Bangladesh, WB Signed Financing Agreement To Help Rural Youths Get Jobs

The Bangladeshi government and the World Bank (WB), yesterday, signed a 300-million U.S. dollar-financing agreement, to equip about 900,000 economically disengaged rural youths with skills and alternative education, needed for employment and entrepreneurship.

About 60 percent of the project’s beneficiaries will be female, according to the World Bank.

“The youths are the future of any country. Creating a well-equipped competitive workforce, where no young person is excluded, is a critical development priority for Bangladesh,” said Abdoulaye Seck, World Bank Country Director for Bangladesh.

The project of Economic Acceleration and Resilience for NEET (EARN), will help develop a competitive workforce through skill development, continuity of education, and employment opportunities, while addressing underlying cultural and social norms that drive exclusion, particularly for women, people with disabilities, and ethnic minorities, said Seck.

Sharifa Khan, secretary of Economic Relations Division, under the Ministry of Finance, said that, this project is aligned with the country’s 8th Five-Year Plan till Jun, 2025.

It will support government plans and policies, by establishing a comprehensive support mechanism for the economic engagement of the rural youths, including those with disabilities

Source: Nam News Network

UNICEF Delivers Medical Supplies Amid Escalating Dengue Outbreak Among Bangladesh’s Children

With more than 21,000 cases of dengue reported among children under the age of 15 in Bangladesh, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), yesterday said, it is intensifying its support for the Bangladeshi government to contain the dengue outbreak.

UNICEF said, it is delivering 2.25 million U.S. dollars’ worth of urgently needed testing kits, training of professionals, along with other critical supplies and services, in the health and water, sanitation, and hygiene sectors, to protect children and respond to public health emergency.

The dengue outbreak has now spread to 64 districts, it said.

According to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in Bangladesh, more than 112,000 cases of dengue have been reported, of which 20 percent are children below the age of 15. Over 500 dengue-related deaths have been reported.

In a year when the world has seen a rising number of climate-driven disasters, climate change is also exacerbating the spread of vector-borne diseases like dengue, directly impacting the lives of children, as well as adults, UNICEF said in a statement.

“Once again, children in Bangladesh are at the frontlines of climate change, as the dengue crisis here escalates,” said Sheldon Yett, UNICEF representative to Bangladesh.

“The government of Bangladesh is undertaking a timely and effective response to the ongoing dengue situation in the country. The need of the hour is for the communities to ensure that mosquitoes do not breed in their houses, and take all precautionary measures to ward away mosquitoes,” said Abul Bashar Mohammad Khurshid Alam, director general of Bangladesh’s Directorate General of Health Services.

Among other measures, UNICEF said, it is supporting the government in engaging communities and raising awareness about dengue prevention, and taking necessary preventive measures.

UNICEF further said, it has mobilised religious and community leaders to influence people with actionable information, to reduce the spread of dengue. Through disseminating information at mass gatherings and social media, it has assisted the government in reaching over 50 million people with messages about protection from dengue in the last month.

UNICEF said, it is also working together with partners to support the government with critical medical supplies, including kits with 13,400 tests, building capacities of staff, providing technical advice, and implementing actions such as campaigns to clean up breeding sites in select areas

Source: Nam News Network

Traffickers lure displaced Rohingya with promises of good jobs

Fed up with discrimination, a lack of work opportunities and the deplorable conditions of their village for displaced persons in western Myanmar’s Rakhine state, Bocholla, a 45-year-old member of the mostly Muslim ethnic Rohingya community, sold nearly everything his family owned to pay for his 18-year-old son’s passage to Thailand.

Six years after a military crackdown drove tens of thousands of Rohingyas from their homes in Rakhine, he hoped that his son could start a new, happier life in Bangkok, free from the difficulties of being a second-class citizen in the Buddhist majority country of his birth.

"The agent took him from our village, promising to get him to Thailand via Yangon … and said nothing bad would happen to him,” Bocholla told RFA Burmese from Rathedaung township’s Nyaung Pin Gyi village.

Bocholla sold his family’s land and house, took out a high-interest loan and even pawned a food assistance booklet from the World Food Program to cobble together the 6.5 million kyats (US$3,100) his son’s handler had demanded to help him relocate.

Not long after his son left in January, Bocholla learned that he had been arrested in Magwe region’s Minbu township and the two lost contact.

“I asked the agent so many times what had become of him and what to do next, but he never responded,” he said.

Bocholla and his family are among tens of thousands of Rohingya living in temporary villages and camps for those displaced by a Myanmar military crackdown in 2017. More than 140,000 are sheltering in camps in Rakhine’s Sittwe township that the UK-based Burmese Rohingya Organization has likened to “open air prisons.”

Desperate to return

Another 740,000 Rohingya fled to neighboring Bangladesh from Rakhine during the military clearance operations and have refused to take part in a repatriation program that would see them sent to camps in Rakhine state, saying they want to return to their original homesteads because they find the camps unsafe.

With few options after years of a stateless existence, many Rohingya are now doing whatever they can to sail or travel over land to Muslim majority countries in the region, including Indonesia and Malaysia, or nations with a more open society, such as Thailand and India.

But their desperation to leave makes them susceptible to exploitation by human traffickers.

Bocholla’s experience is not uncommon for Rohingya living in Rakhine and Bangladesh. Members of the ethnic community say similar tales of falling victim to trafficking can be heard throughout villages and camps for the displaced.

Mamotsolein, a 16-year-old Rohingya boy, recently left the Ohn Taw Ghi (North) Rohingya camp in Sittwe after a trafficker promised him a job with good pay in Rakhine’s Rathedaung township.

Instead, he was kidnapped and held for a 6 million-kyat (US$2,860) ransom, his father said.

“We don’t have that much money so we offered to pay 3 million, but they wouldn’t return our son,” he said. “Now they say they’re going to kill him if we can’t pay them what they ask.”

Mamotsolein’s father said that he filed a complaint with the Sittwe Township Police Station about the kidnapping and human trafficking, but authorities have yet to respond.

Trafficking networks

Rohingyas told RFA there are “at least three human traffickers” in each village and camp for the displaced, and that nearly all of them are fellow members of the ethnic group. These people act as groomers to select potential victims and connect them with second-level trafficking networks that arrange their transport to a city such as Yangon, they said.

From there, a third-level trafficking network sends the victims to a third country, where they are sold for labor or held for ransom.

Members of aid groups working with Rohingya communities told RFA that second- and third-level traffickers include Rohingya, as well as ethnic Rakhines and majority Bamar. They said traffickers also bring Rohingyas to Rakhine state from camps in Bangladesh and “keep them in groups” before transporting them elsewhere.

RFA spoke to at least 10 individuals for this report, including Rohingya human trafficking awareness campaigners, aid workers who help arrested Rohingyas, lawyers for Rohingyas, Rohingyas in camps and villages for the displaced, leaders from Rohingya camps in Bangladesh and Rohingya activists.

One human trafficking awareness campaigner said that most of the networks operate in Rathedaung township's Ah Nauk Pyin and Nyaung Ping Gyi villages.

"Their head gangs, who are located in Yangon and Thailand, offer lower-level traffickers incentives, such as 200,000 kyats (US$95) per person, if they can recruit people at the Rohingya camps,” said the campaigner, speaking on condition of anonymity citing security concerns.

“They usually leave via motorboat from Ah Nauk Pyin and Nyaung Pin Gyi villages,” he said. “People from the Bangladesh camps, as well as from Rakhine’s Buthidaung, Maungdaw and Sittwe townships, also go there to leave. Those villages are a meeting point for them."

A Rohingya will typically pay 6-12 million kyats (US$2,860-5,720) to traffickers to get to Thailand or Malaysia from Rakhine state, whereas those from camps in Bangladesh pay around 300,000 taka (US$2,750) for the same service.

Convincing victims to leave

Khin Maung, director of the Rohingya Youth Association of Bangladesh's Thankhali camp, said that recruiters work to convince camp residents who are having difficulty earning a living to leave for other countries.

"They persuade the [victims] saying that the food is not good in the camp and they can't go back to Myanmar, so they will have to live like that for the rest of their lives or they can go abroad, and people take the bait," he said.

If those who try to leave are arrested, their traffickers are rarely brought to justice, according to a lawyer who provides legal assistance to Rohingyas. He said the networks typically keep their chain of operations disconnected so that traffickers cannot be caught.

“When there are arrests, they are of the Rohingya victims and dock workers, not the traffickers or the owner of the boats,” he said.

Rohingya activists and residents say human trafficking takes place in areas controlled by the junta as well as by the Arakan Army of ethnic rebels, although they declined to say whether the groups are involved in the networks, due to fear of reprisal.

Attempts by RFA to contact Arakan Army spokesperson Khaing Thukha and junta Deputy Information Minister Major Gen. Zaw Min Tin for comment have gone unanswered.

According to the U.S. State Department's 2023 Trafficking in Persons Report, Myanmar has made no significant efforts to eliminate human trafficking and is the third worst country in the world in terms of willingness to cooperate on combating the problem.

In 2022, the United Nations refugee agency estimated that 2,400 Rohingya embarked on life-threatening sea journeys from Bangladesh's camps, a five-fold increase from the previous year.

Nay San Lwin, co-founder of the Free Rohingya Coalition, told RFA that in 2022 alone, more than 400 Rohingya died enroute to another country.

Rohingya activists have called for authorities to better police trafficking in camps and villages for the displaced and for a loosening of restrictions at the sites that limit Rohingyas’ right to travel, work and pursue an education.

Source: Radio Free Asia

Govt. to give compensation for losses caused due to lumpy skin disease

The National Development Action Committee has decided to sort out the issues of electricity wire, telephone cable and other obstacles in the preliminary stage of the project meant to end the hindrances seen in the development projects.

The 51st meeting of Committee held Monday at the Office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers decided to shift such infrastructures to ease the project implementation.

The meeting was presided over by Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal 'Prachanda'.

The meeting has made decisions to provide compensation to the farmers for their losses of livestock caused due to lumpy skin outbreak. For this, the Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development shall prepare a needed proposal.

Similarly, precautions would be applied for the prevention of such diseases in the future.

The meeting also concluded that infrastructure development projects were delayed for lack of budget to shift the infrastructures like electric and telephone cable.

Now onwards, such obstacles will be addressed during the project preparation stage.

Likewise, the state-owned telecommunications infrastructures would be co-used and dual investment would be reduced. For this to materialise, the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology would immediately advance proposals.

Similarly, a taskforce will be formed to prepare a modality on management and use of physical infrastructures, human resources adjustment and related issues between the Tribhuvan University and Rajashri Janak University.

Furthermore, a taskforce would be formed to offer recommendation within three months to control the fragmentation of the agricultural land.

The taskforce to be led by a member of the National Planning Commission will have representation from Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development, Land Management, Cooperative and Poverty Alleviation and Ministry of Energy, Water Resources and Irrigation.

Likewise, decision has been made to form a taskforce to offer suggestions within two months for making human resource management of all three tiers of government scientific and professional.

Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister Narayan Kaji Shrestha, Minister for Communications and Information Technology Rekha Sharma, Energy Minister Shakti Bahadur Banset, Foreign Affairs Minister NP Saud, Physical Infrastructure Minister Prakash Jwala, Civil Aviation Minister Sudan Kirati, Urban Development Minister Sita Gurung, Health Minister Mohan Bahadur Basnet and Law Minister Dhanraj Gurung were also present at the meeting.

Source: National News Agency

Farm mechanization boosts farm production: experts

Substantial promotion of modern farm machinery can be the crucial means of boosting farm production besides making the products more profitable and making the farmers happy.

The grassroots farmers are gradually being habituated and accustomed to the need-based machinery and technologies through diversified interventions so that they can derive total benefits out of it.

Farm machinery experts and agricultural scientists made the observation while addressing a daylong training related to introduction, repairing and maintenance of farm machineries innovated by Bangladesh Agriculture Research Institute (BARI) here on Sunday.

Farm Machinery and Postharvest Process Engineering (FMPE) Division of BARI organised the training at BARI regional station supported by the Farm Machinery Technology Development for Profitable Crop Production (FMDP) project.

FMDP Chief Scientific Officer and Head Dr Nurul Amin addressed the training as chief guest, while Principal Scientific Officer Dr Sayedur Rahman and Senior Scientific Officers Dr Ersadul Haque and Dr Zahidul Islam spoke as resource persons disseminating their expertise on the issue.

Twelve sub-assistant agriculture officers from Charghat and Tanore Upazilas and 13 scientific assistants from BARI's different organs joined the training.

In the training, the participants were given practical ideas and knowledge on various machineries, including seeder, treasure and cleaner of wheat, maize, paddy and pulses, portable mustard oil extractor and operation, repairing and maintenance of solar power driven irrigation pump.

Apart from this, they were familiarized with 18 types of machines developed by BARI.

As a whole, the participants gained more knowledge on proper operation, repairing and maintenance of the machines at field level.

In his remarks, Dr Nurul Amin said farmers in the area are gradually being habituated to cost-effective and mechanized farming and harvesting.

Large-scale promotion of mechanization could be the effective means of mitigating the problems of labour shortage, slow pace and high expensive potato harvesting.

There is a huge labour shortage in the potato growing area during peak harvesting period. Manual potato harvesting is a slow, time consuming and costly operation.

"Mechanised potato harvester saves cost and time besides mitigating labour shortage," said Dr Sayedur Rahman, adding FMPE Division has developed the power tiller driven potato harvester.

He said more area coverage within a short period of time, reducing labour dependency, escaping bad weather and quick potato harvesting, cost reduction by 60 percent and profitable potato production are the major salient features of the harvester.

Dr Ersadul Haque said that potato harvesters meet the labour shortage through speeding up the harvesting process. It can harvest potatoes from around 10-12 bighas of land on average a day depending upon the operator's skill.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha

Heavy rain unlikely in the immediate future

Kathmandu, Aug 28

The Meteorological Forecast Division of the Department of Hydrology and Meteorology has stated that heavy rain in the immediate future is not likely.

Meteorologist at the Division Rojan Lamichhane said that chances for moderate rain are on but heavy rain or torrential rain for the immediate future is not going to happen.

According to Lamichhane, the upcoming 24 hours will witness slight to moderate rain in some places of the hilly region and other parts in the country. However, sporadic heavy rain could take place, Lamichhane stated.

The Division has stated that the Axis of the Monsoon Trough is slightly towards north than the normal.

Source: National News Agency

Banchare Danda folks announce to stop garbage dumping

Kathmandu, Aug 28: Locals at Banchare Danda in Nuwakot district have announced that they will no longer allow the garbage of Kathmandu Valley to be disposed in the landfill site there.

The locals, expressing displeasure over the lack of implementation of agreements inked with the government and Kathmandu Metropolitan City (KMC) in various time, have decided to launch a peaceful protest and announced to prevent disposing garbage in the landfill site in their locality.

In a press conference organized by a committee formed by the locals at Banchare Danda Landfill Site area here on Monday, they warned to launch a peaceful protest from coming September 18 if the sustainable waste management plan at the unmanned landfill site was not implemented to protect the lives of locals.

Committee coordinator Shreeram Dungana ranted that the State had failed to ensure citizens' right to live in a clean environment and expressed his qualm over the 'inconsiderate' behavior of the KMC towards the landfill site affected locals.

Hari Lama, one of the affected locals, lamented that he was compelled to protest over the indifference of the government towards the affected locals.

Likewise, Sumitra Dhakal, Deputy Coordinator of the Committee, suggested that the human settlement at the affected area should be removed from there. She suggested that the waste management should be carried out by the same local level where the source of waste is generated.

Similarly, Chuyame Tamang, Acting Chairperson of Kakani rural municipality ward no 2, urged the KMC not to create an environment for the affected locals to protest to protect their lives.

The affected locals have pressed for implementation of the formation of Waste Development Authority under the office of the Prime Minister and Council of Ministers and declare the affected area as highly sensitive zone.

Source: National News Agency

Senior journalist Rajeshwar Nepali passes away

Dhanusha, Aug 28: Senior journalist and writer Rajeshwar Nepali has passed away.

Called the guardian of journalism, Nepali passed away at 8:10 pm today at Max Hospital in Janakpurdham. He was also an advocate for and struggled for democracy and freedom of the press.

He was born on the 19th of Bhadra 2002 BS.

Source: National News Agency

Ansar and VDP DG pays tributes to Bangabandhu at Tungipara

Director General (DG) of Bangladesh Ansar and VDP Major General AKM Aminul Haque today paid rich tributes to Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman by placing a wreath at his mausoleum at Tungipara in Gopalganj.

After laying the wreath, the DG stood in solemn silence for some time as a mark of profound respect to the memory of the Father of the Nation.

Later, he offered a doa seeking eternal peace of the departed souls of Bangabandhu and other martyrs who had to embrace martyrdom on the fateful August 15, 1975.

A special prayer was also offered seeking longevity of the Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her family members.

Additional Director General of Bangladesh Ansar and VDP Brigadier General Khandaker Farid Hasan and officials, among others, were present.

Later, the DG signed the visitors' book there.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha

Samrat’s bail in graft case extended till October 2

A court here today extended the bail of former Jubo League leader Ismail Hossain Chowdhury Samrat in a graft case filed by the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) till October 2.

Judge Monjurul Alam of the Dhaka Special Judge Court-6 passed the order following a short hearing today.

The Rapid Action Battalion (RAB) arrested Samrat along with his associate and also former Jubo League leader Enamul Haque Arman from a village in

Cumilla's Chauddagram upazila on October 6, 2019.

On November 12 in the same year, ACC deputy director Md Jahangir Alam filed a case against him for amassing wealth worth around Taka 3 crore beyond his known income sources.

The anti-corruption watchdog submitted a charge sheet against him on November 26, 2020, accusing him for rallying wealth worth over Taka 222.88 crore beyond his known income sources.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha

PM mourns death of ex-minister Motiur Rahman

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today expressed deep shock and sorrow at the death of former Member of Awami League (AL) Central Working Committee, former Religious Affairs Minister and valiant freedom fighter Principal Motiur Rahman.

In a condolence message, the prime minister said Motiur Rahman, also former President of Mymensingh District AL, was a dedicated leader of the Bangladesh Awami League.

She recalled that, "He (Motiur Rahman) performed his organisational duties remaining steadfast to the ideals of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and the politics of the Awami League defying uncountable inducement and repeated imprisonments."

Sheikh Hasina said Motiur Rahman, who led the Mymensingh district Awami League for more than three decades, served as a trainer and successful organiser of the freedom fighters during the Great War of Liberation.

He was awarded Ekushey Padak in 2022 for his outstanding contribution to the War of Liberation.

"The death of Principal Motiur Rahman is an irreparable loss to the party, and I lost a faithful political companion at the demise of him," she added.

The premier prayed for eternal peace of the departed soul and conveyed her deepest sympathy to the members of his bereaved family.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha

Moderately heavy to heavy rain falls likely at places over Chattogram, Sylhet

– Bangladesh Meteorological Department (BMD) predicted moderately heavy to heavy rain falls at places over Chattogram and Sylhet divisions for the next 24 hours commencing 9am today.

Light to moderate rain or thundershowers accompanied by temporary gusty wind is likely to occur at many places over two divisions, at a few places over another four divisions and at one or two places over the rest two divisions.

"Light to moderate rain or thunder showers accompanied by temporary gusty wind is likely to occur at many places over Chattogram and Sylhet divisions; at a few places over Rangpur, Dhaka, Mymensingh and Barishal divisions and at one or two places over Rajshahi and Khulna divisions," said a met office forecast.

Day and night temperature may remain nearly unchanged over the country, the forecast begins from 9am today.

The axis of monsoon trough runs through Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal to Assam across northern part of Bangladesh. One of its associated troughs extends up to North Bay.

Monsoon is fairly active over Bangladesh and moderate over North Bay.

Country's maximum temperature on Sunday was recorded by 36.0 degree celsius at Faridpur while the lowest temperature today was recorded by 23.0 degree celsius jointly at Nikli, Sylhet and Bandarban.

Today's sunset at Dhaka at 06-21 PM while Tomorrow's sunrise at 05-39 AM.

Source: Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha