Ads by Cash-71
Hajj stampede death toll 769, says Saudi health minister; Iran denounces ‘crime’
Posted by bangladesh
Metropolitan Magistrate Mahbubur Rahman gave the order of
remand when the former student leader was produced in his court on Wednesday.
Manna in a phone conversation with an unidentified person seemed to suggest the need to influence senior generals to take over power and end the current political crisis.
In another conversation with BNP leader Sadeque Hossain Khoka, now in the US, he said ' a few deaths' during clashes in the Dhaka university could destabilise the government.
The two leaked audio clips of Manna -- one of his conversation with BNP leader Sadeque Hossain Khoka and the other with an unidentified person -- were carried by bdnews24.com on Sunday.
That led to an intense political debate.
He was picked up by the Rapid Action Battalion from a house in Banani early on Tuesday and later handed over to the Gulshan police.
He was then sent to the Detective Branch headquarters and was produced in court on Wednesday.
A case was filed against Manna with the Gulshan police on Tuesday under Section 131 of Penal Code.
Bangladesh Penal Code's Section 131 says, “Whoever abets the committing of mutiny by an officer, soldier...or attempts to seduce any such officer, soldier, sailor or airman from his allegiance or his duty, shall be punished with [imprisonment] for life, or with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine.”
Manna in a phone conversation with an unidentified person seemed to suggest the need to influence senior generals to take over power and end the current political crisis.
In another conversation with BNP leader Sadeque Hossain Khoka, now in the US, he said ' a few deaths' during clashes in the Dhaka university could destabilise the government.
The two leaked audio clips of Manna -- one of his conversation with BNP leader Sadeque Hossain Khoka and the other with an unidentified person -- were carried by bdnews24.com on Sunday.
That led to an intense political debate.
He was picked up by the Rapid Action Battalion from a house in Banani early on Tuesday and later handed over to the Gulshan police.
He was then sent to the Detective Branch headquarters and was produced in court on Wednesday.
A case was filed against Manna with the Gulshan police on Tuesday under Section 131 of Penal Code.
Bangladesh Penal Code's Section 131 says, “Whoever abets the committing of mutiny by an officer, soldier...or attempts to seduce any such officer, soldier, sailor or airman from his allegiance or his duty, shall be punished with [imprisonment] for life, or with imprisonment of either description for a term which may extend to ten years, and shall also be liable to fine.”
All User,
new blog created which name is all-dell.blogspot.com.
you can get more dell information, dell exam question and answer,other things.
so enjoy and go to
www.all-dell.blogspot.com
thanks
new blog created which name is all-dell.blogspot.com.
you can get more dell information, dell exam question and answer,other things.
so enjoy and go to
www.all-dell.blogspot.com
thanks
Hifazat-e Islam chief Ahmad Shafi is not attending the rally at Motijheel’s Shapla Chattar for security reasons.
Zimbabua won the match and the series is 1-1.
āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦিāϤীā§ āĻĻিāύ āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āϏāĻŦāĻেā§ে āĻŦā§ āĻĒুঁāĻিāĻŦাāĻাāϰ āĻĸাāĻা āϏ্āĻāĻ āĻāĻ্āϏāĻেāĻ্āĻে (āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ) āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻļুāϰু āĻšā§েāĻে āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻে āĻāĻ াāύাāĻŽাāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝ āĻĻিā§ে।
āϏোāĻŽāĻŦাāϰ āϏāĻাāϞ āϏাā§ে ā§§ā§ĻāĻাā§ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻļুāϰুāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻĨāĻŽ ⧍ā§Ļ āĻŽিāύিāĻ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে ā§§ā§Š āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻŦাā§āϞেāĻ āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āĻāĻŽāϤে āĻļুāϰু āĻāϰে। ā§Ēā§Ģ āĻŽিāύিāĻেāϰ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύে āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§Ļ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽে āϝাā§।
āĻŦেāϞা ā§§ā§§āĻাā§ āĻāĻ āĻāĻŖ্āĻাāϰ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻļেāώে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻĒৌঁāĻাā§ ā§Ē āĻšাāĻাāϰ ā§Šā§¯ā§§ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻে, āϝা āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§§ā§Ž āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽ।
āĻāĻ āϏāĻŽā§ āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻšাāϤāĻŦāĻĻāϞ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Žā§§ āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻাāϰ āĻļেā§াāϰ āĻ āĻŽিāĻāĻুā§াāϞ āĻĢাāύ্āĻĄ। āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻĻাāĻŽ āĻŦাā§ে ā§Ŧā§ĒāĻি āĻļেā§াāϰেāϰ, āĻāĻŽে ā§§ā§Ļ⧝āĻিāϰ āĻāĻŦং āĻ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤিāϤ āĻিāϞ ā§¨ā§ŽāĻিāϰ āĻĻাāĻŽ।
āĻāϤ āĻā§েāĻ āĻাāϰ্āϝāĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āϧāϰেāĻ āύিāĻŽ্āύāĻŽুāĻী āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤাā§ āϰā§েāĻে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏূāĻāĻ। āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻĒৌঁāĻাā§ ā§Ē āĻšাāĻাāϰ ā§Ēā§Ļ⧝ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻে, āϝা āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§ā§Ŧ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽ। āĻāϤ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻļেāώ āĻĻিāύ āĻĸাāĻা āϏ্āĻāĻ āĻāĻ্āϏāĻেāĻ্āĻেāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻŽে āĻĒ্āϰা⧠⧝ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ।
āĻāĻĻেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻāϤ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āϤিāύ āĻাāϰ্āϝāĻĻিāĻŦāϏে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻŽে ā§§.⧝⧠āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻŦা āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Žā§¯.ā§¯ā§Ž āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ। āĻĻিāύে āĻā§ে āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§Ē⧍ āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻা, āϝা āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Ž.ā§ā§Š āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻāĻŽ।
āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻে āϝোāĻ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§§ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ। āĻĻিāύে āĻā§ে āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§ā§Ē āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻা, āϝা āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰা⧠⧍ā§Ģ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻāĻŽ।
āϏোāĻŽāĻŦাāϰ āϏāĻাāϞ āϏাā§ে ā§§ā§ĻāĻাā§ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻļুāϰুāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻĨāĻŽ ⧍ā§Ļ āĻŽিāύিāĻ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে ā§§ā§Š āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻŦাā§āϞেāĻ āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āĻāĻŽāϤে āĻļুāϰু āĻāϰে। ā§Ēā§Ģ āĻŽিāύিāĻেāϰ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύে āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§Ļ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽে āϝাā§।
āĻŦেāϞা ā§§ā§§āĻাā§ āĻāĻ āĻāĻŖ্āĻাāϰ āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻļেāώে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻĒৌঁāĻাā§ ā§Ē āĻšাāĻাāϰ ā§Šā§¯ā§§ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻে, āϝা āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§§ā§Ž āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽ।
āĻāĻ āϏāĻŽā§ āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻšাāϤāĻŦāĻĻāϞ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Žā§§ āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻাāϰ āĻļেā§াāϰ āĻ āĻŽিāĻāĻুā§াāϞ āĻĢাāύ্āĻĄ। āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻĻাāĻŽ āĻŦাā§ে ā§Ŧā§ĒāĻি āĻļেā§াāϰেāϰ, āĻāĻŽে ā§§ā§Ļ⧝āĻিāϰ āĻāĻŦং āĻ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤিāϤ āĻিāϞ ā§¨ā§ŽāĻিāϰ āĻĻাāĻŽ।
āĻāϤ āĻā§েāĻ āĻাāϰ্āϝāĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āϧāϰেāĻ āύিāĻŽ্āύāĻŽুāĻী āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤাā§ āϰā§েāĻে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏূāĻāĻ। āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻĒৌঁāĻাā§ ā§Ē āĻšাāĻাāϰ ā§Ēā§Ļ⧝ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻে, āϝা āĻāĻেāϰ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§ā§Ŧ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ āĻāĻŽ। āĻāϤ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻļেāώ āĻĻিāύ āĻĸাāĻা āϏ্āĻāĻ āĻāĻ্āϏāĻেāĻ্āĻেāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻŽে āĻĒ্āϰা⧠⧝ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ।
āĻāĻĻেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻāϤ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āϤিāύ āĻাāϰ্āϝāĻĻিāĻŦāϏে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻ āĻāĻŽে ā§§.⧝⧠āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻŦা āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Žā§¯.ā§¯ā§Ž āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ। āĻĻিāύে āĻā§ে āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§Ē⧍ āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻা, āϝা āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Ž.ā§ā§Š āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻāĻŽ।
āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšে āĻĄিāĻāϏāĻ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϏূāĻāĻে āϝোāĻ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§§ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻĒā§েāύ্āĻ। āĻĻিāύে āĻā§ে āϞেāύāĻĻেāύ āĻšā§ āĻĒ্āϰাā§ ā§Šā§ā§Ē āĻোāĻি āĻাāĻা, āϝা āĻāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšেāϰ āĻেā§ে āĻĒ্āϰা⧠⧍ā§Ģ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻāĻŽ।
⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Š āϏাāϞেāϰ āϏāϰāĻাāϰি āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŦāϰ্āώāĻĒāĻ্āĻি āĻোāώāĻŖা
Posted by bangladesh
āĻāĻাāĻŽী ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Š āϏাāϞে āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āϏāĻŦ āϏāϰāĻাāϰি āĻ āĻāϧা āϏāϰāĻাāϰি āĻĻāĻĒ্āϤāϰ āĻāĻŦং āϏ¦াā§āϤ্āϤāĻļাāϏিāϤ āĻ
āĻāϧা āϏ¦াā§āϤ্āϤāĻļাāϏিāϤ āϏংāϏ্āĻĨাāĻুāϞোāϰ āĻāύ্āϝ āĻŦাāϰ্āώিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻāϞ্āĻĒāύা āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻāϰেāĻে
āϏāϰāĻাāϰ।
āĻāύāĻĒ্āϰāĻļাāϏāύ āĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰāĻŖাāϞ⧠āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ āĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϤাāϞিāĻা āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻāϰে। āĻāϤে ā§§ā§Ē āĻĻিāύেāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āĻুāĻি āϰā§েāĻে, āϝাāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϤিāύāĻি āĻĒā§েāĻে āϏাāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ (āĻļুāĻ্āϰāĻŦাāϰ) āĻĻিāύে।
āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āĻুāĻিāϤে āϰā§েāĻে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻ-āĻ āĻŽিāϞাāĻĻুāύ্āύāĻŦী ⧍ā§Ģ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻļāĻšীāĻĻ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āĻ āĻāύ্āϤāϰ্āĻাāϤিāĻ āĻŽাāϤৃāĻাāώা āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ⧍⧧ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻŦāĻ্āĻāĻŦāύ্āϧু āĻļেāĻ āĻŽুāĻিāĻŦুāϰ āϰāĻšāĻŽাāύেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āϏ¦াāϧীāύāϤা āĻ āĻাāϤীā§ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ⧍ā§Ŧ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻŽে āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ āĻŽে, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŦুāĻĻ্āϧ āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§Š āĻŽে, āĻুāĻŽাāϤুāϞ āĻŦিāĻĻা ⧍ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰ ⧝ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাāϤীā§ āĻļোāĻ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻāύ্āĻŽাāώ্āĻāĻŽী ā§¨ā§Ž āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻĻুāϰ্āĻাāĻĒূāĻা (āĻŦিāĻā§া āĻĻāĻļāĻŽী) ā§§ā§Ē āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšা ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻŦিāĻā§ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ āĻāĻŦং āϝীāĻļু āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽāĻĻিāύ (āĻŦā§āĻĻিāύ) ⧍ā§Ģ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ।
āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻāϞ্āĻĒāύাā§ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāĻšী āĻāĻĻেāĻļে āĻŽোāĻ āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āϏāϰāĻাāϰি āĻুāĻি āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϰā§েāĻে āĻŦাংāϞা āύāĻŦāĻŦāϰ্āώ ā§§ā§Ē āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻŦāϰাāϤ ⧍ā§Ģ āĻুāύ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻāĻĻāϰ ā§Ŧ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰেāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ ā§Ž āĻ ā§§ā§Ļ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšাāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻ ā§§ā§ āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻļুāϰা ā§§ā§Ē āύāĻে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŽুāϏāϞিāĻŽ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻĒাঁāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻি āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāϤে āĻুāĻি āύেā§া āϝাāĻŦে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻেāϰী āĻাāĻšাāϰ āϏো¤¦া ⧝ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻĢাāϤেāĻšা-āĻ āĻā§াāĻāĻĻাāĻšāĻŽ ⧍⧍ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻŽেāϰাāĻ ā§ āĻুāύ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰেāϰ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦিāϤীā§ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§§ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšাāϰ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦিāϤীā§ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ।
āĻšিāύ্āĻĻুāĻĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āϝ āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻি āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āϰā§েāĻে। āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϏāϰāϏ¦āϤী āĻĒূāĻা ā§§ā§Ģ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻļিāĻŦāϰাāϤ্āϰী āĻŦ্āϰāϤ ā§§ā§Ļ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻĻোāϞāϝাāϤ্āϰা ⧍⧠āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻšāϰিāĻাঁāĻĻ āĻ াāĻুāϰেāϰ āĻāĻŦিāϰ্āĻাāĻŦ ā§Ž āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻŽāĻšাāϞā§া ā§Ē āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻĻুāϰ্āĻাāĻĒূāĻা (āύāĻŦāĻŽী) ā§§ā§Š āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āϞāĻ্āώ্āĻŽীāĻĒূāĻা ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ āĻ āĻļ্āϝাāĻŽা āĻĒূāĻা ⧍ āύāĻে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻাāύ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϰā§েāĻে- āĻংāϰেāĻি āύāĻŦāĻŦāϰ্āώ ā§§ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻāϏ্āĻŽ ā§§ā§Š āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻĒুāĻŖ্āϝ ā§¨ā§Ž āĻĨেāĻে ā§Šā§Ļ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻāϏ্āĻাāϰ āϏাāύāĻĄে ā§Šā§§ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ āĻāĻŦং āϝীāĻļু āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽোā§āϏāĻŦ (āĻŦā§ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻāĻে āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ) ⧍ā§Ē āĻ ā§¨ā§Ŧ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŦৌāĻĻ্āϧ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻĒাঁāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϤাāϞিāĻা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāĻুāϞো āĻšāĻ্āĻে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŽাāĻী āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ⧍ā§Ģ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻৈāϤ্āϰ āϏংāĻ্āϰাāύ্āϤি ā§§ā§Š āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāώাā§ী āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ⧍⧧ āĻুāϞাāĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŽāϧু āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§§ā§Ž āϏেāĻĒ্āĻে¤¦āϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦাāϰāĻŖা āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ।
āĻāĻাā§াāĻ āϝে āĻোāύো āϏ¤āĻĒ্āϰāĻĻাā§েāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝেāĻ āĻāϰ্āĻŽāĻāϰ্āϤা āĻ āĻāϰ্āĻŽāĻাāϰী āύিāĻāϧāϰ্āĻŽ āĻ āύুāϝাā§ী āĻŦāĻāϰে āĻŽোāĻ āϤিāύ āĻĻিāύ āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻি āύিāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦেāύ।
āĻāύāĻĒ্āϰāĻļাāϏāύ āĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰāĻŖাāϞ⧠āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ āĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϤাāϞিāĻা āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻāϰে। āĻāϤে ā§§ā§Ē āĻĻিāύেāϰ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āĻুāĻি āϰā§েāĻে, āϝাāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϤিāύāĻি āĻĒā§েāĻে āϏাāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ (āĻļুāĻ্āϰāĻŦাāϰ) āĻĻিāύে।
āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āĻুāĻিāϤে āϰā§েāĻে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻ-āĻ āĻŽিāϞাāĻĻুāύ্āύāĻŦী ⧍ā§Ģ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻļāĻšীāĻĻ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āĻ āĻāύ্āϤāϰ্āĻাāϤিāĻ āĻŽাāϤৃāĻাāώা āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ⧍⧧ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻŦāĻ্āĻāĻŦāύ্āϧু āĻļেāĻ āĻŽুāĻিāĻŦুāϰ āϰāĻšāĻŽাāύেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āϏ¦াāϧীāύāϤা āĻ āĻাāϤীā§ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ⧍ā§Ŧ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻŽে āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ āĻŽে, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŦুāĻĻ্āϧ āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§Š āĻŽে, āĻুāĻŽাāϤুāϞ āĻŦিāĻĻা ⧍ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰ ⧝ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাāϤীā§ āĻļোāĻ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻāύ্āĻŽাāώ্āĻāĻŽী ā§¨ā§Ž āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻĻুāϰ্āĻাāĻĒূāĻা (āĻŦিāĻā§া āĻĻāĻļāĻŽী) ā§§ā§Ē āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšা ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻŦিāĻā§ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ ā§§ā§Ŧ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ āĻāĻŦং āϝীāĻļু āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽāĻĻিāύ (āĻŦā§āĻĻিāύ) ⧍ā§Ģ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ।
āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻāϞ্āĻĒāύাā§ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāĻšী āĻāĻĻেāĻļে āĻŽোāĻ āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āϏāϰāĻাāϰি āĻুāĻি āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϰā§েāĻে āĻŦাংāϞা āύāĻŦāĻŦāϰ্āώ ā§§ā§Ē āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻŦāϰাāϤ ⧍ā§Ģ āĻুāύ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻāĻĻāϰ ā§Ŧ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰেāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ ā§Ž āĻ ā§§ā§Ļ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšাāϰ āĻāĻেāϰ āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻ ā§§ā§ āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻļুāϰা ā§§ā§Ē āύāĻে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŽুāϏāϞিāĻŽ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻĒাঁāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻি āĻোāώāĻŖা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāϤে āĻুāĻি āύেā§া āϝাāĻŦে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻেāϰী āĻাāĻšাāϰ āϏো¤¦া ⧝ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻĢাāϤেāĻšা-āĻ āĻā§াāĻāĻĻাāĻšāĻŽ ⧍⧍ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻļāĻŦে āĻŽেāϰাāĻ ā§ āĻুāύ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻĢিāϤāϰেāϰ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦিāϤীā§ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§§ āĻ āĻাāϏ্āĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāĻĻুāϞ āĻāĻāĻšাāϰ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦিāϤীā§ āĻĻিāύ ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ।
āĻšিāύ্āĻĻুāĻĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āϝ āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻি āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āϰā§েāĻে। āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϏāϰāϏ¦āϤী āĻĒূāĻা ā§§ā§Ģ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻļিāĻŦāϰাāϤ্āϰী āĻŦ্āϰāϤ ā§§ā§Ļ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻĻোāϞāϝাāϤ্āϰা ⧍⧠āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻšāϰিāĻাঁāĻĻ āĻ াāĻুāϰেāϰ āĻāĻŦিāϰ্āĻাāĻŦ ā§Ž āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻŽāĻšাāϞā§া ā§Ē āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āĻĻুāϰ্āĻাāĻĒূāĻা (āύāĻŦāĻŽী) ā§§ā§Š āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ, āϞāĻ্āώ্āĻŽীāĻĒূāĻা ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ āĻ āĻļ্āϝাāĻŽা āĻĒূāĻা ⧍ āύāĻে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻাāύ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϰā§েāĻে- āĻংāϰেāĻি āύāĻŦāĻŦāϰ্āώ ā§§ āĻাāύুā§াāϰি, āĻāϏ্āĻŽ ā§§ā§Š āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻĒুāĻŖ্āϝ ā§¨ā§Ž āĻĨেāĻে ā§Šā§Ļ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ, āĻāϏ্āĻাāϰ āϏাāύāĻĄে ā§Šā§§ āĻŽাāϰ্āĻ āĻāĻŦং āϝীāĻļু āĻ্āϰিāϏ্āĻেāϰ āĻāύ্āĻŽোā§āϏāĻŦ (āĻŦā§ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻāĻে āĻ āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāύ) ⧍ā§Ē āĻ ā§¨ā§Ŧ āĻĄিāϏে¤¦āϰ।
āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻিāϰ āĻŦৌāĻĻ্āϧ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āĻĒাঁāĻ āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻুāĻিāϰ āϤাāϞিāĻা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāĻুāϞো āĻšāĻ্āĻে- āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŽাāĻী āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ⧍ā§Ģ āĻĢেāĻŦ্āϰুā§াāϰি, āĻৈāϤ্āϰ āϏংāĻ্āϰাāύ্āϤি ā§§ā§Š āĻāĻĒ্āϰিāϞ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻāώাā§ী āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ⧍⧧ āĻুāϞাāĻ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻŽāϧু āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§§ā§Ž āϏেāĻĒ্āĻে¤¦āϰ, āĻাঁāĻĻ āĻĻেāĻা āϏাāĻĒেāĻ্āώে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦাāϰāĻŖা āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖিāĻŽা ā§§ā§Ž āĻ āĻ্āĻোāĻŦāϰ।
āĻāĻাā§াāĻ āϝে āĻোāύো āϏ¤āĻĒ্āϰāĻĻাā§েāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝেāĻ āĻāϰ্āĻŽāĻāϰ্āϤা āĻ āĻāϰ্āĻŽāĻাāϰী āύিāĻāϧāϰ্āĻŽ āĻ āύুāϝাā§ী āĻŦāĻāϰে āĻŽোāĻ āϤিāύ āĻĻিāύ āĻāĻ্āĻিāĻ āĻুāĻি āύিāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦেāύ।
āĻāϰ্āϤিāĻ্āĻুāĻĻেāϰ āĻেāĻ ‘āĻ্āϝাāĻāϰিāύা’, āĻেāĻāĻŦা ‘āϏাāĻিāĻŦ’
Posted by bangladesh
āĻāĻ্āĻāĻ্āϰাāĻŽ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§ে āĻāϰ্āϤি āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āĻāĻŦেāĻĻāύāĻাāϰীāϰ āĻাā§āĻাā§ āĻাāϰāϤীā§ āĻāϞāĻ্āĻিāϤ্āϰ āĻ āĻ্āϰিāĻেāĻ āϤাāϰāĻাāĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāϏāĻে।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§ে āĻ āύāϞাāĻāύে āĻāϰ্āϤি āĻĒ্āϰāĻ্āϰিā§াā§ āĻাāϰিāĻāϰি āϤ্āϰুāĻিāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āύিā§ে ‘āĻ āύ্āϝāϰাāĻ’ āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰেāĻে। āĻāϰ āϏংāĻļ্āϞিāώ্āĻ āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļ āĻĒāϤ্āϰেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰিāύ্āĻ āύিāϤে āĻিā§ে āĻĻেāĻāϤে āĻĒাāĻ্āĻেāύ āύিāĻেāϰ āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻļাāĻšāϰুāĻ āĻাāύ āĻŦা āĻ্āϝাāĻāϰিāύা āĻাāĻāĻĢেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻŦāϞিāĻāĻĄ āϤাāϰāĻা āĻŦা āϏাāĻিāĻŦ āĻāϞ āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻ্āϰিāĻেāĻাāϰেāϰ āĻāĻŦি।
āύāϤুāύ āĻāϰে āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻŦা āϏংāĻļোāϧāύেāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āύা āĻĨাāĻাā§ āĻŦিāĻĒাāĻে āĻĒā§āϤে āĻšāĻ্āĻে āĻāĻ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāĻĻেāϰ। āĻĢāϞে āĻāĻ āĻāĻŦি āϏāĻŽ্āĻŦāϞিāϤ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰেāĻ āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώা āύেā§াāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻāϰāĻে āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞ⧠āĻāϰ্āϤৃāĻĒāĻ্āώ। āϤāĻŦে āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāĻĻেāϰ āϏāĻ্āĻে āĻāϰে āĻĻুāĻ āĻāĻĒি āĻĒাāϏāĻĒোāϰ্āĻ āĻāĻৃāϤিāϰ āĻāĻŦি āύিā§ে āĻāϏāϤে āĻŦāϞা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ āĻā§েāĻŦāϏাāĻāĻে ‘āĻ’ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻĢāϰāĻŽ āĻĒূāϰāĻŖ āĻāϰা āĻĒ্āϰāĻĨāĻŽ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻŽো. āϏাāĻŦ্āĻŦিāϰ āĻšোāϏেāύেāϰ āĻāύ্āϝ āĻŦāϰাāĻĻ্āĻĻ āĻšā§েāĻে ā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļā§§ āϰোāϞ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰāĻি। āϤাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āĻĻেāĻা āϝাā§ āĻļাāĻšāϰুāĻ āĻাāύেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāϰ āĻ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻŽো āĻāϞী āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻ্āϝাāĻāϰিāύা āĻাāĻāĻĢ āĻāĻŦং āĻāĻāĻ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āύুāĻাāϤ āϰাāĻŽিāĻļা āĻāĻāϰাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āϏাāĻিāĻŦ āĻāϞ āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāϏেāĻে।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ ⧝āĻি āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻিāϤেāĻ āĻ āϏংāĻ্āϝ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āĻāĻাāĻŦে āĻাāϰāϤীā§ āύাā§āĻ-āύাā§িāĻা āĻ āĻেāϞোā§াā§āĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻāϰ্āϤি āĻŦিāĻ্āĻāĻĒ্āϤিāϤে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āĻĄাāĻāύāϞোāĻĄেāϰ āύিā§āĻŽে āĻŦāϞা āĻšā§েāĻে- āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ āĻā§েāĻŦ āϏাāĻāĻ www.cu.ac.bd- āĻ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļ āĻāϰে āύিāϰ্āĻĻিāώ্āĻ āĻĒেāĻāĻে āĻিā§ে āĻāĻāĻāĻāϏāϏিāϰ āĻŦোāϰ্āĻĄ, āϰোāϞ, āĻĒাāϏেāϰ āϏাāϞ āĻ āϰেāĻিāϏ্āĻ্āϰেāĻļāύ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ āĻĻিāϤে āĻšāĻŦে। āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āϏāĻ িāĻ āĻšāϞে āĻোāĻĒāύ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ (āĻĒিāύ) āĻĻেā§া āĻšāĻŦে āĻāĻŦং āϤা āĻĻিā§ে āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āĻĄাāĻāύāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦেāύ।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§ে āĻ āύāϞাāĻāύে āĻāϰ্āϤি āĻĒ্āϰāĻ্āϰিā§াā§ āĻাāϰিāĻāϰি āϤ্āϰুāĻিāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āύিā§ে ‘āĻ āύ্āϝāϰাāĻ’ āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰেāĻে। āĻāϰ āϏংāĻļ্āϞিāώ্āĻ āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļ āĻĒāϤ্āϰেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰিāύ্āĻ āύিāϤে āĻিā§ে āĻĻেāĻāϤে āĻĒাāĻ্āĻেāύ āύিāĻেāϰ āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻļাāĻšāϰুāĻ āĻাāύ āĻŦা āĻ্āϝাāĻāϰিāύা āĻাāĻāĻĢেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻŦāϞিāĻāĻĄ āϤাāϰāĻা āĻŦা āϏাāĻিāĻŦ āĻāϞ āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻ্āϰিāĻেāĻাāϰেāϰ āĻāĻŦি।
āύāϤুāύ āĻāϰে āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻŦা āϏংāĻļোāϧāύেāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ āύা āĻĨাāĻাā§ āĻŦিāĻĒাāĻে āĻĒā§āϤে āĻšāĻ্āĻে āĻāĻ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāĻĻেāϰ। āĻĢāϞে āĻāĻ āĻāĻŦি āϏāĻŽ্āĻŦāϞিāϤ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰেāĻ āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώা āύেā§াāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻāϰāĻে āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞ⧠āĻāϰ্āϤৃāĻĒāĻ্āώ। āϤāĻŦে āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāĻĻেāϰ āϏāĻ্āĻে āĻāϰে āĻĻুāĻ āĻāĻĒি āĻĒাāϏāĻĒোāϰ্āĻ āĻāĻৃāϤিāϰ āĻāĻŦি āύিā§ে āĻāϏāϤে āĻŦāϞা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ āĻā§েāĻŦāϏাāĻāĻে ‘āĻ’ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻĢāϰāĻŽ āĻĒূāϰāĻŖ āĻāϰা āĻĒ্āϰāĻĨāĻŽ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻŽো. āϏাāĻŦ্āĻŦিāϰ āĻšোāϏেāύেāϰ āĻāύ্āϝ āĻŦāϰাāĻĻ্āĻĻ āĻšā§েāĻে ā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļā§§ āϰোāϞ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰāĻি। āϤাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āĻĻেāĻা āϝাā§ āĻļাāĻšāϰুāĻ āĻাāύেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে। āĻāϰ āĻ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻŽো āĻāϞী āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻ্āϝাāĻāϰিāύা āĻাāĻāĻĢ āĻāĻŦং āĻāĻāĻ āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āύুāĻাāϤ āϰাāĻŽিāĻļা āĻāĻāϰাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āϏাāĻিāĻŦ āĻāϞ āĻšাāϏাāύেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāϏেāĻে।
āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ ⧝āĻি āĻāĻāύিāĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻিāϤেāĻ āĻ āϏংāĻ্āϝ āĻļিāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨীāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰে āĻāĻাāĻŦে āĻাāϰāϤীā§ āύাā§āĻ-āύাā§িāĻা āĻ āĻেāϞোā§াā§āĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰা āĻšā§েāĻে।
āĻāϰ্āϤি āĻŦিāĻ্āĻāĻĒ্āϤিāϤে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āĻĄাāĻāύāϞোāĻĄেāϰ āύিā§āĻŽে āĻŦāϞা āĻšā§েāĻে- āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝাāϞā§েāϰ āĻā§েāĻŦ āϏাāĻāĻ www.cu.ac.bd- āĻ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļ āĻāϰে āύিāϰ্āĻĻিāώ্āĻ āĻĒেāĻāĻে āĻিā§ে āĻāĻāĻāĻāϏāϏিāϰ āĻŦোāϰ্āĻĄ, āϰোāϞ, āĻĒাāϏেāϰ āϏাāϞ āĻ āϰেāĻিāϏ্āĻ্āϰেāĻļāύ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ āĻĻিāϤে āĻšāĻŦে। āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āϏāĻ িāĻ āĻšāϞে āĻোāĻĒāύ āύāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ (āĻĒিāύ) āĻĻেā§া āĻšāĻŦে āĻāĻŦং āϤা āĻĻিā§ে āĻĒāϰীāĻ্āώাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻāĻŦি āĻāĻĒāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āĻĄাāĻāύāϞোāĻĄ āĻāϰāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦেāύ।
A Biman Bangladesh Airlines flight will bring the mortal remains of
Chittagong-12 (Anwara) MP and ruling Awami League Presidium Member
Akhtaruzzaman Chowdhury Babu from Singapore to Dhaka on Monday.
The 71-year-old leading entrepreneur of the port city died at Mount Elizabeth Hospital around 4:30am, his Private Secretary Borhanuddin Chowdhury Murad told bdnews24.com.
The three-time MP was the head of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on the Ministry of Textiles and Jute.
"He had long been suffering from kidney complications. He was treated in Singapore for around a month," he said.
The first namaj-e-janaza for Babu will be held at Parliament building premises. His body will be taken to Chittagong after the second namaj-e-janaza in front of the Awami League headquarters.
Three more funeral prayers will be held in Chittagong on Nov 7 – at Jamiyatul Falah National Mosque at 11am, at AJ Chowdhury ground in Patia at 12 in the noon and at Anwara High School field at 2pm. Another four namaj-e-janajas will be held at Chowdhury High School field in Hildhar in Anowara.
Babu will be buried in his family graveyard, said Murad.
The AL leader left behind his wife, three sons and three daughters.
Babu had been serving as the President of Chittagong south district unit of Awami League since 1977.
The 71-year-old leading entrepreneur of the port city died at Mount Elizabeth Hospital around 4:30am, his Private Secretary Borhanuddin Chowdhury Murad told bdnews24.com.
The three-time MP was the head of the Parliamentary Standing Committee on the Ministry of Textiles and Jute.
"He had long been suffering from kidney complications. He was treated in Singapore for around a month," he said.
The first namaj-e-janaza for Babu will be held at Parliament building premises. His body will be taken to Chittagong after the second namaj-e-janaza in front of the Awami League headquarters.
Three more funeral prayers will be held in Chittagong on Nov 7 – at Jamiyatul Falah National Mosque at 11am, at AJ Chowdhury ground in Patia at 12 in the noon and at Anwara High School field at 2pm. Another four namaj-e-janajas will be held at Chowdhury High School field in Hildhar in Anowara.
Babu will be buried in his family graveyard, said Murad.
The AL leader left behind his wife, three sons and three daughters.
Babu had been serving as the President of Chittagong south district unit of Awami League since 1977.
The Junior School Certificate (JSC) and Junior Dakhil Certificate (JSD)
examinations began on Sunday at 2,250 centres across the country.
Senior Public Relations Officer of the Ministry of Education Subodh Chandra Dhali told bdnews24.com the Bengali first paper examination began on Sunday at 10am.
A total of 1,908,365 students from 27,642 educational institutions are appearing in the exams. Of them, 1,011,503 are girls and 896,862 boys.
The Education Ministry said this year 47, 252 more students are sitting the tests than last year. A total of 1,861,113 candidates had sat the tests last year.
According to the ministry, a total of 1,553,575 candidates, 826,082 of whom are girls and 727,493 boys, are appearing for the JSC examinations.
The number is 354,790 for JDC tests, with 185,421 of them girls and 169,369 boys.
The number of irregular candidates for JSC exams is 149,392 and JDC 23,292.
JSC has 136,711 special candidates – who failed in up to three subjects last year – and JDC has 20,301 such candidates.
The examinations will also be held at seven centres abroad. A centre in Jeddah has 106 candidates, Riyadh 109, Tripoli eight, Doha 72, Abu Dhabi 39, and two centres in Dubai have 18 and 36 candidates respectively.
Ten candidates from Oman's capital Muscat will also be taking the examinations for the first time.
Question papers except for Bengali second paper, English first and second papers and mathematics will be based on creativity. Handicapped candidates will be allowed 20 minutes of extra time.
The candidates with sight disability and missing limbs will be allowed a dictation taker.
The results are supposedly to be published by December.
JSC was introduced in the country for the first time in 2010 and JDC in 2011 for eighth-graders.
Senior Public Relations Officer of the Ministry of Education Subodh Chandra Dhali told bdnews24.com the Bengali first paper examination began on Sunday at 10am.
A total of 1,908,365 students from 27,642 educational institutions are appearing in the exams. Of them, 1,011,503 are girls and 896,862 boys.
The Education Ministry said this year 47, 252 more students are sitting the tests than last year. A total of 1,861,113 candidates had sat the tests last year.
According to the ministry, a total of 1,553,575 candidates, 826,082 of whom are girls and 727,493 boys, are appearing for the JSC examinations.
The number is 354,790 for JDC tests, with 185,421 of them girls and 169,369 boys.
The number of irregular candidates for JSC exams is 149,392 and JDC 23,292.
JSC has 136,711 special candidates – who failed in up to three subjects last year – and JDC has 20,301 such candidates.
The examinations will also be held at seven centres abroad. A centre in Jeddah has 106 candidates, Riyadh 109, Tripoli eight, Doha 72, Abu Dhabi 39, and two centres in Dubai have 18 and 36 candidates respectively.
Ten candidates from Oman's capital Muscat will also be taking the examinations for the first time.
Question papers except for Bengali second paper, English first and second papers and mathematics will be based on creativity. Handicapped candidates will be allowed 20 minutes of extra time.
The candidates with sight disability and missing limbs will be allowed a dictation taker.
The results are supposedly to be published by December.
JSC was introduced in the country for the first time in 2010 and JDC in 2011 for eighth-graders.
The government on Sunday withdrew Cox's Bazar Superintendent of Police
Selim Mohammad Jahangir and attached him to Police Headquarters, nearly a
month after the communal violence at the district's Ramu upazila.
The Ministry of Home Affairs issued a circular in this regard in the afternoon. The Buddhist community leaders have been voicing their demand to withdraw Jahangir since the attack.
On Sept 29 night, religious zealots, apparently stirred by a Facebook post allegedly denigrating Islam and the Quran, attacked the Buddhist households in Ramu. They attacked, vandalised, looted and torched seven monasteries, 30 houses and shops there.
The hate attacks also spread in Cox's Bazar's Ukhia and Teknaf and Chittagong's Patia on the following day.
The locals have been accusing police of inaction since the beginning and during the attacks.
Six other police officials were also transferred across the country on Sunday. Four of them are Deputy Inspectors General (DIG) and two are SPs.
Police Headquarters Public Relations Officer Qamrul Ahsan confirmed of the transfers.
Criminal Investigation Department's (CID) Additional DIG Anwar Hossain has been promoted to police's Special Brach DIG while one of the Directors in Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) Manzur Kader Khan was made DIG in the police headquarters. OSD DIG Abdullahel Baki was made Vice Principal at the Bangladesh Police Academy in Sarda while Barisal range Additional DIG Bhanulal Das was promoted to DIG in CID.
Patuakhali SP Azad Mia replaced Selim Mohammad Jahangir as Cox's Bazar district's SP while Dhaka Telecom SP Rafiqul Hasan Khan replaced Azad.
Fifty-one top level police officials were also shuffled on Thursday.
The Ministry of Home Affairs issued a circular in this regard in the afternoon. The Buddhist community leaders have been voicing their demand to withdraw Jahangir since the attack.
On Sept 29 night, religious zealots, apparently stirred by a Facebook post allegedly denigrating Islam and the Quran, attacked the Buddhist households in Ramu. They attacked, vandalised, looted and torched seven monasteries, 30 houses and shops there.
The hate attacks also spread in Cox's Bazar's Ukhia and Teknaf and Chittagong's Patia on the following day.
The locals have been accusing police of inaction since the beginning and during the attacks.
Six other police officials were also transferred across the country on Sunday. Four of them are Deputy Inspectors General (DIG) and two are SPs.
Police Headquarters Public Relations Officer Qamrul Ahsan confirmed of the transfers.
Criminal Investigation Department's (CID) Additional DIG Anwar Hossain has been promoted to police's Special Brach DIG while one of the Directors in Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) Manzur Kader Khan was made DIG in the police headquarters. OSD DIG Abdullahel Baki was made Vice Principal at the Bangladesh Police Academy in Sarda while Barisal range Additional DIG Bhanulal Das was promoted to DIG in CID.
Patuakhali SP Azad Mia replaced Selim Mohammad Jahangir as Cox's Bazar district's SP while Dhaka Telecom SP Rafiqul Hasan Khan replaced Azad.
Fifty-one top level police officials were also shuffled on Thursday.
The second war crimes tribunal of Bangladesh on Sunday ordered the start
of the trial against Jamaat-e-Islami leader Abul Kalam Azad, better
known as 'Bachchu Razakar', on eight charges of crimes against humanity
committed during the Liberation War in 1971.
The three-judge International Crimes Tribunal–2 led by Justice ATM Fazle Kabir framed charges against Azad and set Nov 14 for witness deposition to start.
The court also threw away a plea by Azad's counsels seeking his acquittal.
The prosecution on Sept 2 had submitted former charges linking him to crimes against humanity including genocide, murder, rape, arson, loot, abduction, deportation and persecution.
Prosecutor Shahidur Rahman had said the Pakistan Army entered Faridpur on Apr 21, 1971. On that day, Azad along with the Pakistan troops murdered eight people at Faridpur's well-known Jagatbandhu Ashram and later killed Kolaron village Zamindar (landlord) Sudhanshu Mohon Roy and his son Monimoy Roy, he added.
'Bachchu Razakar' is said to have been an accomplice of Jamaat-e-Islami Secretary General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujaheed in Faridpur district during the war.
He was a member of Jamaat's student wing Islami Chhatra Sangha when he was a student of Rajendra College in Faridpur in 1971.
After Mar 25, 1971, Azad formed a group of his own which committed crimes against humanity in different places in Faridpur during the war.
The ICT-2 on Sept 9 accepted charges and ordered his arrest and production by Sept 23.
The arrest warrant for him was issued in April, police failed to find him after raids on his office and residence. He is believed to have fled to Pakistan.
The tribunal on Oct 7 decided to continue trial in Azad's absentia as he did not turn up even after public notice was issued for his appearance.
The three-judge International Crimes Tribunal–2 led by Justice ATM Fazle Kabir framed charges against Azad and set Nov 14 for witness deposition to start.
The court also threw away a plea by Azad's counsels seeking his acquittal.
The prosecution on Sept 2 had submitted former charges linking him to crimes against humanity including genocide, murder, rape, arson, loot, abduction, deportation and persecution.
Prosecutor Shahidur Rahman had said the Pakistan Army entered Faridpur on Apr 21, 1971. On that day, Azad along with the Pakistan troops murdered eight people at Faridpur's well-known Jagatbandhu Ashram and later killed Kolaron village Zamindar (landlord) Sudhanshu Mohon Roy and his son Monimoy Roy, he added.
'Bachchu Razakar' is said to have been an accomplice of Jamaat-e-Islami Secretary General Ali Ahsan Mohammad Mujaheed in Faridpur district during the war.
He was a member of Jamaat's student wing Islami Chhatra Sangha when he was a student of Rajendra College in Faridpur in 1971.
After Mar 25, 1971, Azad formed a group of his own which committed crimes against humanity in different places in Faridpur during the war.
The ICT-2 on Sept 9 accepted charges and ordered his arrest and production by Sept 23.
The arrest warrant for him was issued in April, police failed to find him after raids on his office and residence. He is believed to have fled to Pakistan.
The tribunal on Oct 7 decided to continue trial in Azad's absentia as he did not turn up even after public notice was issued for his appearance.
Meteorological Department on Sunday said there was a possibility of low
to moderate rain across Bangladesh induced by cyclone Nilam.
The Met Office in a statement released long-term forecast for November.
The statement said 17 millilitres of rain was recorded in the capital, Dhaka, until Sunday evening while the amount was 35 millilitres in Rajshahi. There was a little rain in Khulna and Barisal too.
There was a possibility that the rain could stay on for two or three more days because of Nilam.
The Met Office also expressed concern over several deep convections in the Bay of Bengal this month and said at least one of them may turn into cyclone.
An official said the winter season is likely to begin if there are at least one or two deep convections in the Bay this month.
The Met Office in a statement released long-term forecast for November.
The statement said 17 millilitres of rain was recorded in the capital, Dhaka, until Sunday evening while the amount was 35 millilitres in Rajshahi. There was a little rain in Khulna and Barisal too.
There was a possibility that the rain could stay on for two or three more days because of Nilam.
The Met Office also expressed concern over several deep convections in the Bay of Bengal this month and said at least one of them may turn into cyclone.
An official said the winter season is likely to begin if there are at least one or two deep convections in the Bay this month.
Bangladesh Television (BTV) will go on air round-the-clock from tomorrow.
BTV's News Editor Gopal Chandra Dev in a statement said terrestrial telecast, however, will continue from 7 am to 12:30 am.
Information Minister Hasanul Huq Inu will formally inaugurate the 24-hour telecast by the state-run television at 12 at BTV's Shaheed Manirul Alam auditorium.
Information Secretary Hedayetullah Al-Mamoon will be present as the special guest.
BTV's News Editor Gopal Chandra Dev in a statement said terrestrial telecast, however, will continue from 7 am to 12:30 am.
Information Minister Hasanul Huq Inu will formally inaugurate the 24-hour telecast by the state-run television at 12 at BTV's Shaheed Manirul Alam auditorium.
Information Secretary Hedayetullah Al-Mamoon will be present as the special guest.
Former President Iajuddin Ahmed has been admitted to Bangkok's Bumrungrad International Hospital in critical condition.
His son Imtiaz Ahmed Babu on Sunday night told reporters by telephone from Bangkok, "My father had undergone a surgery on Oct 28. Then his condition deteriorated following complications in kidney activities."
The 81-year-old former President has been put on life-support since then, he added.
Iajuddin's wife Prof Anwara Begum is also in Bangkok.
He was hospitalised in August last year following complaints of chest pain and was taken to Thailand for better treatment.
He was flown again to Thailand as he felt sick after returning home.
In May 2006, Iajuddin had undergone a successful heart by-pass surgery at the Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore.
A soil scientist and educationist, Iajuddin took over as President in September 2002 and served until February 2009.
He thrust himself into the charge of Chief Advisor to the caretaker government after the BNP's last tenure ended in 2006, a move which political analysts say created violent political conflict. But his caretaker administration failed to resolve the political crisis and hold elections.
Iajuddin then declared state of emergency in 2007, for which he was harshly criticised. The country was forced to go through a two-year long military rule during that time.
A former Chairman of the University Grants Commission (UGC), Iajuddin had also received the prestigious Ekushey Padak in 1995.
His son Imtiaz Ahmed Babu on Sunday night told reporters by telephone from Bangkok, "My father had undergone a surgery on Oct 28. Then his condition deteriorated following complications in kidney activities."
The 81-year-old former President has been put on life-support since then, he added.
Iajuddin's wife Prof Anwara Begum is also in Bangkok.
He was hospitalised in August last year following complaints of chest pain and was taken to Thailand for better treatment.
He was flown again to Thailand as he felt sick after returning home.
In May 2006, Iajuddin had undergone a successful heart by-pass surgery at the Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore.
A soil scientist and educationist, Iajuddin took over as President in September 2002 and served until February 2009.
He thrust himself into the charge of Chief Advisor to the caretaker government after the BNP's last tenure ended in 2006, a move which political analysts say created violent political conflict. But his caretaker administration failed to resolve the political crisis and hold elections.
Iajuddin then declared state of emergency in 2007, for which he was harshly criticised. The country was forced to go through a two-year long military rule during that time.
A former Chairman of the University Grants Commission (UGC), Iajuddin had also received the prestigious Ekushey Padak in 1995.
Search engine giant Google Inc. on Monday appointed first-ever Country Consultant for Bangladesh.
One of the global leaders in internet-related products and services, Google has assigned Kazi Monirul Kabir, a seasoned professional in trade and brand marketing, to kick-start its operations in Bangladesh.
Kabir was the Chief Communications Officer at Grameenphone and sat on the seven-strong management committee. He also left his seat on the board of GPIT, a GP subsidiary.
He did MBA from Berlin School of Creative Leadership and has worked in game-changing positions with British American Tobacco Bangladesh Co. Ltd, Banglalink GSM, Rahimafrooz Limited, to name a few.
The appointment, however, does not imply full-fledged operations of the web giant, which is already providing locally specified services in 49 countries. The time the company takes in market feasibility studies and acclimatisation varies country to country.
Kabir, who is counted among the best professionals in public relations in Bangladesh, is about to represent a company which is known to be conservative in media correspondence.
When asked for his reaction to his new job, he was succinct. "Yes I am leaving Grameenphone. I'll be serving as Country Consultant in Bangladesh for Google this month."
"I am really excited and looking forward to it," Kabir in a short message toldbdnews24.com.
Kabir has managed sales, corporate and public affairs of big organisations and is expected to face new challenges in this latest mission. Insiders say the sales of Google enterprise solutions rely largely on the e-commerce infrastructure of the country.
Google may also receive and respond to frequent calls from state bodies like BTRC in matters similar to those that arose in the wake of 'anti-Islam' video row. The controversial video is hosted, along with other similar platforms, by Youtube, the most popular video-sharing website Google has owned since 2006.
Apart from its free productivity tools – which includes popular limited storage web mail gmail.com – Google sells corporate solutions at a competitive price, which, insiders say, may influence the way independent and small enterprises are managed.
Part of the revenue Google generates is derived from offering companies search technologies. A Google establishment in Bangladesh is also expected to promote the apps market.
In recent years, Google has taken a vertical integration strategy*, for example in mobile computing, that motivated it to own the operating system and the device along with its popular Android applications.
While experts say the world may take up to 2015 to see more mobiles log on to the net than PCs, it is already the case in Bangladesh.
*Investorwords says vertical integration is the process in which several steps in the production and/or distribution of a product or service are controlled by a single company or entity, in order to increase that company's or entity's power in the marketplace.
One of the global leaders in internet-related products and services, Google has assigned Kazi Monirul Kabir, a seasoned professional in trade and brand marketing, to kick-start its operations in Bangladesh.
Kabir was the Chief Communications Officer at Grameenphone and sat on the seven-strong management committee. He also left his seat on the board of GPIT, a GP subsidiary.
He did MBA from Berlin School of Creative Leadership and has worked in game-changing positions with British American Tobacco Bangladesh Co. Ltd, Banglalink GSM, Rahimafrooz Limited, to name a few.
The appointment, however, does not imply full-fledged operations of the web giant, which is already providing locally specified services in 49 countries. The time the company takes in market feasibility studies and acclimatisation varies country to country.
Kabir, who is counted among the best professionals in public relations in Bangladesh, is about to represent a company which is known to be conservative in media correspondence.
When asked for his reaction to his new job, he was succinct. "Yes I am leaving Grameenphone. I'll be serving as Country Consultant in Bangladesh for Google this month."
"I am really excited and looking forward to it," Kabir in a short message toldbdnews24.com.
Kabir has managed sales, corporate and public affairs of big organisations and is expected to face new challenges in this latest mission. Insiders say the sales of Google enterprise solutions rely largely on the e-commerce infrastructure of the country.
Google may also receive and respond to frequent calls from state bodies like BTRC in matters similar to those that arose in the wake of 'anti-Islam' video row. The controversial video is hosted, along with other similar platforms, by Youtube, the most popular video-sharing website Google has owned since 2006.
Apart from its free productivity tools – which includes popular limited storage web mail gmail.com – Google sells corporate solutions at a competitive price, which, insiders say, may influence the way independent and small enterprises are managed.
Part of the revenue Google generates is derived from offering companies search technologies. A Google establishment in Bangladesh is also expected to promote the apps market.
In recent years, Google has taken a vertical integration strategy*, for example in mobile computing, that motivated it to own the operating system and the device along with its popular Android applications.
While experts say the world may take up to 2015 to see more mobiles log on to the net than PCs, it is already the case in Bangladesh.
*Investorwords says vertical integration is the process in which several steps in the production and/or distribution of a product or service are controlled by a single company or entity, in order to increase that company's or entity's power in the marketplace.
Biman Bangladesh Airlines' first flight carrying Hajj returnees touched
down at the Shahjalal International Airport on Wednesday.
A Boeing 747 carried the 582 pilgrims back to Dhaka at 7:15pm, Director of the flag carrier's Public Relations Department Khan Mosharraf Hossain told bdnews24.com.
Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister Mohammad Faruk Khan welcomed the Bangladeshi hajjis at the airport.
Biman will conduct 136 flights through November to return 54,179 pilgrims. According to the Biman, it will conduct the last return flight on Nov 30.
The Hajj flights were conducted from Sep 17 to Oct 20.
According to the government, a total of 110,550 Bangladeshis went to Saudi Arabia to take part in the biggest congregation of the Muslims.
Apart from Dhaka, eight Biman flights left from Chittagong and two from Sylhet for the first time.
It is using a rented Boeing 747 and two of its Boeing 777 and two DC 10s to carry the pilgrims.
The two other airlines, Saudia, the Saudi Arabian Airlines, and Saudi-approved private NAS Air started the return flights on Oct 30. NAS Air will end the flights on Nov 28 and the Saudia on Nov 30.
A Boeing 747 carried the 582 pilgrims back to Dhaka at 7:15pm, Director of the flag carrier's Public Relations Department Khan Mosharraf Hossain told bdnews24.com.
Civil Aviation and Tourism Minister Mohammad Faruk Khan welcomed the Bangladeshi hajjis at the airport.
Biman will conduct 136 flights through November to return 54,179 pilgrims. According to the Biman, it will conduct the last return flight on Nov 30.
The Hajj flights were conducted from Sep 17 to Oct 20.
According to the government, a total of 110,550 Bangladeshis went to Saudi Arabia to take part in the biggest congregation of the Muslims.
Apart from Dhaka, eight Biman flights left from Chittagong and two from Sylhet for the first time.
It is using a rented Boeing 747 and two of its Boeing 777 and two DC 10s to carry the pilgrims.
The two other airlines, Saudia, the Saudi Arabian Airlines, and Saudi-approved private NAS Air started the return flights on Oct 30. NAS Air will end the flights on Nov 28 and the Saudia on Nov 30.
RAB investigators spoke to Mahir Sarowar Megh, the only son of slain
journalist couple Sagar Sarowar and Meherun Runi, for around three and a
half hours on Wednesday.
Megh went to the headquarters of the elite force at Uttara with his maternal uncle Nawsher Roman around 1pm.
"We've tried to gather information by speaking with him that may help the investigation," RAB spokesperson Commander M Suhail told reporters.
He said it was not an 'interrogation' in any way. "Megh had come to the RAB headquarters earlier as well. But it was the first time we formally requested his uncle to bring him for the sake of the case."
On the Feb 11 night when his parents were killed at their house at Rajabazar, Megh was at home.
The government arrested seven suspects, most of who have already been charged with killing a doctor.
Megh's uncle Roman, who had filed the case over the murders, said the child appeared to be annoyed and initially expressed anger several times once they were in the RAB headquarters.
"Later he became normal. But the investigation officer could not ask him any question as he was always busy playing around," he said.
Journalists have been demonstrating for arrest of the killers of Sagar and Runi since the murders. The then Home Minister, Shahara Khatun, had pledged to capture the killers within 48 hours but the police failed to deliver. The case was transferred to the RAB later.
The new Home Minister, Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, said on Oct 9 that eight of the killers of Sagar and Runi have been identified and seven of them have been arrested.
The journalists termed his findings vague as he did not speak about the link among the accused, who are from separate places.
Megh went to the headquarters of the elite force at Uttara with his maternal uncle Nawsher Roman around 1pm.
"We've tried to gather information by speaking with him that may help the investigation," RAB spokesperson Commander M Suhail told reporters.
He said it was not an 'interrogation' in any way. "Megh had come to the RAB headquarters earlier as well. But it was the first time we formally requested his uncle to bring him for the sake of the case."
On the Feb 11 night when his parents were killed at their house at Rajabazar, Megh was at home.
The government arrested seven suspects, most of who have already been charged with killing a doctor.
Megh's uncle Roman, who had filed the case over the murders, said the child appeared to be annoyed and initially expressed anger several times once they were in the RAB headquarters.
"Later he became normal. But the investigation officer could not ask him any question as he was always busy playing around," he said.
Journalists have been demonstrating for arrest of the killers of Sagar and Runi since the murders. The then Home Minister, Shahara Khatun, had pledged to capture the killers within 48 hours but the police failed to deliver. The case was transferred to the RAB later.
The new Home Minister, Mohiuddin Khan Alamgir, said on Oct 9 that eight of the killers of Sagar and Runi have been identified and seven of them have been arrested.
The journalists termed his findings vague as he did not speak about the link among the accused, who are from separate places.
Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) Chairman Ghulam Rahman on Wednesday
said their investigation into the alleged corruption in the Padma bridge
project was on the right track.
"Regarding overall investigation into the Padma bridge graft, we want to say that everything is under control and things are going in the right way," he told reporters at the ACC headquarters.
Leaving no 'loophole' the inquiry is going on with maximum alertness, he added.
Some officials of the Integrity Department of the World Bank raised graft allegations in the country's largest-ever infrastructure development project in September last year.
The development partner wanted the government to send on leave all the government officials relating to the project.
As the government failed to meet the conditions, the multinational global lender cancelled its credit for the $2.9 billion project on June 29, saying it had credible evidence of a corruption conspiracy involving Bangladeshi officials, executives of Canadian engineering giant SNC-Lavalin and some private individuals.
It set several conditions to revive its pledged $1.2 billion loan.
Later, former Communications Minister Syed Abul Hossain stepped down while former Bridges Division Secretary Mosharraf Hossain was sent on leave. Prime Minister's Economic Affairs Advisor Mashiur Rahman who was the Integrity Advisor to the Padma bridge project went on leave in mid-September.
The multinational lender, which decided to revive its loan commitment on Sep 21 after the Bangladesh government agreed to its terms and conditions, appointed an external panel early this month to oversee the ACC investigation.
The three-member panel in mid-October visited Dhaka and held several meetings with the top ACC officials. The World Bank's second team will arrive early in November to work out the procurement modalities of the project.
ACC Commissioner M Sahabuddin told reporters on Oct 15 that the World Bank had assured the ACC of helping in quizzing former SNC-Lavalin executives Ramesh Shah and Mohammad Ismail who are now languishing in jail after being arrested by the Canadian police.
The first World Bank team asked the ACC to provide it with necessary documents on the investigation, but the ACC sought time to provide those. The antigraft watchdog on Oct 23 sent the documents, information and data to the panel.
ACC chief Rahman on Wednesday said that they are yet to receive any feedback from the external panel.
"But we're in constant communication with them. They may send information anytime,' he added.
"Regarding overall investigation into the Padma bridge graft, we want to say that everything is under control and things are going in the right way," he told reporters at the ACC headquarters.
Leaving no 'loophole' the inquiry is going on with maximum alertness, he added.
Some officials of the Integrity Department of the World Bank raised graft allegations in the country's largest-ever infrastructure development project in September last year.
The development partner wanted the government to send on leave all the government officials relating to the project.
As the government failed to meet the conditions, the multinational global lender cancelled its credit for the $2.9 billion project on June 29, saying it had credible evidence of a corruption conspiracy involving Bangladeshi officials, executives of Canadian engineering giant SNC-Lavalin and some private individuals.
It set several conditions to revive its pledged $1.2 billion loan.
Later, former Communications Minister Syed Abul Hossain stepped down while former Bridges Division Secretary Mosharraf Hossain was sent on leave. Prime Minister's Economic Affairs Advisor Mashiur Rahman who was the Integrity Advisor to the Padma bridge project went on leave in mid-September.
The multinational lender, which decided to revive its loan commitment on Sep 21 after the Bangladesh government agreed to its terms and conditions, appointed an external panel early this month to oversee the ACC investigation.
The three-member panel in mid-October visited Dhaka and held several meetings with the top ACC officials. The World Bank's second team will arrive early in November to work out the procurement modalities of the project.
ACC Commissioner M Sahabuddin told reporters on Oct 15 that the World Bank had assured the ACC of helping in quizzing former SNC-Lavalin executives Ramesh Shah and Mohammad Ismail who are now languishing in jail after being arrested by the Canadian police.
The first World Bank team asked the ACC to provide it with necessary documents on the investigation, but the ACC sought time to provide those. The antigraft watchdog on Oct 23 sent the documents, information and data to the panel.
ACC chief Rahman on Wednesday said that they are yet to receive any feedback from the external panel.
"But we're in constant communication with them. They may send information anytime,' he added.
Bangladesh may import gas from neighbouring India through Siliguri-Rangpur route to cope with the increasing gas crisis.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Indian High Commissioner Pankaj Saran to Bangladesh discussed the possibility of gas import on Tuesday as the latter called on her at her office.
PM's Press Secretary Abul Kalam Azad briefed reporters about the issues discussed at the meeting.
About 250MW power could be imported from northeastern Indian state Meghalaya through Sylhet, Azad said.
The High Commissioner conveyed to Hasina Eid greetings from the Indian President and the Prime Minister.
The meeting also discussed touched upon issues like border demarcation in line with the Indira-Mujib treaty and implementation of the US $1-billion given to Bangladesh as credit.
Ambassador-at-Large M Ziauddin was also present during the call-on.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Indian High Commissioner Pankaj Saran to Bangladesh discussed the possibility of gas import on Tuesday as the latter called on her at her office.
PM's Press Secretary Abul Kalam Azad briefed reporters about the issues discussed at the meeting.
About 250MW power could be imported from northeastern Indian state Meghalaya through Sylhet, Azad said.
The High Commissioner conveyed to Hasina Eid greetings from the Indian President and the Prime Minister.
The meeting also discussed touched upon issues like border demarcation in line with the Indira-Mujib treaty and implementation of the US $1-billion given to Bangladesh as credit.
Ambassador-at-Large M Ziauddin was also present during the call-on.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)



