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Poor women are transforming their lives thanks to help from NGOs, writes News Network’s Ayesha Siddika Biplobe.
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Those who hire domestic help should also appreciate their feelings and problems, writes News Network s Ausma Akter Urmee.
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Girls at safe houses are not necessarily safe, writes News Network’s Moushumi Rahman
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Tribal people are losing their ancestral lands. Why?
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Slum women are vulnerable to common diseases and health problems, writes News Network’s Shapla Talukdar.
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Who cares about bidi workers?
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Marriage over telephone is growing in Bangladesh. News Network’s Jannatul Mawa Shirin explains why?
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It is better to know about the health condition of would-be husband and wife in pre-marriage medical consultation to avoid many post-marriage problems, writes News Network’s Mariam Akther.
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Bangladesh’s eroding rivers add to the poverty and misery of the rural people who travel to the cities in search of work, writes News Network’s Farhana Akhter Shompa.
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Teasing of women, obscene remarks or comments can no longer be tried under the law that seeks to prevent violence on women and children in Bangladesh. How then the victims will get justice?
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Indoor air pollution is also a threat to health of the inhabitants, writes News Network’s Rezwana Nur.
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Drug addiction is ruining many families in northern Bangladesh, writes Ataur Rahman.
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A year after they were banned, harmful polythene shopping bags are coming back thanks to negligence, corruption and lack of public awareness, writes News Network’s Tawhida Akhter.
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Rain or no rain Dhaka, the capital city of 10 million people, is afflicted with water logging causing public misery, writes Shaila Yeasmin of News Network.
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Police in Bangladesh must perform wonders to regain public trust, writes Mahfuzur Rahman.
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Soiled notes could cause diseases, writes Quazi Sabnam for NewsNetwork
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Sexual harassment of female students raises concern in the university campuses, writes News Network’s Shahnaz Ferdous Chowdhury.
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Primary Education Stipend Project has generated enthusiasm among the poor students, writes Quazi Sabnam for News Network.
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Bangladesh needs to build a social safety net to fulfill constitutional obligations
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Small children doing the work of breaking dry cell batteries are exposed to health hazards and they are also terribly low paid
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Free primary education alone cannot bring poor children to school
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The rising cost of living is affecting the country's poor and low-income group people
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Stigma and lack of awareness have distorted Bangladesh’s perception of AIDS and its ability to fight it
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Remedy to arsenic pollution is still a far cry
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If you think women are safe at home you are wrong
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Dhaka is growing fast, while its utility services are lagging behind
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Female ward commissioners allege discrimination against them by their male counterparts
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IACC calls for an end to illegal political party financing for the greater sake of democracy
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Brick kilns are polluting the air
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Commercials to promote smoking should be immediately banned
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Nepal: A Queen Who Still Reigns
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Children in Bangladesh are far from wat they need
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Parents need to talk to their teenage children to help them on the right tracks
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Lack of public toilets cause health hazards to many in Bangladesh, writes News Network's Kowser Jahan Rumee.
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Bangaldeshi women read journalism, but only a few of them become journalists. News Network's Mansura Hossain explains why.
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