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News from Bangladesh-Updates and Discussion

Bangladesh Border Guards seize 400 rare birds

The Bangladesh Border Guards (BGB) yesterday seized 400 rare Bangladeshi birds at Chhoto Achra intersection before being smuggled into India. Acting on a tip-off, a BGB team conducted a raid at a private transport office in Chhoto Achra and seized the Team Parade birds worth about 2mn taka.

The seized birds were handed over to Animal Resource Department in Jessore district. Earlier, a flock of birds, smuggled from Bangladesh, were seized near the border. But the men who were carrying them slipped away.

More than 500 species, including Badrika, Kokateel and Prince, were rescued near Petrapol in North 24-Parganas. “These birds are not found in India. We will hand them over to the Alipore zoo authorities next week,” said sources quoting the Indian border guards.




- Google the head line.
 
Bangladesh and the Netherlands to share flood research

01 Aug 2011 10:19

Source: Content partner // SciDev.Net - Syful Islam



[DHAKA] Flood-prone Bangladesh and the Netherlands are planning to exchange research findings and share experience on managing floods, which are projected to worsen because of climate change.

Floods wreak havoc in Bangladesh every year. Last week's floods killed at least four people and stranded an estimated 20,000, according to the Associated Press.

A five-year research programme worth €700,000 (US$1 million) will aim to strengthen the capacity of institutions and communities to deal with moderate and extreme floods. The programme was announced last month (27 June) and will be hosted by the Wageningen University and the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology.

It will allow the scientists to share experiences and come up with a framework that will link disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation and flood management. Funds will go towards four PhD research projects that will analyse flood policies and strategies in the two countries, and one project aimed at putting research findings into practice though local workshops.

So far, both countries have had mixed experiences with building embankments on coastal deltas to reclaim low-lying land.

Bangladesh's coast is a flat plain into which sediment-laden rivers drain. Engineers built embankments to keep seawater out of the deltas and to protect against storm surges, Shah Alam Khan, professor at the Institute of

Water and Flood Management and a co-leader of the new programme, told SciDev.Net.

But the embankments stopped rain water draining out, causing heavy waterlogging. Local communities eventually started breaking open the embankments to let the accumulated water out. This community-driven process was later adopted as government policy.

"The consequences of the polder [land protected by an embankment] system were not considered when the technology was adopted," Khan said. "Tidal flooding is a natural process in Bangladesh which was barred through [setting up] polders, leaving the overall ecosystem of the area in a dire state."

Large parts of the Netherlands are below the sea level and are also protected by embankments. But there, too, the embankments caused drainage problems as the land got silted up.

To solve the problem, the Netherlands adopted policies on river management by cutting embankments to allow tidal flooding for up to five years. This helped drain out excess water.

Khan said that engineers' efforts on tidal management have not yielded uniform results in all areas, and exchanging knowledge with the Netherlands could help them improve river management.

The research project dubbed 'Communities and institutions for flood resilience: enhancing knowledge and capacity to manage flood risk in the Bangladeshi and Dutch Deltas'', is funded by WOTRO, a Dutch funding organisation for research on global issues.
 
Bangladesh and the Netherlands to share flood research

01 Aug 2011 10:19

Source: Content partner // SciDev.Net - Syful Islam



[DHAKA] Flood-prone Bangladesh and the Netherlands are planning to exchange research findings and share experience on managing floods, which are projected to worsen because of climate change.

Floods wreak havoc in Bangladesh every year. Last week's floods killed at least four people and stranded an estimated 20,000, according to the Associated Press.

A five-year research programme worth €700,000 (US$1 million) will aim to strengthen the capacity of institutions and communities to deal with moderate and extreme floods. The programme was announced last month (27 June) and will be hosted by the Wageningen University and the Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology.

It will allow the scientists to share experiences and come up with a framework that will link disaster risk reduction, climate change adaptation and flood management. Funds will go towards four PhD research projects that will analyse flood policies and strategies in the two countries, and one project aimed at putting research findings into practice though local workshops.

So far, both countries have had mixed experiences with building embankments on coastal deltas to reclaim low-lying land.

Bangladesh's coast is a flat plain into which sediment-laden rivers drain. Engineers built embankments to keep seawater out of the deltas and to protect against storm surges, Shah Alam Khan, professor at the Institute of

Water and Flood Management and a co-leader of the new programme, told SciDev.Net.

But the embankments stopped rain water draining out, causing heavy waterlogging. Local communities eventually started breaking open the embankments to let the accumulated water out. This community-driven process was later adopted as government policy.

"The consequences of the polder [land protected by an embankment] system were not considered when the technology was adopted," Khan said. "Tidal flooding is a natural process in Bangladesh which was barred through [setting up] polders, leaving the overall ecosystem of the area in a dire state."

Large parts of the Netherlands are below the sea level and are also protected by embankments. But there, too, the embankments caused drainage problems as the land got silted up.

To solve the problem, the Netherlands adopted policies on river management by cutting embankments to allow tidal flooding for up to five years. This helped drain out excess water.

Khan said that engineers' efforts on tidal management have not yielded uniform results in all areas, and exchanging knowledge with the Netherlands could help them improve river management.

The research project dubbed 'Communities and institutions for flood resilience: enhancing knowledge and capacity to manage flood risk in the Bangladeshi and Dutch Deltas'', is funded by WOTRO, a Dutch funding organisation for research on global issues.

Good... this annual flood and cyclone hampering our economical growth a lot. who will provide fund for the research?? both Govt??
 
Bangladesh Border Guards seize 400 rare birds

The Bangladesh Border Guards (BGB) yesterday seized 400 rare Bangladeshi birds at Chhoto Achra intersection before being smuggled into India. Acting on a tip-off, a BGB team conducted a raid at a private transport office in Chhoto Achra and seized the Team Parade birds worth about 2mn taka.

The seized birds were handed over to Animal Resource Department in Jessore district. Earlier, a flock of birds, smuggled from Bangladesh, were seized near the border. But the men who were carrying them slipped away.

More than 500 species, including Badrika, Kokateel and Prince, were rescued near Petrapol in North 24-Parganas. “These birds are not found in India. We will hand them over to the Alipore zoo authorities next week,” said sources quoting the Indian border guards.




- Google the head line.
If BGB seized them,how come they coming to Alipore zoo?
 
If BGB seized them,how come they coming to Alipore zoo?

they are not talking about same birds. BGB seized 400 birds. and Birds of more than 500 species were rescued in INDIA
 
A photo of the Shahbagh area in Dhaka :
di-L3VN.jpg

Photo shot by : Ershad Ahmed


Related photos in posts # 145, # 146 and # 147 of another thread
 
PM Hasina orders road repair before Eid

Aug 16th, 2011

Dhaka, Aug 16 (bdnews24.com) — Prime minister Sheikh Hasina has ordered the communications ministry to repair all damaged roads and start state-run BRTC bus services from the capital to all districts before Eid-ul-Fitr.

She also ordered the finance ministry to allocate sufficient money for the repair works, her press secretary told reporters on Tuesday after a meeting where communications minister Syed Abul Hossain presented a report on the activities and achievements of the ministry.

Eid-ul-Fitr, the largest religious festival in predominately Muslim Bangladesh, falls on Aug 31 or Sept 1 depending on moon-sight.

Officials of the communications ministry informed the prime minister that 300 Bangladesh Road Transport Corporation (BRTC) buses are ready to run on the roads, Azad said.

They said the most of the damaged roads have already been repaired and condition of the others would be restored immediately, the press secretary said.

Bus owners have enforced a transport strike on 13 routes, including Dhaka-Mymensingh and Dhaka-Tangail, demanding renovation of the highway to make them fit for running the vehicles.

The prime minister asked for a report on the expenditure in the sector during 2001-06 BNP-led four-party alliance government, 2007-08 caretaker government and last two and a half years of the present government when the communications ministry officials said the roads inherited the damage, Azad said.

He said Hasina expressed her satisfaction over the activities of the ministry during the present government's tenure.

Finance minister A M A Muhith and the communications minister on Sunday fiercely argued at a cabinet meeting in presence of the prime minister as she wanted explanation from Abul over the current status of the roads and the deaths of filmmaker Tareque Masud and journalist Mishuk Munier and three others in a road crash on Saturday.

Prime minister's advisors H T Imam and Mashiur Rahman, finance secretary Mohammad Tareq and communications secretary Mozammel Haque Khan, among others, were present at the Tuesday meeting.
 
An old postcard showing the Chhoto Katra gatehouse of Old Dhaka, built during the 16th century :

121429.jpg

121429a.jpg


(two images)
 
An old postcard showing the Mohammadpur area of Dhaka city, photo shot probably during 1958-59 (this road was formerly known as Ayub Avenue) :
1344.jpg


1000 × 630
 
An old postcard showing an area of Dhaka, probably near University or Mohammadpur, photo shot during the 1950's :
1344.jpg


1000 × 630

Ah, those days. So clean, empty and open :D

I heard Chittagong used to a very beautiful city.
 
Christians in Bangladesh Cleared of Charge of Offending Muslims


Workers at free health clinic exonerated after what lawyer calls police harassment.
LOS ANGELES, August 15 (CDN)


A court in Bangladesh on Thursday (Aug. 11) exonerated two Christians along with four Muslim friends accused of “hurting religious sensibility.”

Nurul Islam, another Christian and their Muslim friends were cleared of the charge after police failed to provide documentation of any evidence against them, an attorney said.

In March Christians under the direction of the Way of Peace movement had arranged a two-day health camp offering free treatment to poor villagers in Damurhuda area in Chuadanga district, some 210 kilometers (126 miles) northwest of Dhaka.

Around 100 villagers attended the camp for free treatment the first day, March 23, and a Japanese doctor treated them. But two of the Christian organizers and their Muslim friends were arrested on March 24 under Section 54 of the penal code, a special power granted to police to arrest anyone on any suspicion.

They were released on bail three days later. Police are required to submit a primary investigation report within 15 days of the beginning of prosecution, and when they failed to do so, the Christians were released at a hearing on April 10. Police again filed a case on April 13, however, charging them with “hurting religious feelings” of area Muslims after a foreign doctor offered Bibles to patients at a health camp.

The Japanese volunteer doctor offered Christian leaflets and Bibles to the patients, telling them they were under no obligation to take the literature, Christian said. The foreign doctor was not named in either of the cases.

Lawyer Aksijul Islam Ratan told Compass that police had harassed his clients from the beginning, saying officers rather than any known victim filed the case as plaintiff.

“It was a very complicated case, as neither any individual nor any group filed the case,” Ratan said. “But the accusations from the government side against the Christians were baseless, so the honorable court exonerated them.”

The Christians were accused of distributing leaflets to convert poor Muslims, thus allegedly hurting the religious feelings of those in the area, said Ratan.

“The police harassed them from the very beginning, and what the police did was excessive,” he said. “Again police could not show relevant documents regarding their charge. So the honorable court did not take the charge into cognizance and discharged my clients.”

7723.jpg


Islam told Compass that justice was done in the face of police hostility against him and the others.

“We got proper justice twice from the court,” he said.

The Bangladeshi constitution provides for freedom to propagate one’s religion subject to law, but authorities and communities often object to efforts to convert people from Islam, according to the U.S. Department of State’s 2010 International Religious Freedom Report.

Bangladesh is the world’s third-largest Muslim-majority nation, with Muslims making up 89 percent of its population of 164.4 million, according to Operation World. Christians are less than 1 percent of the total, and Hindus 9 percent.

The Pew Research Centre’s Forum on Religion and Public Life, a private U.S. research group, said government restrictions and public hostility involving religion grew in some of the most populous countries from mid-2006 to mid-2009. Besides Pakistan, the countries most restrictive or hostile towards certain religions included India, Indonesia, Egypt, Iran, China, Myanmar, Russia,Turkey, Vietnam, Nigeria and Bangladesh – although most of these did not show much change in the three years, according to the Pew report.

END

Christians in Bangladesh Cleared of Charge of Offending Muslims
 

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