Fourteen long years have passed, yet the haunting image of Felani Khatun’s lifeless body hanging from the barbed fence at the India-Bangladesh border lingers in the nation’s collective memory.
The U-loops on Dhaka’s Airport Road might be a perfect example of how public money is spent on arbitrary projects.
At first glance, it looked like piles of trash jumbled together.
The first phone call which awoke Biplop Chandra Baddya on Friday, right after lunch, may have been the most life-changing one he had ever received.
Sattya Prashad Das spent his whole life teaching religious education and humanity to his students, irrespective of religions and caste in his locality in Bhola’s Borhanuddin upazila.
Fourteen long years have passed, yet the haunting image of Felani Khatun’s lifeless body hanging from the barbed fence at the India-Bangladesh border lingers in the nation’s collective memory.
The U-loops on Dhaka’s Airport Road might be a perfect example of how public money is spent on arbitrary projects.
At first glance, it looked like piles of trash jumbled together.
Sattya Prashad Das spent his whole life teaching religious education and humanity to his students, irrespective of religions and caste in his locality in Bhola’s Borhanuddin upazila.
The first phone call which awoke Biplop Chandra Baddya on Friday, right after lunch, may have been the most life-changing one he had ever received.