Difference between revisions of "Bangladesh" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
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| colspan="2" | [[image:LocationBangladesh.png]]
 
| colspan="2" | [[image:LocationBangladesh.png]]
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Official language''' || [[Bengali language|Bangla]]
+
| '''Official language''' || Bangla
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Capital''' || Dhaka
 
| '''Capital''' || Dhaka
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| Begum Khaleda Zia
 
| Begum Khaleda Zia
 
|-
 
|-
| '''[[Area]]'''<br>- Total<br>- % water
+
| '''Area'''<br>- Total<br>- % water
| [[List of countries by area|Ranked 91st]]<br>144,000 [[square kilometre|km&sup2;]]<br>7.0%
+
| [[Ranked 91st]]<br>144,000 km&sup2;<br>7.0%
 
|-
 
|-
| '''[[Population]]'''<br> - Total (July [[2004]] est.)<br> - [[Population density|Density]]
+
| '''Population'''<br> - Total (2004 est.)<br> - Density
| [[List of countries by population|Ranked 7th]]<br>141,340,476<br>1,055/km&sup2;
+
| Ranked 7th<br>141,340,476<br>1,055/km&sup2;
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Independence'''
 
| '''Independence'''
 
| 1971
 
| 1971
 
|-
 
|-
| '''Currency''' || [[Taka]] (BDT)
+
| '''Currency''' || Taka
 
|-
 
|-
| '''[[Time zone]]'''
+
| '''Time zone'''
 
| Universal Time +6
 
| Universal Time +6
 
|-
 
|-
| '''National anthem''' || [[Amar Sonar Bangla]]
+
| '''National anthem''' || ''Amar Sonar Bangla''<br><small>(''My Golden Bengal'')
 
|-
 
|-
 
| '''Internet TLD''' || .bd
 
| '''Internet TLD''' || .bd
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|}
 
|}
  
The '''People's Republic of Bangladesh''' ([[Bangla]]: গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ, [[Bengali script#Bengali symbols|Gôno Projātontrī Bāņlādesh]]) is a country in [[South Asia]] that forms the eastern part of the ancient region of [[Bengal]]. ''Bangladesh'' (বাংলাদেশ) {{IPA2|'bɑːŋlɑːðɛʃ}} literally means "The Country of [[Bengal]]". Lying north of the [[Bay of Bengal]], on land it borders [[India]] and [[Myanmar]], and it is a close neighbor to [[China]], [[Nepal]] and [[Bhutan]].
+
The '''People's Republic of Bangladesh''' is a country in [[South Asia]] that forms the eastern part of the ancient region of [[Bengal]]. ''Bangladesh'' literally means "The Country of Bengal." Lying north of the [[Bay of Bengal]], it borders [[India]] and [[Myanmar]].
  
 
Evidence of civilization in Bangladesh dates back to 1st millenium B.C.E. After [[Partition of India]] in 1947 the area became known as [[East Pakistan]] after becoming part of [[Pakistan]]. In [[1971]] after years of linguistic and ethnic differences with [[West Pakistan]], the [[Bangladesh Liberation War]] broke out. With the aid of [[Military of India|Indian Military]], the east became liberated later that year forming the nation of Bangladesh.
 
Evidence of civilization in Bangladesh dates back to 1st millenium B.C.E. After [[Partition of India]] in 1947 the area became known as [[East Pakistan]] after becoming part of [[Pakistan]]. In [[1971]] after years of linguistic and ethnic differences with [[West Pakistan]], the [[Bangladesh Liberation War]] broke out. With the aid of [[Military of India|Indian Military]], the east became liberated later that year forming the nation of Bangladesh.
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== History ==
 
== History ==
  
There has long been advanced [[civilization]] in what is now Bangladesh, once the eastern part of a greater region called [[Bengal]]. There is recent evidence of civilizations dating back to [[500 B.C.E.]], and there are even claims of social structures from around [[1000 B.C.E.]]. One of the earliest historical references to be found to date is the mention of a land named ''Gangaridai'' by the [[Ancient Greece|Greeks]] around 100B.C.E. The word is speculated to have come from ''Gangahrd'' (Land with the Ganges in its heart) and believed to be referring to an area in Bangladesh. However, more concrete proof of a political entity in [[Bengal]] starts with the Hindu king [[Shashanka]] in 7th century [[CE]]. This was followed (though not immediately) by the Buddist [[Pala dynasty]] and the Hindu [[Sena dynasty]].  
+
There has long been advanced civilization in what is now Bangladesh, once the eastern part of a greater region called [[Bengal]]. There is recent evidence of civilizations dating back to 500 B.C.E., and there are even claims of social structures from around 1000 B.C.E. One of the earliest historical references to be found to date is the mention of a land named ''Gangaridai'' by the Greeks around 100B.C.E. The word is speculated to have come from ''Gangahrd'' (Land with the Ganges in its heart) and believed to be referring to an area in Bangladesh. However, more concrete proof of a political entity in [[Bengal]] starts with the Hindu king [[Shashanka]] in 7th century CE. This was followed (though not immediately) by the Buddist [[Pala dynasty]] and the Hindu [[Sena dynasty]].  
  
[[Bengal]] became [[Islam]]ic starting in the [[13th century]] and developed into a wealthy centre of trade and industry under the [[Mughal Empire]] during the [[16th century]]. [[Europe]]an traders had arrived in the late [[15th century]] and eventually the [[British East India Company]] controlled the region by the late [[18th century]] after the [[Battle of Plassey]]. Starting from this conquest, the [[United Kingdom|British]] extended [[British Raj|their rule]] over all of [[India]]. When [[Indian Independence Struggle|Indian independence]] was achieved in [[1947]], political motivations caused it to be divided into the independent states of [[Pakistan]] and [[India]].  
+
Bengal became [[Islam]]ic starting in the 13th century and developed into a wealthy centre of trade and industry under the [[Mughal Empire]] during the 16th century. [[Europe]]an traders had arrived in the late 15th century and eventually the [[British East India Company]] controlled the region by the late 18th century after the [[Battle of Plassey]]. Starting from this conquest, the British extended their rule over all of India. When Indian independence was achieved in 1947, political motivations caused it to be divided into the independent states of [[Pakistan]] and India.  
  
The [[Partition of India]] saw Bengal divided between the two new countries: a Muslim-dominated eastern part called [[East Bengal (province)|East Bengal]] corresponding to what is now Bangladesh, and a western part, the Indian state of [[West Bengal]]. The abolition of the [[Zamindari]] system (which divided the society into lords, owners of property, and commoners, users of property) in [[East Bengal]] ([[1950]]) was a major landmark in Bangladesh's movement to a "people's state". The [[Language Movement]] of [[1952]] established the rights of the Bengali community to speak in their own language, an event commomorated now as the [[International Mother Language Day]]. In [[1955]], the government of Pakistan changed the name of the province from [[East Bengal (province)|East Bengal]] to [[East Pakistan]].
+
The [[Partition of India]] saw Bengal divided between the two new countries: a Muslim-dominated eastern part called [[East Bengal (province)|East Bengal]] corresponding to what is now Bangladesh, and a western part, the Indian state of [[West Bengal]]. The abolition of the [[Zamindari]] system (which divided the society into lords, owners of property, and commoners, users of property) in [[East Bengal]] (1950) was a major landmark in Bangladesh's movement to a "people's state". The [[Language Movement]] of 1952 established the rights of the Bengali community to speak in their own language, an event commomorated now as the [[International Mother Language Day]]. In 1955, the government of Pakistan changed the name of the province from [[East Bengal (province)|East Bengal]] to [[East Pakistan]].
  
[[East Pakistan]] was dominated and neglected by West Pakistan, which comprised the rest of Pakistan ([[West Punjab]], [[Sindh]], [[Baluchistan]], and the [[Northwest Frontier Province]]). Despite the fact that [[East Pakistan]] earned the larger share of national income, especially through the export of [[Jute]], most of the development was done in [[West Pakistan]]. The [[Pakistan Army]] was also mostly dominated by officers from [[West Pakistan]]. The tensions peaked in [[1971]], following an open, non-democratic denial by Pakistani president General [[Yahya Khan]], of election results that gave the [[Awami League]] an overwhelming majority in the parliament Under the leadership of [[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]], also known as ''Bôngobondhu'' (Friend of Bengal), Bangladesh started its [[Bangladesh Liberation War|struggle for independence]]. The official onset followed one of the bloodiest [[genocide]]s of recent times carried out by the Pakistan army on Bengali civilians on [[25 March]] [[1971]]. Virtually the entire Bengali [[intelligentsia]] were annihilated. Owing to West Pakistan's effort to rid the country of foreign journalists, accurate numbers are difficult to get, but some estimates claim 50,000 deaths in the first three days of the so-called ''[[Operation Searchlight]]'' of the Pakistan Army [http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/G_0075.HTM]. The overall death toll of the Bengalis in the nine month war is officially estimated to be around 3 million, with some Western sources citing between 1-1.5 million deaths [http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat2.htm#Bangladesh]. More than ten million Bengalis fled to neighbouring India, which backed the liberation war, with support from the [[Soviet Union]].   
+
[[East Pakistan]] was dominated and neglected by West Pakistan, which comprised the rest of Pakistan ([[West Punjab]], [[Sindh]], [[Baluchistan]], and the [[Northwest Frontier Province]]). Despite the fact that [[East Pakistan]] earned the larger share of national income, especially through the export of [[Jute]], most of the development was done in [[West Pakistan]]. The [[Pakistan Army]] was also mostly dominated by officers from [[West Pakistan]]. The tensions peaked in 1971, following an open, non-democratic denial by Pakistani president General [[Yahya Khan]], of election results that gave the [[Awami League]] an overwhelming majority in the parliament Under the leadership of [[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]], also known as ''Bôngobondhu'' (Friend of Bengal), Bangladesh started its [[Bangladesh Liberation War|struggle for independence]]. The official onset followed one of the bloodiest genocides of recent times carried out by the Pakistan army on Bengali civilians in March 1971. Virtually the entire Bengali [[intelligentsia]] were annihilated. Owing to West Pakistan's effort to rid the country of foreign journalists, accurate numbers are difficult to get, but some estimates claim 50,000 deaths in the first three days of the so-called ''[[Operation Searchlight]]'' of the Pakistan Army [http://banglapedia.search.com.bd/HT/G_0075.HTM]. The overall death toll of the Bengalis in the nine month war is officially estimated to be around 3 million, with some Western sources citing between 1-1.5 million deaths [http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat2.htm#Bangladesh]. More than ten million Bengalis fled to neighbouring India, which backed the liberation war, with support from the [[Soviet Union]].   
  
[[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]] was arrested by the Pakistani Government. Before his arrest, Rahman made a formal and official declaration of Independence on [[26 March]]. Hence [[26 March]] is considered the Independence Day of Bangladesh. On [[27 March]] [[Ziaur Rahman]], an army major then, and [[President of Bangladesh]] much later, made the announcement of the declaration of Independence of Bangladesh on behalf of Sheikh Mujib, using a makeshift radio transmitter from [[Kalurghat]] near [[Chittagong]] city. With help of Bengali officers in the army, support of civilians and military/humanitarian aid from India, Bangladesh quickly formed a regular army as well as a guerilla force known as [[Mukti Bahini]] (Freedom Fighters). Besides attacks on the Pakistani army, the Mukti Bahini provided local [[Military espionage|intelligence]] and guidance of immense value to the allied force of [[Bangladesh Army]] and [[Indian Army]] which attacked the occupying West Pakistani army of 80,000 in early [[December]] 1971.[[Image:TIMEfreedomofBangladesh.jpg|right|thumb|A ''[[TIME magazine|TIME]]'' magazine issue covering the newly independent Bangladesh.]] Within two weeks of the Indian invasion, on [[16 December]] [[1971]], the [[Lieutenant-General A. A. K. Niazi]] of the Pakistan army formally surrendered to Lt.Gen. [[Jagjit Singh Aurora]], the head of the [[Indian army]]'s Eastern Command. India took 93,000 [[Prisoner of war|prisoners of war]] who were held in camps in India. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who had been incarcerated in West Pakistan since March, returned triumphantly as the first [[Prime Minister]] of the new nation. India withdrew its troops from Bangladesh within three months of the war.  
+
[[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]] was arrested by the Pakistani Government. Before his arrest, Rahman made a formal and official declaration of Independence on 26 March. Hence 26 March is considered the Independence Day of Bangladesh. On 27 March [[Ziaur Rahman]], an army major then, and [[President of Bangladesh]] much later, made the announcement of the declaration of Independence of Bangladesh on behalf of Sheikh Mujib, using a makeshift radio transmitter from [[Kalurghat]] near [[Chittagong]] city. With help of Bengali officers in the army, support of civilians and military/humanitarian aid from India, Bangladesh quickly formed a regular army as well as a guerilla force known as [[Mukti Bahini]] (Freedom Fighters). Besides attacks on the Pakistani army, the Mukti Bahini provided local [[Military espionage|intelligence]] and guidance of immense value to the allied force of [[Bangladesh Army]] and [[Indian Army]] which attacked the occupying West Pakistani army of 80,000 in early December 1971.[[Image:TIMEfreedomofBangladesh.jpg|right|thumb|A ''[[TIME magazine|TIME]]'' magazine issue covering the newly independent Bangladesh.]] Within two weeks of the Indian invasion, on 16 December 1971, the [[Lieutenant-General A. A. K. Niazi]] of the Pakistan army formally surrendered to Lt.Gen. [[Jagjit Singh Aurora]], the head of the [[Indian army]]'s Eastern Command. India took 93,000 prisoners of war who were held in camps in India. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who had been incarcerated in West Pakistan since March, returned triumphantly as the first Prime Minister of the new nation. India withdrew its troops from Bangladesh within three months of the war.  
  
After the war, [[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]] became the Prime Minister and later the [[President]] of Bangladesh. He along with most of his family were massacred by a group of disgruntled Army officers on [[15 August]] [[1975]]. Following his death, (Major General) Khaled Mosharraf led a military [[Coup d'état|coup]] on [[3 November]] [[1975]]. Khaled Mosharraf was killed in a counter coup on [[7 November]] 1975 in the Dhaka cantonment culminating in General [[Ziaur Rahman]] gaining power and later gained the Presidency. But in [[1981]], he was killed in yet another coup, in [[Chittagong]]. In [[1982]] General [[Hossain Mohammad Ershad]] staged a bloodless coup and  became the Chief Martial Law Administrator, assuming practically all power. Ershad later declared himself President and started a new political party named Janadal, which he later renamed as [[Jatiya Party]], and ruled until [[1990]], when a popular uprising forced Ershad to resign and give way to a parliamentary democracy. Since then, Bangladesh has been ruled by three democratically elected governments.
+
After the war, [[Sheikh Mujibur Rahman]] became the Prime Minister and later the [[President]] of Bangladesh. He along with most of his family were massacred by a group of disgruntled Army officers on 15 August 1975. Following his death, (Major General) Khaled Mosharraf led a military coup on 3 November 1975. Khaled Mosharraf was killed in a counter coup on 7 November 1975 in the Dhaka cantonment culminating in General [[Ziaur Rahman]] gaining power and later gained the Presidency. But in 1981, he was killed in yet another coup, in [[Chittagong]]. In 1982 General [[Hossain Mohammad Ershad]] staged a bloodless coup and  became the Chief Martial Law Administrator, assuming practically all power. Ershad later declared himself President and started a new political party named Janadal, which he later renamed as [[Jatiya Party]], and ruled until 1990, when a popular uprising forced Ershad to resign and give way to a parliamentary democracy. Since then, Bangladesh has been ruled by three democratically elected governments.
  
 
== Politics ==
 
== Politics ==
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Despite sustained domestic and international efforts to improve economic and demographic prospects, Bangladesh remains an underdeveloped, [[overpopulation|overpopulated]], and ill-governed nation. Although more than half of the [[Gross Domestic Product|GDP]] is generated through the service sector, nearly two-thirds of Bangladeshis are employed in the [[agriculture]] sector, with [[rice]] as the single most important product.
 
Despite sustained domestic and international efforts to improve economic and demographic prospects, Bangladesh remains an underdeveloped, [[overpopulation|overpopulated]], and ill-governed nation. Although more than half of the [[Gross Domestic Product|GDP]] is generated through the service sector, nearly two-thirds of Bangladeshis are employed in the [[agriculture]] sector, with [[rice]] as the single most important product.
  
Among other crops, [[Jute]] has been the major foreign exchange earnings cash crop from Bangladesh. Almost 70% of the export earnings of Bangladesh came from [[Jute]] immediately after the independence. [[Jute]] is the second Natural [[Fiber]] widely cultivated in the world after [[cotton]]. And Bangladesh is the major producer of [[Jute]] in the world.
+
Among other crops, [[Jute]] has been the major foreign exchange earnings cash crop from Bangladesh. Almost 70% of the export earnings of Bangladesh came from Jute immediately after the independence. Jute is the second Natural [[Fiber]] widely cultivated in the world after [[cotton]]. And Bangladesh is the major producer of Jute in the world.
  
 
However, major portion of the export earnings of Bangladesh comes from the Garments Industry. During the 80s, the garments sector in Bangladesh boomed very rapidly. This was possible because of the very low cost labor, which attracted the foreign investors to invest in the garments sector. The garments sector has developed a comprehensive network of businesses in Bangladesh, from yarn, lables, accessories, and fabrics, to ready made garments. The garments industry employs almost 40% of the female population in Bangladesh.
 
However, major portion of the export earnings of Bangladesh comes from the Garments Industry. During the 80s, the garments sector in Bangladesh boomed very rapidly. This was possible because of the very low cost labor, which attracted the foreign investors to invest in the garments sector. The garments sector has developed a comprehensive network of businesses in Bangladesh, from yarn, lables, accessories, and fabrics, to ready made garments. The garments industry employs almost 40% of the female population in Bangladesh.
  
Major impediments to growth include frequent [[cyclone]]s and [[flood]]s, inefficient state-owned enterprises, mismanaged port facilities, a rapidly growing labour force that has not been absorbed by agriculture, inefficient use of energy resources (such as [[natural gas]]), insufficient power supplies, and slow implementation of economic reforms, caused by political infighting and [[Political corruption|corruption]]. In [http://www.transparency.org/cpi/2001/cpi2001.html 2001], [http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2002/2002.08.28.cpi.en.html 2002], and [http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2003/2003.10.07.cpi.en.html 2003], [[TransparencyInternational|Transparency International]]'s surveys ranked Bangladesh as the World's most corrupt country.
+
Major impediments to growth include frequent cyclones and floods, inefficient state-owned enterprises, mismanaged port facilities, a rapidly growing labour force that has not been absorbed by agriculture, inefficient use of energy resources (such as [[natural gas]]), insufficient power supplies, and slow implementation of economic reforms, caused by political infighting and corruption. In [http://www.transparency.org/cpi/2001/cpi2001.html 2001], [http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2002/2002.08.28.cpi.en.html 2002], and [http://www.transparency.org/pressreleases_archive/2003/2003.10.07.cpi.en.html 2003], [[TransparencyInternational|Transparency International]]'s surveys ranked Bangladesh as the World's most corrupt country.
  
Since [[June]] [[2004]] Bangladesh has been ravaged by its worst floods in six years, which have killed 628 people so far and covered about 60% of the country. About 20 million people are in need of food aid on account of damaged crops, and the [[textile]] industry which earns 80% of the country's export earnings has been disrupted. Officials estimate that the damage incurred could approach US$7 billion [http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040804/ap_on_re_as/south_asia_floods_1 (Yahoo!News)].
+
Since June 2004 Bangladesh has been ravaged by its worst floods in six years, which have killed 628 people so far and covered about 60% of the country. About 20 million people are in need of food aid on account of damaged crops, and the [[textile]] industry which earns 80% of the country's export earnings has been disrupted. Officials estimate that the damage incurred could approach US$7 billion [http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040804/ap_on_re_as/south_asia_floods_1 (Yahoo!News)].
  
 
The July 19, 2005 issue of the [[New York Times]] reported that an eight story shopping mall (the largest  in [[South Asia]]) has recently opened in [[Dhaka]], the capital of Bangladesh. The large influx of shoppers belies the notion that the economy of Bangladesh has been stagnant, and also reveals the growth of the middle class in the country. Observers credited an expansion in the textile and garment trade for bringing some prosperity to the country.
 
The July 19, 2005 issue of the [[New York Times]] reported that an eight story shopping mall (the largest  in [[South Asia]]) has recently opened in [[Dhaka]], the capital of Bangladesh. The large influx of shoppers belies the notion that the economy of Bangladesh has been stagnant, and also reveals the growth of the middle class in the country. Observers credited an expansion in the textile and garment trade for bringing some prosperity to the country.
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== Culture ==
 
== Culture ==
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
 +
  
 
== Sports ==
 
== Sports ==
  
Although Bangladesh is not a major sporting power in any sense, Bangladeshi athletes and sportspersons have brought the country many laurels.  [[Kabadi]] (কাবাডি) is the national game of Bangladesh, though recently cricket has gained popularity in the [[urban area|urban areas]]. In the international arena, cricket and [[chess]] have brought many victories to Bangladesh. In [[2005]], Bangladesh beat the world champions [[Australian cricket team|Australia]] in a [[one-day international|one-day match]] in [[England]], and [[Niaz Morshed]] became the first [[international Grandmaster|Grandmaster]] of the subcontinent. Bangladeshi Shooters have also won medals in Commmonwealth games and Asian Games.
+
Although Bangladesh is not a major sporting power in any sense, Bangladeshi athletes and sportspersons have brought the country many laurels.  [[Kabadi]] is the national game of Bangladesh, though recently cricket has gained popularity in the urban areas. In the international arena, cricket and [[chess]] have brought many victories to Bangladesh. In 2005, Bangladesh beat the world champions [[Australian cricket team|Australia]] in a [[one-day international|one-day match]] in [[England]], and [[Niaz Morshed]] became the first [[international Grandmaster|Grandmaster]] of the subcontinent. Bangladeshi Shooters have also won medals in Commmonwealth games and Asian Games.
  
 
== Education ==
 
== Education ==
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Education in Bangladesh is highly subsidized by the Government, which operates many schools and colleges in the primary, secondary and higher secondary level as well as many public universities. The whole country is divided into seven education boards (Dhaka, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Jessore, Barishal, Sylhet and Comilla Education Boards) which oversee education from the primary to the higher secondary level, and conduct the primary and junior scholarship examinations, the [[SSC|Secondary School Certificate]] examination, and the [[HSC|Higher Secondary Certificate]] examination. The Government also provides a large portion of the salaries of the teachers in non-government schools. To promote literacy among women, education is free upto the higher secondary level for female students. There is also a Government-funded program which gives incentives like stipends and food for continuing education in the secondary level.
 
Education in Bangladesh is highly subsidized by the Government, which operates many schools and colleges in the primary, secondary and higher secondary level as well as many public universities. The whole country is divided into seven education boards (Dhaka, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Jessore, Barishal, Sylhet and Comilla Education Boards) which oversee education from the primary to the higher secondary level, and conduct the primary and junior scholarship examinations, the [[SSC|Secondary School Certificate]] examination, and the [[HSC|Higher Secondary Certificate]] examination. The Government also provides a large portion of the salaries of the teachers in non-government schools. To promote literacy among women, education is free upto the higher secondary level for female students. There is also a Government-funded program which gives incentives like stipends and food for continuing education in the secondary level.
  
There are 22 Public Universities in Bangladesh. Among them five provide engineering education and the rest are general universities.
+
There are 22 public universities in Bangladesh. Among them five provide engineering education and the rest are general universities.
  
  
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===Newspapers===
 
===Newspapers===
{| style="align:center; width:60%;"
 
|- valign="top"
 
| '''[[Bangla]] newspapers'''
 
| '''[[English language|English]] newspapers'''
 
|-
 
|
 
 
* [http://www.ajkerkagoj.com/ Ajker Kagoj]
 
* [http://www.ajkerkagoj.com/ Ajker Kagoj]
 
* [http://www.dailyinqilab.com/ Inqilab]
 
* [http://www.dailyinqilab.com/ Inqilab]
Line 167: Line 168:
 
* [http://www.prothom-alo.net/ Prothom Alo]
 
* [http://www.prothom-alo.net/ Prothom Alo]
 
* [http://www.shaptahik2000.com/home.asp Shaptahik 2000]
 
* [http://www.shaptahik2000.com/home.asp Shaptahik 2000]
|
 
 
* [http://www.thedailystar.net The Daily Star]
 
* [http://www.thedailystar.net The Daily Star]
 
* [http://www.newagebd.com The New Age]
 
* [http://www.newagebd.com The New Age]

Revision as of 06:46, 11 December 2005


Note: You may need a Bengali Font to see all the characters on this page.


গনপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ
Gôno Projātontrī Bānglādesh
Flag of Bangladesh Coat of arms
Flag of Bangladesh Coat of Arms of Bangladesh
LocationBangladesh.png
Official language Bangla
Capital Dhaka
President Iajuddin Ahmed
Prime Minister Begum Khaleda Zia
Area
- Total
- % water
Ranked 91st
144,000 km²
7.0%
Population
- Total (2004 est.)
- Density
Ranked 7th
141,340,476
1,055/km²
Independence 1971
Currency Taka
Time zone Universal Time +6
National anthem Amar Sonar Bangla
(My Golden Bengal)
Internet TLD .bd
Country Calling Code 880

The People's Republic of Bangladesh is a country in South Asia that forms the eastern part of the ancient region of Bengal. Bangladesh literally means "The Country of Bengal." Lying north of the Bay of Bengal, it borders India and Myanmar.

Evidence of civilization in Bangladesh dates back to 1st millenium B.C.E. After Partition of India in 1947 the area became known as East Pakistan after becoming part of Pakistan. In 1971 after years of linguistic and ethnic differences with West Pakistan, the Bangladesh Liberation War broke out. With the aid of Indian Military, the east became liberated later that year forming the nation of Bangladesh.

Bangladesh is one of the founding members of SAARC and a member of OIC. It is among the most densely populated countries in the world and much of it can be attributed to the fertile Ganges Delta and the monsoon rains that are the lifeline of Bangladesh. However, overpopulation and poverty have plagued Bangladesh, along with regular flooding. Depite being a constitutional democracy, the nation has witnessed many coups that have left the economy in a shambles.

History

There has long been advanced civilization in what is now Bangladesh, once the eastern part of a greater region called Bengal. There is recent evidence of civilizations dating back to 500 B.C.E., and there are even claims of social structures from around 1000 B.C.E. One of the earliest historical references to be found to date is the mention of a land named Gangaridai by the Greeks around 100B.C.E. The word is speculated to have come from Gangahrd (Land with the Ganges in its heart) and believed to be referring to an area in Bangladesh. However, more concrete proof of a political entity in Bengal starts with the Hindu king Shashanka in 7th century CE. This was followed (though not immediately) by the Buddist Pala dynasty and the Hindu Sena dynasty.

Bengal became Islamic starting in the 13th century and developed into a wealthy centre of trade and industry under the Mughal Empire during the 16th century. European traders had arrived in the late 15th century and eventually the British East India Company controlled the region by the late 18th century after the Battle of Plassey. Starting from this conquest, the British extended their rule over all of India. When Indian independence was achieved in 1947, political motivations caused it to be divided into the independent states of Pakistan and India.

The Partition of India saw Bengal divided between the two new countries: a Muslim-dominated eastern part called East Bengal corresponding to what is now Bangladesh, and a western part, the Indian state of West Bengal. The abolition of the Zamindari system (which divided the society into lords, owners of property, and commoners, users of property) in East Bengal (1950) was a major landmark in Bangladesh's movement to a "people's state". The Language Movement of 1952 established the rights of the Bengali community to speak in their own language, an event commomorated now as the International Mother Language Day. In 1955, the government of Pakistan changed the name of the province from East Bengal to East Pakistan.

East Pakistan was dominated and neglected by West Pakistan, which comprised the rest of Pakistan (West Punjab, Sindh, Baluchistan, and the Northwest Frontier Province). Despite the fact that East Pakistan earned the larger share of national income, especially through the export of Jute, most of the development was done in West Pakistan. The Pakistan Army was also mostly dominated by officers from West Pakistan. The tensions peaked in 1971, following an open, non-democratic denial by Pakistani president General Yahya Khan, of election results that gave the Awami League an overwhelming majority in the parliament Under the leadership of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, also known as Bôngobondhu (Friend of Bengal), Bangladesh started its struggle for independence. The official onset followed one of the bloodiest genocides of recent times carried out by the Pakistan army on Bengali civilians in March 1971. Virtually the entire Bengali intelligentsia were annihilated. Owing to West Pakistan's effort to rid the country of foreign journalists, accurate numbers are difficult to get, but some estimates claim 50,000 deaths in the first three days of the so-called Operation Searchlight of the Pakistan Army [1]. The overall death toll of the Bengalis in the nine month war is officially estimated to be around 3 million, with some Western sources citing between 1-1.5 million deaths [2]. More than ten million Bengalis fled to neighbouring India, which backed the liberation war, with support from the Soviet Union.

Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was arrested by the Pakistani Government. Before his arrest, Rahman made a formal and official declaration of Independence on 26 March. Hence 26 March is considered the Independence Day of Bangladesh. On 27 March Ziaur Rahman, an army major then, and President of Bangladesh much later, made the announcement of the declaration of Independence of Bangladesh on behalf of Sheikh Mujib, using a makeshift radio transmitter from Kalurghat near Chittagong city. With help of Bengali officers in the army, support of civilians and military/humanitarian aid from India, Bangladesh quickly formed a regular army as well as a guerilla force known as Mukti Bahini (Freedom Fighters). Besides attacks on the Pakistani army, the Mukti Bahini provided local intelligence and guidance of immense value to the allied force of Bangladesh Army and Indian Army which attacked the occupying West Pakistani army of 80,000 in early December 1971.

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A TIME magazine issue covering the newly independent Bangladesh.

Within two weeks of the Indian invasion, on 16 December 1971, the Lieutenant-General A. A. K. Niazi of the Pakistan army formally surrendered to Lt.Gen. Jagjit Singh Aurora, the head of the Indian army's Eastern Command. India took 93,000 prisoners of war who were held in camps in India. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, who had been incarcerated in West Pakistan since March, returned triumphantly as the first Prime Minister of the new nation. India withdrew its troops from Bangladesh within three months of the war.

After the war, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman became the Prime Minister and later the President of Bangladesh. He along with most of his family were massacred by a group of disgruntled Army officers on 15 August 1975. Following his death, (Major General) Khaled Mosharraf led a military coup on 3 November 1975. Khaled Mosharraf was killed in a counter coup on 7 November 1975 in the Dhaka cantonment culminating in General Ziaur Rahman gaining power and later gained the Presidency. But in 1981, he was killed in yet another coup, in Chittagong. In 1982 General Hossain Mohammad Ershad staged a bloodless coup and became the Chief Martial Law Administrator, assuming practically all power. Ershad later declared himself President and started a new political party named Janadal, which he later renamed as Jatiya Party, and ruled until 1990, when a popular uprising forced Ershad to resign and give way to a parliamentary democracy. Since then, Bangladesh has been ruled by three democratically elected governments.

Politics

Bangladesh is a Parliamentary democracy. The President is the head of state and holds a largely ceremonial post. The real power, however, is held by the Prime Minister, who is head of government. The president is elected by the legislature every five years and has normally limited powers that are substantially expanded during the tenure of a caretaker government, mainly in controlling the transition to a new government.

The prime minister is appointed by the president and must be a member of parliament (MP) who the president feels commands the confidence of the majority of other MPs. The cabinet is composed of ministers selected by the prime minister and appointed by the president.

The unicameral Bangladeshi parliament is the House of the Nation or Jatiya Sangsad, which has 300 members are elected by popular vote from single territorial constituencies for five-year terms of office. The remaining 45 seats are reserved for women, and allocated among the political parties according to their representation of elected members. There is Universal suffrage, citizens attain the right to vote at the age of 18. The highest judiciary body is the Supreme Court, of which the chief justices and other judges are appointed by the president.

Khaleda Zia is currently the Prime Minister of Bangladesh.

The politics of Bangladesh is dominated by two major parties, Bangladesh Nationalist Party and Awami League. Other major political parties include Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh and Jatiya Party.

In 2005 Bangladesh (along with Chad) was named by Transparency International as the most corrupt country in the world.

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Map of Bangladesh

Geography

NASA satellite Image of Bangladesh's physical features (click to enlarge)

Bangladesh consists mostly of a low-lying river delta located on the Indian subcontinent with a largely marshy jungle coastline on the Bay of Bengal known as the Sundarbans, home to the (Royal) Bengal Tiger and one of the largest mangrove forests in the world. Bangladesh is situated in the geographic region named The Ganges Delta (also known as the Ganges-Brahmaputra River Delta). This delta is the largest in the world. Having densely vegetated lands, Bangladesh is often called the Green Delta. The densely populated delta is formed by the confluence of the Ganges (local name Padma or Pôddā), Brahmaputra (Jomunā), and Meghna rivers and their tributaries as they flow down from the Himalaya, creating the largest riverine delta in the world. Bangladesh's alluvial soil is highly fertile but vulnerable to both flood and drought. Hills rise above the plain only in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (highest point: the Keokradong at 1230 m) in the far southeast and the Sylhet division in the northeast.

Straddling the Tropic of Cancer, the Bangladeshi climate is tropical with a mild winter from October to March, a hot, humid summer from March to June, and a humid, warm rainy monsoon from June to October. Natural calamities, such as floods, tropical cyclones, tornadoes, and tidal bores affect the country almost every year, combined with the effects of deforestation, soil degradation and erosion. Dhaka is the country's capital and largest city. Other major cities include Chittagong, Rajshahi, and Khulna. Cox's Bazar, South of the city of Chittagong, has a sea beach that stretches uninterrupted over 120 km; it is frequently quoted as the World's longest natural sea beach (although this claim is difficult to prove or disprove).

Economy

Fishermen near the town of Cox's Bazaar in southern Bangladesh. Many industries in Bangladesh are still primitive by modern standards.

Despite sustained domestic and international efforts to improve economic and demographic prospects, Bangladesh remains an underdeveloped, overpopulated, and ill-governed nation. Although more than half of the GDP is generated through the service sector, nearly two-thirds of Bangladeshis are employed in the agriculture sector, with rice as the single most important product.

Among other crops, Jute has been the major foreign exchange earnings cash crop from Bangladesh. Almost 70% of the export earnings of Bangladesh came from Jute immediately after the independence. Jute is the second Natural Fiber widely cultivated in the world after cotton. And Bangladesh is the major producer of Jute in the world.

However, major portion of the export earnings of Bangladesh comes from the Garments Industry. During the 80s, the garments sector in Bangladesh boomed very rapidly. This was possible because of the very low cost labor, which attracted the foreign investors to invest in the garments sector. The garments sector has developed a comprehensive network of businesses in Bangladesh, from yarn, lables, accessories, and fabrics, to ready made garments. The garments industry employs almost 40% of the female population in Bangladesh.

Major impediments to growth include frequent cyclones and floods, inefficient state-owned enterprises, mismanaged port facilities, a rapidly growing labour force that has not been absorbed by agriculture, inefficient use of energy resources (such as natural gas), insufficient power supplies, and slow implementation of economic reforms, caused by political infighting and corruption. In 2001, 2002, and 2003, Transparency International's surveys ranked Bangladesh as the World's most corrupt country.

Since June 2004 Bangladesh has been ravaged by its worst floods in six years, which have killed 628 people so far and covered about 60% of the country. About 20 million people are in need of food aid on account of damaged crops, and the textile industry which earns 80% of the country's export earnings has been disrupted. Officials estimate that the damage incurred could approach US$7 billion (Yahoo!News).

The July 19, 2005 issue of the New York Times reported that an eight story shopping mall (the largest in South Asia) has recently opened in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. The large influx of shoppers belies the notion that the economy of Bangladesh has been stagnant, and also reveals the growth of the middle class in the country. Observers credited an expansion in the textile and garment trade for bringing some prosperity to the country.

Demographics

Apart from very small countries or urban city-states such as Singapore and Bahrain, Bangladesh is the most densely populated country in the world. The nation, at 982 persons per km², has often been compared to Indonesia's Java.

Bangladesh is ethnically homogenous, with Bengalis comprising 98% of the population, the rest belonging to the tribal people. The vast majority speak Bangla, or Bengali, an Indo-Aryan language written in the Bengali script. It is the official language, though English is accepted in official tasks and in university-level education. A small number of people, mostly non-Bengali Muslims from regions of India such as Bihar speak Urdu. A substantial number of non-Bengali tribal groups inhabit the Chittagong Hill Tracts in the southeast and the Northern regions Bangladesh, including parts of the districts of Mymensingh, Sylhet, Rangpur. Almost all non-Bengali Bangladeshis speak Bangla as a second language.

Most Bangladeshis (about 83%) are Muslims, but Hindus constitute a sizable (16%) minority. There are also a small number of Buddhists, Christians, and Animists.

Bangladesh has a high population growth rate. In the mid-eighties, the government began promoting birth control to slow population growth, but with limited success. However, the Government has gained considerable success in preventing the spread of many childhood diseases, through an effective nationwide immunisation policy.

Many are landless or forced to inhabit hazardous floodplains, with the consequence of rampant water-borne disease. In an effort to stem the spread of pathogens like cholera and dysentery, international organizations began to promote well-drilling throughout the nation. Several years after widespread implementation of the programme, over a quarter of the population exhibited symptoms of arsenic poisoning. High levels of naturally occurring arsenic in the water table of certain regions has not been accounted for. The effects of arsenic-tainted water still remain a problem.

Culture

Sports

Although Bangladesh is not a major sporting power in any sense, Bangladeshi athletes and sportspersons have brought the country many laurels. Kabadi is the national game of Bangladesh, though recently cricket has gained popularity in the urban areas. In the international arena, cricket and chess have brought many victories to Bangladesh. In 2005, Bangladesh beat the world champions Australia in a one-day match in England, and Niaz Morshed became the first Grandmaster of the subcontinent. Bangladeshi Shooters have also won medals in Commmonwealth games and Asian Games.

Education

Education in Bangladesh is highly subsidized by the Government, which operates many schools and colleges in the primary, secondary and higher secondary level as well as many public universities. The whole country is divided into seven education boards (Dhaka, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Jessore, Barishal, Sylhet and Comilla Education Boards) which oversee education from the primary to the higher secondary level, and conduct the primary and junior scholarship examinations, the Secondary School Certificate examination, and the Higher Secondary Certificate examination. The Government also provides a large portion of the salaries of the teachers in non-government schools. To promote literacy among women, education is free upto the higher secondary level for female students. There is also a Government-funded program which gives incentives like stipends and food for continuing education in the secondary level.

There are 22 public universities in Bangladesh. Among them five provide engineering education and the rest are general universities.


Further reading/Non-government sites

Government and government organizations

Newspapers

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Online Bangladeshi news sources

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