Why Bangladesh Must Build, Not Just Code
The foundations of a prosperous nation are not built in the cloud. They are built on the ground, in plants and workshops and export zones, by people who make things the world needs. It is past time to look down from the screen and begin.
Bangladesh First and the New Balancing Act
Tarique Rahman’s expected Malaysia-China sequence is a necessary correction to an India-centric past. Malaysia gives the visit diplomatic balance and China gives it strategic weight. But the correction will only succeed if it produces a wider foreign-policy basket without chipping away at Bangladesh’s sovereign decision-making space.
Our Moral Compass in Ruins
It should be the topmost priority of any government to ensure that our education system is running independently with the most competent and scholarly educators.
Bangladesh First and the New Balancing Act
Tarique Rahman’s expected Malaysia-China sequence is a necessary correction to an India-centric past. Malaysia gives the visit diplomatic balance and China gives it strategic weight. But the correction will only succeed if it produces a wider foreign-policy basket without chipping away at Bangladesh’s sovereign decision-making space.
Policy as Experiment
The most successful developmental states were not necessarily those that possessed perfect knowledge from the outset. Rather, they were states capable of learning rapidly, adjusting policies pragmatically, and building institutional memory over time.
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. It is shocking that the interim government signed this agreement without consulting representatives of the poultry industry.
Modi's Demography Mission is Yet Another Hindutva Gimmick
The clearest sign of gimmickry behind the so-called mission to control Bangladeshi immigrants is that the government has appointed a non-demographer to head an exercise on demographic change.
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.
Why Bangladesh Must Build, Not Just Code
The foundations of a prosperous nation are not built in the cloud. They are built on the ground, in plants and workshops and export zones, by people who make things the world needs. It is past time to look down from the screen and begin.
Shifting Gear on the Economy
What good economic policies actually look like -- and how to tell when they are missing
A Dangerous Corporate Trend
Corporate success is increasingly measured by size rather than substance.
Our Moral Compass in Ruins
It should be the topmost priority of any government to ensure that our education system is running independently with the most competent and scholarly educators.
A State Within a State
The political cost of holding Salimpur is carried by whichever party is in power. But the failure is not new. The Awami League, the interim government, and the current administration have all inherited and repeated the same failure. In that sense, it is the same failure under three different governments.
How Abuse is Normalized
We owe our daughters, sons and every future generation something better than inherited shame. We owe them safety. We owe them dignity. Let silence end where abuse begins, on our screens and in our streets; through words that challenge, actions that protect, and a resolve that no longer looks away.
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.