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The problem is not only that laws fail after harm occurs, but that outdated laws make women unsure whether what they are facing is legally recognized as harm or not.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The problem is not only that laws fail after harm occurs, but that outdated laws make women unsure whether what they are facing is legally recognized as harm or not.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