Monday, January 11, 2010
Journalist Salma Sobhan
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Sunday, January 10, 2010
Sheikh Hasina
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Begum Kaleda Zia
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Zobeda Kanam
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Advocate Sahara Katun
Advocate Sahara Khatun is a Bangladeshi politician and the current Home Minister in the Government of Bangladesh. Khatun is a member of Parliament, and the current law secretary of the Awami League. Sahara Khatun was born in Kurmitola in Dhaka on March 01, 1943. She completed BA and LLB degrees. She is the founding president of Bangladesh Awami League Parishad and General Secretary of Bangladesh Mahila Samity, as well as a member of the International Women Lawyers' Association and the International Women's Alliance. Sahara Khatun has been involved in politics since student life. She is a parliament member and the Home Affairs Minister of Bangladesh Government. She was elected a member of parliament (MP) from Dhaka-18 constituency in December 29, 2008 National Election. Sahara Khatun pledged to people in her constituency that she would reconstruct the roads and improve the drainage system in the area.
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Advocate Motia Chowdury
Matia Chowhdury once again showed a great example of true leadership. Our leaders should walk in the shoes of an average citizen to understand their agony, their day to day problem. For Bangladesh, it is only Motia, a loner and the brightest in her orbit which is unparallel. She is humble and serene like the nature of Bangladesh, yet so feisty like a monsoon river on the street of protests. When patriotism and honesty were traded for comfort and wealth by the once valiant heroes of our political past, they gradually lost their moral shelter and repugnantly transformed into a herd of rats, bats and mules. But to Motia, virtues and reasons are the irreversible concept of life. That concept lures her to the street, gives her strength to barricade the goliath of evils for the protection of her kinfolk. Every starved person of her country is her kin. Therefore when she stands in the line for rice and waits for hours oblivious of scorching sun and weariness of recent ailment, she reflects one of the millions, famished. Will the children fall asleep hungry tonight – that is her only agony now. She is Motia , the ‘Agni Kanya’ evolved through age and experience to become Banga Kanya, the daughter of Bangladesh.
Posted by POLOL at 11:33 AM 0 comments
Advocate Tarana Halim
Lawmakers, Tarana Halim expressed her solidarity with the campaign. It is the responsibility of everyone to resist repression on women, she said, adding that such repression will continue unabated unless women get recognition for their contribution to the family and society. Speaking at the programme, Home Minister Sahara Khatun said concerted efforts of men and women can Although there are some tough laws against torture of women, they cannot always be enforced properly due to various reasons, she added. The local EU Presidency and the Delegation of the European Commission in a statement expressed their solidarity and support with the continued efforts to combat gender-based violence in Bangladesh. Odhikar held a discussion at the National Press Club with a call to work together to combat violence against women. A study of Odhikar showed that from January 1, 2009 to October 30, 2009 a total of 55 women fell victims to acid violence, 209 women and girls (under 16) were raped, including 4 by law enforcers, and 277 were victims of dowry.
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Dr. Zohora Begum
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Ivy Rahman
Ivy Rahman (July 7, 1944 - August 24, 2004) was a Bangladeshi politician. She was the Women's Affairs secretary of Awami League. She was killed in the 2004 Dhaka Grenade Attacks launched by Islamist terrorists. Rahman was married to Zillur Rahman, who is the current President of Bangladesh. Early life Ivy Rahman was born Jebun Nahar Ivy on July 7, 1944. Her father was the principal of Dhaka College. She married Zillur Rahman in 1958. They had two daughters and a son. On August 21, 2004, Ivy Rahman was present at an Awami League political rally in Dhaka. After the speech by Sheikh Hasina ended, Islamist terrorists launched a coordinated grenade attack on the Awami league leaders. Rahman was injured in the grenade blast, and both of her legs were blown off. After 3 days, she died on 24 August 2004, in the Combined Military Hospital in Dhaka.
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Samia Rahman
Ekushey television made a star out of Samia Zaman. 'To begin with, I was not a newsreader ' says Samia. She joined Ekushey as a News and Current Affairs Editor just when the channel was coming into its own. Just two weeks before going on air, Ekushey was still in a fix about its news anchor. Simon Bring, the man behind it all, asked her to audition for the job. She was an instant hit, and thus ended up as the leading anchorwoman of her times. Before Ekushey, especially the newscaster job; Samia was all set to make her own film. 'I returned from London to concentrate on films.' But perhaps Bangladesh needed Ekushey and the stylish news readers to alter the history of Bangladeshi television news casting. 'Proud as I was to be a part of something that important, my first love kept beckoning me,' she smiles.
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Wednesday, January 6, 2010
Women contribution in Agriculture
Despite their routine domestic work, women are very actively involved in agricultural production in Bangladesh. Women in rural Bangladesh are in general responsible for most of the agricultural work in the homestead. They traditionally undertake home gardening. Farm activities in the homesteads, ranging from selection of seed to harvesting and storing of crops, are predominantly managed by women. Despite women's important role in agriculture, the traditional social norms and customary laws combined with the purdah system deprive Bangladeshi women of equitable economic opportunities and access to resources.
Women contribution in fisheries:
Women in Bangladesh have diversified roles in fisheries, with substantial participation in small-scale fisheries. In Barisal and Rajashahi districts, women catch fish. They, to a large extent, carry out the drying, curing, and marketing of fish as hawkers, stall keepers in permanent market places and weekly bazaars. The majority of the employees in shrimp processing plants in Chittagong and Khulna are women. Women are also predominantly involved in net-making, the Women main income generating occupation in many families, and freshwater fish farming (FAO, 1980) have traditionally participated primarily as family labor in preparing fish nets and, in some areas, in fish processing. In some NGO and government programmes, women from landless households cultivate fish individ.
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Novelist Rabeya Katun
Rabeya Khatun was born in 1935 at Bikrampur. Because her father was a civil servant, she constantly moved from town to town of the then undivided Bengal. She is versatile in her range of literary forms having written novels, short stories, plays, travelogues and memoirs. But her main identity as a writer is that of a novelist. Some of her major novels are Modhumoti, Ferari Shurjo and Ononto Onnesha. Some of her short stories are Muktijoddhar Shtri and Lal Chithi. Some travelogues include Hey Bideshi Bhor, Thames Theke Niagara, Kumari Matir Deshe, Himalaya theke Arab Shagore. She has also written some fine memoirs such as Ekattorer noy mash’ and ‘Shwapner Shohor Dhaka’. Her famous novel is Modhumati (1963), Mon Ek Shwet Kapoti (Mind is a White Pigeon, 1965), Ononto Onwesha (Endless Pursuit, 12967), Rajabagh (1967), Saheb Bazar (1967). She has got Bangle Academy Award, Lekhika Sangha Award (1980), Nasiruddin Gold Medal, Humayun Kadir Memorial Award, Uro Shishu Shahitya Award (2003).
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First Women OC
First time in the history of Bangladesh a woman is chief of a police division. Hosne Ara Begum has been appointed chief officer to a division in the capital Dhaka, as of May 18th. She started her career with the Bangladesh police in 1981 and has worked in many regions of Bangladesh, in different police jurisdictions and departments, including the Intelligence Branch of the Bangladesh police. Women first entered the country’s police force in 1974. Then there were only 14, now there are 1,937, and among them 1,331 police constables. Contacted by AsiaNews, Begun said she is “really lucky to be the first female Office-in-Charge and to be a positive part of history in Bangladesh. I have been given the chance to prove my commitment to the nation once more”. For Khushi Kabir, a prominent human rights activist, Begum’s appointment is an important sign for discrimination against women.” We have experienced in the past that, under police custody, women were being raped by police officers themselves” states Kabir, affirming that even among the police there is “impunity after violating the law or human rights”, particularly the rights of women.
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