SAFF Women’s Champs: .Bangladesh team leaves for Nepal Saturday

A 34-member Bangladesh Women’s Football team will leave here for Nepal on Saturday to compete in the seven-nation SAFF Women’s Championship’ 2022 beginning in Kathmandu on Tuesday( Sept 6).

Bangladesh team was placed in tough Group A along with giant India, Maldives and Pakistan while Group B team comprises hosts Nepal, Sri Lanka and Bhutan.

Experienced booter Sabina Khatun was made the captain of the Bangladesh national women’s football team consisting of 23 booters and eleven officials, while Maria Manda made her deputy.

BFF officials disclosed the details of the meet at a press conference at the BFF conference room Thursday afternoon.

FIFA council member, AFC and BFF member Mahfuza Akhter Kiron, Bangladesh team leader Zakir Hossain Chowdhury, team manager Amirul Islam Babu ‘Head Coach Golam Rabbani Choton and captain Sabina Khatun, among others, were present at the Conference.

Hosts Nepal will play Bhutan in the opening day’s lone match at 5:30 pm at the Dasharath Stadium in Kathmandu.

Bangladesh will start their campaign taking on the Maldives on Wednesday (Sept 7) at 5:30 pm while two arch-rivals India and Pakistan will meet each other in the day’s other match at 1pm.

In the remaining group matches, Bangladesh will face Pakistan on Sept 10 at 1pm and will meet India on Sept 13 at 5:30 pm.

On completion of group matches, top two teams from each of the groups will play in the semifinals on Sept 16.

The final match will held on Sept 19 at 5 pm.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Asia Cup: Bangladesh bat first against Sri Lanka

Dhaka, Sept 1 (UNB) — Bangladesh lost the toss and were sent to bat first in their make-or-break clash against Sri Lanka in the ongoing Asia Cup Thursday.

The Tigers made three changes to their playing XI.

Anamul Haque Bijoy, Mohammad Naim and Mohammad Saifuddin were rested to pave way for Sabbir Rahman, Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Ebadot Hossain.

Bangladesh lost their first match against Afghanistan by seven wickets where Bijoy and Naim failed to impress.

Sabbir is making a comeback to T20s after three years.

The winners of today’s match will qualify for the Super 4. Afghanistan already booked a place in the next phase, beating both Sri Lanka and Bangladesh in their first two matches.

Bangladesh (Playing XI)

Sabbir Rahman, Mushfiqur Rahim (w), Shakib Al Hasan(c), Afif Hossain, Mahmudullah, Mosaddek Hossain, Mahedi Hasan, Taskin Ahmed, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Mustafizur Rahman, and Ebadot Hossain

Sri Lanka (Playing XI)

Pathum Nissanka, Kusal Mendis (w), Charith Asalanka, Danushka Gunathilaka, Bhanuka Rajapaksa, Wanindu Hasaranga, Dasun Shanaka(c), Chamika Karunaratne, Maheesh Theekshana, Dilshan Madushanka, and Asitha Fernando

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Bangladesh bow out of Asia Cup, lose to Sri Lanka

Sri Lanka won a thriller chasing 184 and knocked Bangladesh out of the ongoing Asia Cup Thursday night in the UAE.

Put in to bat first, Bangladesh scored 183 and Sri Lanka chased it down with three balls to play and two wickets to spare.

Kusal Mendis (60 off 37) and captain Dasun Shanaka (45 off 33) led the Lankans to the next phase of the tournament.

In the last four overs, Sri Lanka needed 43 runs with Shanaka and Karunaratne at the crease. Mustafizur Rahman gave away 9 runs in the 17th over, and Mahedi Hasan also conceded as many runs in the 18th.

Eabadot Hossain, who bagged three wickets in the match, conceded 17 runs in the 19th over. In the last over, Mahedi failed to defend eight runs.

Earlier, Bangladesh scored 183-7. Afif Hossain, Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Mosaddek Hossain helped the Tigers post a total that they could defend.

Bangladesh changed their opening pair in the match, dropping Anamul Haque Bijoy and Mohammad Naim and paving the way for Mehidy Hasan Miraz and Sabbir Rahman.

The plan worked for the Tigers. However, Sabbir failed to impress despite hitting a four off the first ball he faced in international cricket after a break of three years.

Mehidy scored 38 off 26 balls with two sixes and two fours and Bangladesh scored 55-1 – the highest powerplay total in the ongoing Asia Cup so far.

After Sabbir fell, Mushfiqur Rahim failed once again (4 off 5).

Shakib scored 21 off 22 with three fours and completed 6,000 runs in T20s – both international and domestic.

In the first 10 overs, Bangladesh scored 85-3. In the next five overs, their score stood at 123-4.

Afif anchored Bangladesh during the middle overs. Before falling prey to Dilshan Madushanka, he scored 39 off 22 balls with four fours and two sixes. In the fifth wicket stand, Afif and Mahmudullah Riyad added 57 runs off 37 balls.

In the last five overs, Bangladesh scored 60 runs. Mosaddek scored 29 off 9 balls with four fours. Taskin Ahmed scored 11 off six balls with a six.

For Sri Lanka, Hasaranga and Chamika Karunaratne scalped two wickets each.

With this win, Sri Lanka qualified for the next phase of the Asia Cup as the second team after Afghanistan from Group B.

Bangladesh ended their Asia Cup campaign without a win.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

All export-oriented industries should get equal facilities: Salman F Rahman

Salman F. Rahman, adviser on the private sector to the Prime Minister and one of the country’s leading businessmen, has said all export-oriented industries should get similar facilities to meet the objective of export diversification.

Salman, also a first-time MP, was speaking as the chief guest at a webinar organized by the think-tank Policy Research Institute (PRI) on improving export trade facilities.

The Prime Minister’s private industry and investment adviser admitted that there is a problem with bureaucracy. Although the bureaucratic mentality in the administration has changed at the highest level, at the ground level it still remains the same. Every export-oriented sector can be improved if the bureaucratic complexities are reformed, he said.

“I always say that everything was confined to high-level bureaucracy earlier. But now the problem has been reduced. There is a positive mental change at the highest levels of the bureaucracy. However, problems remain at the lower level and field level,” said Salman.

The National Board of Revenue (NBR) and Commerce Ministry are working on these challenges to improve the business environment, he said.

“We have to change the mindset of the bureaucracy at the field level. We all have to think about the geopolitical situation, how it is affecting the supply chain,” he added.

Salman also focused on increasing the capacity of ports for increasing export opportunities.

He said, “The capacity of Chittagong Port will be further increased. It is being worked on. Work is underway on the proposed deep sea port in the Matarbari area of Cox’s Bazar district. It will be constructed as a full-fledged commercial port by expanding the coal-carrying jetty.”

Once these are done, exports can be further increased, he said.

State Minister for Planning Shamsul Alam also participated in the webinar. PRI Executive Director Ahsan H. Mansur, Chairman Dr Zaidi Sattar, Policy Exchange Chairman Dr M Masrur Riaz, IFC Manager Selma Rasavac, NBR Member (Customs Audit) Dr Abdul Mannan Sikder, Additional commerce secretary Hafizur Rahman, former president of BKMEA Fazlul Haque, CEO of Standard Chartered Bank Enamul Hoque, Country Manager of IFC Martin Holtmann among others, also joined the program.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

No bar to implementing wage board once case is disposed: Hasan Mahmud

Information and Broadcasting Minister Dr Hasan Mahmud on Wednesday said there will be no barrier to implementing the wage board for journalists once a case related to the wage board is disposed.

“I think the barrier in implementing the wage board will be removed if the case related to the wage board is vacated,” Hasan said.

The minister said this at a discussion organized by Dhaka Union of Journalists at the National Press Club in the capital.

Regarding the amendment to the Press Council Act, Hasan Mahmud, also joint secretary of the ruling Awami League, said members of the Press Council are journalists and the proposal for the amendment of the Council Act is placed by the Press Council.

In the amendment, the Press Council will be empowered to impose fine upto highest Tk 5 lakh to the journalists who will violate rules and regulations, he said.

He further said the amendment increases the power of the Press Council to impose fines, though press councils of England and India have power to fine more than Tk 5 lakh.

The minister said that the concerned ministry didn’t file the case. The newspaper owners, journalists and representatives of journalist organizations will have to take care of it, he added.

Bangladesh Federal Union of Journalists (BFUJ) President Omar Faruque, Journalists Welfare Trust Managing Director Subhash Chanda Badal, JPC President Farida Yesmin, BFUJ former President Manjurul Ahsan Bulbul and former Secretary General Abdul Jalil Bhuiyan, among others, addressed the discussion.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Fire breaks out at DNCC building

A fire broke out at the Dhaka North City Corporation (DNCC) office building in the capital on Thursday, officials said.

Fortunately, no casualties were reported.

The blaze began at the electrical control room located next to the elevator on the seventh floor of the building around 7.15am.

On information, three fire tenders were pressed into the service and the blaze was brought under control around 8.15am, said Makbul Hossain, public relations officer, DNCC.

“The exact cause of the fire will be known after an investigation,” he said.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

N. Korea may send workers to Russian-occupied east Ukraine

As the war in Ukraine stretches into its seventh month, North Korea is hinting at its interest in sending construction workers to help rebuild Russian-occupied territories in the country’s east.

The idea is openly endorsed by senior Russian officials and diplomats, who foresee a cheap and hard-working workforce that could be thrown into the “most arduous conditions,” a term Russia’s ambassador to North Korea used in a recent interview.

North Korea’s ambassador to Moscow recently met with envoys from two Russia-backed separatist territories in the Donbas region of Ukraine and expressed optimism about cooperation in the “field of labor migration,” citing his country’s easing pandemic border controls.

The talks came after North Korea in July became the only nation aside from Russia and Syria to recognize the independence of the territories, Donetsk and Luhansk, further aligning with Russia over the conflict in Ukraine.

The employment of North Korean workers in Donbas would clearly run afoul of U.N. Security Council sanctions imposed on the North over its nuclear and missile programs and further complicate the U.S.-led international push for its nuclear disarmament.

Many experts doubt North Korea will send workers while the war remains in flux, with a steady flow of Western weapons helping Ukraine to push back against much larger Russian forces.

But they say it’s highly likely North Korea will supply labor to Donbas when the fighting eases to boost its own economy, broken by years of U.S.-led sanctions, pandemic border closures and decades of mismanagement.

The labor exports would also contribute to a longer-term North Korean strategy of strengthening cooperation with Russia and China, another ideological ally, in an emerging partnership aimed at reducing U.S. influence in Asia.

Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin has said that North Korean construction companies have already offered to help rebuild war-torn areas in Donbas, and that North Korean workers would be welcomed if they come.

That’s a clear break from Russia’s position in December 2017, when it backed new U.N. Security Council sanctions, imposed on North Korea for testing an intercontinental ballistic missile, requiring member states to expel all North Korean workers from their territories within 24 months.

Russia now seems eager to undercut those sanctions as it faces a U.S.-led pressure campaign aimed at isolating its economy over its aggression in Ukraine, said Lim Soo-ho, a senior analyst at the Institute for National Security Strategy, a think tank run by South Korea’s spy agency.

“For Russia, the idea of employing North Korean workers for postwar rebuilding has real merit,” Lim said. “Large numbers of North Korean construction workers came to Russia in previous years, and demand for their labor was strong because they were cheap and known for quality work.”

Before the 2017 sanctions, labor exports were a rare legitimate source of foreign currency for North Korea, bringing hundreds of millions of dollars a year to the government.

Read:UN inspectors head to Ukraine nuclear plant in war zone

The U.S. State Department earlier estimated that about 100,000 North Koreans were working overseas in government-arranged jobs, primarily in Russia and China, but also in Africa, the Middle East, Europe and South Asia.

Civilian experts say the workers earned $200 million to $500 million a year for North Korea’s government while pocketing only a fraction of their salaries, often toiling for more than 12 hours a day under constant surveillance by their country’s security agents.

While Russia sent home some North Korean workers before the U.N. deadline in December 2019, an uncertain number remained, continuing to work or becoming stuck after the North sealed its borders to fend off COVID-19.

North Korea could easily mobilize possibly several hundreds or even thousands of workers to Donbas if it decides to use the laborers who remained in Russia, said Kang Dong Wan, a North Korea expert at South Korea’s Dong-A University.

It’s not yet clear how lucrative Donbas would be for North Korea.

Russia is short of cash, battered by Western sanctions targeting its financial institutions and a broad swath of industries. North Korea likely has no interest in being paid in rubles because of worries about the currency’s purchasing power, which bottomed out during the war’s early days before Moscow took steps to artificially restore its value.

North Korea might be willing to be compensated with food, fuel and machinery, an exchange that would likely also violate Security Council sanctions, Lim said.

Hong Min, a senior analyst at South Korea’s Institute for National Unification, said North Korea could have bigger things in mind than short-term gains from labor exports.

“The United States’ strategic competition with China and confrontation with Russia have given North Korea breathing room as it steps up to join Moscow and Beijing in a united front to counter U.S. influence and promote a multipolar international system,” Hong said.

North Korea has already used the war in Ukraine to ramp up its weapons development, exploiting divisions in the Security Council, where Russia and China vetoed U.S.-sponsored resolutions to tighten sanctions on North Korea over its revived ICBM tests this year.

North Korea and Russia also see eye-to-eye on key policies.

North Korea has repeatedly blamed the United States for the Ukraine crisis, saying the West’s “hegemonic policy” justifies military actions by Russia in Ukraine to protect itself.

Russia, meanwhile, has repeatedly condemned the revival of large-scale military exercises between the U.S. and South Korea this year, accusing the allies of provoking North Korea and aggravating tensions.

Alexander Matsegora, Russia’s ambassador to North Korea, has backed its dubious assertion that its COVID-19 outbreak was caused by South Korean activists who flew anti-North Korean leaflets and other materials across the border with balloons.

Nam Sung-wook, a professor at the unification and diplomacy department of South Korea’s Korea University, is one of the few experts who sees the labor exports beginning soon.

Desperate to address its economic woes, North Korea might send small groups of workers to Donbas on “scouting missions” over the next few months and gradually increase the numbers depending on how the war goes, he said.

“Interests are aligning between Pyongyang and Moscow,” Nam said. “One hundred or 200 workers could eventually become 10,000.”

Source: United News of Bangladesh

IMF agrees to provide crisis-hit Sri Lanka $2.9 billion

The International Monetary Fund said Thursday it has reached a staff-level agreement with Sri Lanka to provide $2.9 billion over four years to help salvage the country from its economic crisis.

An IMF team visiting Sri Lanka said in a statement that the preliminary agreement is subject to approval from the agency’s management and executive board “contingent on the implementation by the authorities of prior actions, and on receiving financing assurances from Sri Lanka’s official creditors and making a good faith effort to reach a collaborative agreement with private creditors.”

Sri Lanka is facing its worst economic crisis in recent memory with acute shortages of essentials like fuel, medicines and food because of serious foreign currency shortages.

The island nation has suspended repayment of nearly $7 billion in foreign debt due for this year. The country’s total foreign debt amounts to more than $51 billion of which $ 28 billion has to be repaid by 2028.

The IMF said Sri Lanka’s economy is expected to contract by 8.7% and inflation has exceeded 60%.

“Against this backdrop, the authorities’ program, supported by the Fund, would aim to stabilize the economy, protect the livelihoods of the Sri Lankan people, and prepare the ground for economic recovery and promoting sustainable and inclusive growth,” it said.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

PM Hasina: Time to groom the labour force to face challenges of 4IR

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Thursday underlined the need for taking preparation from right now to deal with the possible changes that would happen in the domestic and international labour markets as a result of the 4th industrial revolution (4IR).

“We’ve a huge labour force, which will have to be included in it. They will have to be trained, educated and developed as skilled manpower,” she said.

The premier was addressing the inauguration of 24th national convention and 43rd council session of Institution of Diploma Engineers, Bangladesh (IDEB) in the city’s Osmani Memorial Auditorium, joining it through a virtual platform from Ganobhaban.

She said her government has emphasized skills enhancement, employment growth, strengthening technology and institutional capacity, regional connectivity and infrastructure development, economic and social equity, women empowerment and ensuring equal opportunities for all to face the changed situation.

She said that the skills development programmes have been launched to face the challenges induced by the 4IR and to attain the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). “Because it is very essential to develop skilled manpower,” she added.

“In this era of 4IR, the use of technology, artificial intelligence and robotics are important factors,” said the PM.

She said the 4IR will hugely impact Bangladesh’s economy and employment. The use of robots and technology with artificial intelligence has already started in the readymade garment sector in the country and will start in other sectors gradually.

As a result of the use of robots and technology with artificial intelligence, the productivity in the RMG sector is increasing and the quality of the clothes is improving simultaneously, she went on.

Putting emphasis on technical education, the premier said it is essential to bring a radical change in the country’s education system. “We’ve already brought changes here,” she said.

“We are implementing comprehensive programmes in science and technology, and technical education to turn manpower into human resources,” she said, mentioning different steps and plans of the government in this regard.

PM Hasina: Time to groom the labour force to face challenges of 4IR

Boost production, save resources, exercise austerity to face possible tougher time: PM

The prime minister renewed her call to the people to go for growing more food besides exercising austerity in use of resources as the world braces for difficult times ahead.

“We’ll have to exercise austerity and save resources from now on. We’ll have to avoid wastage of resources. Because, the world economic condition is getting worse day by day,” she said.

Hasina asked the people not to leave a single inch of land uncultivated in these tough times. “We’ll have to maintain self-sufficiency in food production ,” she said, adding her government is implementing all sorts of measures in this regard.

“We’ll have to advance in a planned way. If so, the world recession will not be able to affect us,” she said.

The premier noted her government’s success in reaching electricity to every house of the country in fulfilling its promise.

But unfortunately, not only Bangladesh, many developed countries are struggling to provide electricity and energy amid the crisis created by the Ukraine war and the resultant sanctions just when the global economy started recovering from the Covid-19 fallouts, she said.

She said even some countries in Europe and America asked the people to ration the use of electricity and water, not to use boiled water and heating system. The countries are worried about energy supply in the next winter.

Liberation War Affairs Minister AKM Mozammel Haque and State Minister for Housing and Public Works Sharif Ahmed spoke on the occasion.

IDEB president AKMA Hamid presided over the function, while its general secretary Shamsur Rahman delivered the welcome speech. The IDEB, a professional body of the country’s more than 5 lakh diploma engineers, was founded in 1970.

The PM unveiled the cover of a souvenir published by Bangabandhu Diploma Engineers’ Parishad featuring the life and works of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

US-Bangla launches Dhaka-Bangkok, Chattogram-Kolkata flights

Private carrier US-Bangla Airlines launched two international flights — one on the Dhaka-Bangkok route and another on the Chattogram-Kolkata route — on Thursday morning.

The flight on the Dhaka-Bangkok route took off from Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in the capital around 10.10am and is slated to land at Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi International Airport at 1.40pm (local time), said Md Kamrul Islam, general manager (public relations) of the carrier.

The return flight will leave Bangkok at 2.40pm (local time) on the same day and arrive in Dhaka at 4.20pm. The airline will operate flights on the Dhaka-Bangkok route five days a week, except for Mondays and Wednesdays.

Meanwhile, the flight on the Chattogram-Kolkata route took off from Shah Amanat International Airport in the port city around 10.15am and landed at Kolkata’s Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose International Airport at 11.40pm (local time).

The return flight will leave Kolkata at 12.40pm (local time) on the same day and arrive in Chattogram at 2.10pm.

The flight on the Chattogram-Kolkata route will operate seven days a week.

Apart from operating flights on all domestic routes, US-Bangla now runs flights to global destinations like Singapore, Chennai, Male, Guangzhou, Kuala Lumpur, Doha, Sharjah, Dubai and Muscat.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Launch fare reduced by 15 paisa/km after fuel price cut

The government has reduced launch fare by 15 paisa per kilometre after fuel prices were lowered by Tk 5 per litre.

The Ministry of Shipping issued a notification in this regard today (September 1, 2022).

The new fares will be effective from tomorrow, it added.

Fares have been reduced to Tk 2.85 per km for the first 100 kms from the existing Tk 3 per km. Beyond the first 100 kms, the fare has been decreased to Tk 2.45 per km from the existing Tk 2.60.

The minimum fare has also been fixed at Tk 30 — Tk 3 reduced from the existing Tk 33, according to the government notification.

On Monday, the government lowered fuel prices by Tk 5 per litre, 23 days after raising them by up to 51.68 per cent.

Prices of diesel and kerosene are now Tk 109, petrol Tk 125, and octane Tk 130 per litre at the filling stations, State Minister for Power, Energy, and Mineral Resources Nasrul Hamid told UNB.

On August 16, the government increased launch fares in view of a 42.5% hike — from Tk 80 to Tk 114 a litre — in the diesel price.

In 2021, the launch fare was fixed at Tk 2.30 per km for a distance for the first 100 km while the fares beyond the first 100 km Tk 2.00 per km. The minimum fare was Tk 25.

Source: United News of Bangladesh

Sundarbans reopens to tourists, fishermen after 3 months

The authorities have reopened the Sundarbans for tourists, fishermen and wood collectors after a three-month closure.

The closure was enforced to ensure safe breeding of many wild animals.

On the first day of reopening, 75 tourists were allowed to enter the world’s largest mangrove forest by ship ‘The Web’ around 12 am to experience tranquility and beauty of the forest, Majharul Haque, joint general secretary of Sundarbans Tour Operators.

Read:Expectations abound as tourists set to return to Sundarbans from Sept 1

Another ship with 40 artistes entered the Sundarbans Thursday morning.

Six more ships with 250 visitors are set to enter the forest on Friday, said an official of the Forest Department.

Earlier, the Forest Department imposed the three-month ban on tourists from June 1 to August 31 in the Sundarbans, to coincide with what is the peak breeding season for most animals in the forest.

The entrance of visitors from home and abroad, fishermen, wood and honey collectors remained restricted during this ban period. Moreover, no boats and ships were allowed to move in the rivers.

Some wood collectors (Bawal) and honey collectors (Mowal) entered the Sundarbans on Thursday after taking pass from the Forest Department.

Tour operator, launch and boat owners have taken adequate measures to attract more tourists, said Mazharul Haque.

HM Dulal, a tour operator of the Sundarbans, expected that a large number of tourists will visit Sundarbans due to better communication system as people can easily travel to the forest by crossing the Padma Bridge.

Source: United News of Bangladesh