Search
1 to 10 out of 85
Results
Student protests in Bangladesh over the state's job quota system have led to violent crackdowns, but the movement still has life, writes M. Niaz Asadullah.
The love for the Argentine football team runs deep in India and Bangladesh, writes Ali Abbas Ahmadi, where fans have been obsessed with the sky-blue-and-whites for decades.
Trapped in inhumane camps and unable to return to their homes, Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh are the victims of state violence and increasingly hostile conditions from the country that once welcomed them so openly, writes Tasnima Uddin.
Bangladesh has entered a new era, celebrating independence from Hasina's regime. Its future now rests in the hands of its students, writes Shamim Chowdhury.
Comment: Bangladesh is enlisting Saudi Arabia's help to help counter militant Islam, but the Gulf kingdom has yet to end to its own multiple ultra-conservative practices, writes James M. Dorsey.
One of the largest influxes ever of Rohingya Muslims into Bangladesh has forced Doctors Without Borders (MSF) to upscale provision of medical care to wounded and malnourished Myanmar refugees.
Among the 600,000 Rohingya Muslims who have fled violence in Myanmar for neighbouring Bangladesh, many have fallen prey to traffickers, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM).
Comment: Members of the Rohingya ethnic group who have already fled to Bangladesh are refugees, and should be recognised as such, writes paediatrician John Kahler.
Of the 520,000 Rohingya Muslims who have fled to Bangladesh in recent weeks over 290,000 are children, haunted by the horrors they have witnessed.
In northern Syria, where the aftershocks of the earthquake compound the devastation of war, humanitarian interventions are a lifeline, writes Imran Ahmed.