vs State

If South Asia wants its uprisings to mean more than a change of management, it has to stop mistaking collapse for transformation.

Mnemonicide of a Crocodile

When a person dies at a railway crossing, we do not abolish the railways. When a pilgrim is trampled at a religious gathering, we do not demolish the shrine. We install gates. We create safety protocols. We manage risk. In Bagerhat, none of this was attempted.

Justice That Can Produce a Judicially Sound Precedent

The legal proceedings unfolding after Ramisa Akhter’s rape, beheading, and murder should be anchored in a fundamental jurisprudential principle and not be designed to appease public emotion: Even in a high-profile case where guilt appears certain, due process is not a concession to the accused, but a guardrail protecting the integrity of the criminal justice system.

The Assassination of Ziaur Rahman and its Echoes

Ziaur Rahman deserves to be remembered not as a symbol of one side of a political divide, but as a leader who, in a period of genuine national crisis, demonstrated that Bangladesh was capable of stability, economic progress, diplomatic sophistication, and democratic aspiration.

Rewriting the Narrative? RAB’s Conduct in a Nation on Edge

In July 2024, when the entire country erupted in protest, when over 1,400 lives were lost, and when Dhaka became a city under siege, RAB did not revert to familiar patterns. They did not conduct midnight raids. They did not trigger mass disappearances. Instead, they acted as a containment force. That contrast is not just noteworthy, it is historic.

Three Million or Three Hundred Thousand?

Seeking a clearer understanding of history does not diminish the legacy of the Liberation War, but honors it more completely. A nation willing to examine its past with honesty shows confidence in its own story.

Is a Second BNP Term in the Bag? Not So Fast.

Yes, economists may envy physicists and political scientists may envy economists. But, here, in a place as fluid and unpredictable as Bangladesh, there are moments when even the most elegant model benefits from being challenged by a journalist's imperfect, half-cooked antithesis.

The Rise of India’s Cockroach Janta Party

Gen Z is winning the internet through a combination of genuine grievance, cultural fluency, and the particular humor of people who have been told they are useless and decided to make art out of it.

America's Unfinished Business in Cuba

Whether this moment produces genuine Cuban freedom or merely a new form of managed dependency will depend entirely on whether Washington wants a democratic Cuba or simply a compliant one. Those are very different objectives. And so far, the evidence suggests Washington hasn't quite decided which it's actually after.

Banking Crisis and Private Power

This piece talks about how bad loans, political patronage, and cosmetic accounting turned Bangladesh’s banks into a public crisis.

The Miracle and the Squeeze

This first article in a three-part series argues that Bangladesh’s celebrated growth story was always more fragile than it looked. Now that growth is slowing and investment is yielding less, the hidden costs of that model are becoming harder to ignore.

Capital Flight, Inequality, and Who Pays

This third article in a three-part series argues how wealth leaves the country, why the gains of growth narrow at the top, and what a fairer settlement would actually require.

The Identity Crisis of Bengali Muslims in Bangladesh

Ultimately, the challenge is not to choose between being Bengali and being Muslim. The real challenge is to recognize that both identities can co-exist within a broader vision of a democratic, pluralistic, and self-confident society.

Time for Industry and Academia to Read from the Same Playbook

There is a real gap between what universities teach, how students learn, and what employers increasingly need.

Why the World Watches but Rarely Acts

The systems that govern the world are powerful, but they are not immutable. They derive their strength, in part, from acceptance, from the belief that they cannot be altered.

Special

Culture

Cultural Bourgeoisie | Episode 2 | When History Reads Like a Thriller

In Episode 2 of Cultural Bourgeoisie, Jyoti Rahman and Ehteshamul Haque explore how political thrillers can illuminate real historical events. From African coups and revolutionary leaders to Bangladesh's own turbulent political history, the conversation examines the intersection of fiction, memory, and scholarship—and why understanding the complexities of the past remains essential today

Counterpoint with Zafar Sobhan l Episode 02 l Zyma Islam

This episode of Counterpoint features a one-on-one conversation between editor Zafar Sobhan and Daily Star senior staff correspondent Zyma Islam. Together, they explore the complex landscape of media freedom and plurality in Bangladesh, reflecting on their experiences through 15 years of the Sheikh Hasina regime, the interim government, and the early days of the BNP government

Counterpoint with Zafar Sobhan | Episode 03 | Yousef Ramadan

In Episode 3 of Counterpoint with Zafar Sobhan, Zafar Sobhan sits down with Palestinian Ambassador Yousef Ramadan for a powerful conversation on the ongoing crisis in Palestine, the geopolitical role of the United States and Israel, and the historical roots of the conflict.

Counterpoint Generations | Ep 10

In Episode 10 of Counterpoint Generations, Zafar Sobhan and Professor Rehman Sobhan examine a range of pressing legal and political developments shaping Bangladesh today.

Counterpoint Generations | Ep 9

Episode 9 of Counterpoint Generations reflects on the immediate post-election landscape, examining voter participation, the formation of the new cabinet, and the institutional challenges facing the incoming government as parliament prepares to begin its term.

Counterpoint Generations | Ep 8

In Episode 8 of Counterpoint Generations, the discussion explores Bangladesh’s electoral journey from the 1970 election to the present, examining how voting behaviour, political participation, and institutions have evolved over time. The episode also addresses contemporary questions around minority voting patterns, and why opinion polls often fail to predict real outcomes. A reflective conversation on elections, uncertainty, and democratic change.

Interview

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