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Tuesday, January 30, 2018

BCL activists again attack protesting students



40 injured; strike observed at edn institutions

In the presence of police, a Chhatra League activist hurling brick chips at Dost Building, office of different progressive students' organisations, in New Market intersection area of Chittagong City yesterday. BCL men yesterday attacked and foiled demonstration by the alliance on the campuses of three different educational institutions, leaving at least 40 injured. Photo: Collected

 Star Report

Activists of Bangladesh Chhatra League yesterday (Monday) attacked and foiled agitation of Pragatisheel Chhatra Jote on the campuses of three different educational institutions, leaving at least 40 injured.

The leaders and activists of Pragatisheel Chhatra Jote, an alliance of left-leaning student organisations, observed a nationwide strike protesting against the attack on Dhaka University students carried out by BCL activists on January 23.

In Sylhet, BCL men swooped on a procession brought out by the Jote activists at the main gate of Shahjalal University of Science and Technology (Sust) around 11:00am, leaving eight of them wounded.

Of them, Samajtantrik Chhatra Front activist Joydwip Das, a third year student of the university, has been admitted to Sylhet MAG Osmani Medical College Hospital with critical head injury, while others received primary treatment.

Witnesses said a group of BCL activists allegedly led by Moshiur Rahim Bhuiyan, Mushfiqur Rahim Zia and Sust BCL Joint Secretary Subrata Paul attacked the procession in front of the university gate.

Proctor Prof Jahir Uddin said the Sust authorities would form a probe body to find out who led the attack.

At a press conference, leaders of Chittagong unit Chhatra Jote yesterday claimed 30-40 of their activists were injured in BCL attack.

The BCL men also vandalised Dost Building, office of different progressive students' organisations, creating panic in the area, the Jote leaders claimed at a press conference held at Maulana Bhashani Auditorium of the building.

Al Kadery Joy, coordinator of the alliance, alleged Samajtantrik Chhatra Front activist Mushfiq Uddin Wasi was picked up by BCL men and kept confined at Chittagong Municipal School.

Later, a group of BCL men of City College unit attacked the Jote activists in the city's New Market area around 1:30pm when they were returning to their respective offices after completing the procession, said witnesses.

BCL Chittagong city president Emran Hossain Emu said he was not aware of any such attacks.

Ahsan Habib, general secretary of Samajtantrik Chhatra Front of Chittagong University unit, was picked up by some BCL men from the Social Science Building, assaulted and handed over to the CU proctor.

The Jote activists also came under attack at Rajshahi University when they were observing the strike in front of the administration building, alleged Kingshuk Kingjal, president of Chhatra Federation.

A faction of BCL led by two former vice presidents attacked the protestors around 9:30am, claimed Kingshuk.

On DU campus, the Jote activists padlocked the main gate of Arts Building when around 70-80 general students joined them expressing solidarity around 8:00am. They brought out a procession marching different streets on the campus before gathering at the base of Aparajeyo Bangla and held a brief rally there.

At the rally, Imran Habib Rummon, convener of the alliance, condemned yesterday's fresh attacks. He announced to continue with their protest at all education institutions across the country against the BCL attacks.

A section of DU students under the banner “Students against repression” has meanwhile conducted a press conference at Modhur Canteen on the campus where they placed various demands.

Coordinator of the movement Masud Al Mahdi claimed eight members of the three probe committees formed over the January 15, 17 and 23 incidents were present in Sunday's human chain organised by Dhaka University Teachers Association. “The members of the probe bodies have clearly sided with the university authorities. This means they have finalised the report and now would establish it,” said Masud while reading out a statement.

“Such behaviour is not unexpected from the teachers as we had earlier seen them being engaged in scuffles and holding counter-human chain blaming each other over the incidents,” he added.

Masud and other students rejected the probe bodies terming those “biased” and demanded expulsion of those involved in the attacks and removal of DU Proctor Prof Golam Rabbani.

On January 23, at least 50 protestors were injured when BCL men swooped on them to “rescue” the VC, who was kept confined by the protestors in front of his office. The following day, BCL men swooped on activists of the left-leaning student organisations in two other education institutions during their programmes protesting against the January 23 attack.

  • Courtesy: The Daily Star Jan 30, 2018 



Draft of Digital Security Act Approved: Gag on freedom of expression



React journalists, rights leaders, feel duped by govt as cabinet keeps controversial restrictions, punishments under different provisions

 Partha Pratim Bhattacharjee and Tuhin Shubhra Adhikary

The freedom of the press and expression was put to the sword, feared journalists and rights defenders as the cabinet approved the draft of the Digital Security Act-2018 yesterday (Monday).

There would be every chance of the act being misused against people's right to express themselves after it is passed by the Jatiya Sangsad, they observed.  

They also felt duped by the government as section 57 of the Information and Communication Technology Act was kept in the proposed law with some changes, despite assurances in the past of eliminating the controversial provision. 

Section 57 deals with defamation, hurting religious sentiments, causing deterioration of law and order and instigating against any person or organisation through publishing or transmitting any material in websites or in electronic form.

It stipulates maximum 14 years in prison for the offences.

Now, the draft of Digital Security Act-2018 splits these offences into four separate sections with punishment ranging from three to 10 years' term. The proposed law describes some crimes as “non-bailable” and allows a police official to search or arrest anyone without a warrant in special circumstances. 

A cabinet meeting, presided over by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at her office, gave the approval and Cabinet Secretary Md Shafiul Alam later briefed the media at the secretariat. He said the government has formulated the act to combat growing cyber crimes that are affecting many public and private organisations including Bangladesh Bank.

The draft was approved keeping a provision for revoking sections 54, 55, 56, 57 and 66 of the ICT act, he said, adding that the cases already filed under section 57 will continue. Inspector General of Police AKM Shahidul Hoque, too, said the proceedings of the cases filed under section 57 will continue, reports UNB.

Currently, 701 cases filed under section 57 are pending with the lone cyber tribunal of the country, sources say.

Asked whether the proposed law will affect journalism as elements of section 57 were incorporated in the draft, the cabinet secretary did not give any direct answer and only said, “There is nothing about journalists here [in the draft].”

Rights activists and journalists have been demanding cancellation of section 57 for its widespread misuse. Experts say the section goes against people's right to freedom of expression and free speech and it contains vague wordings, allowing its misuse against newsmen and social media users.

Protests were staged last year after more than two dozen journalists were sued under the section. Amid widespread criticisms, Law Minister Anisul Huq on several occasions said section 57 would be removed.

Contacted last night, he said, “There is a great difference between section 57 [of ICT Act] and the provisions incorporated in the Digital Security Act.” Asked about the criticisms from journalists and rights activists about the draft, the minister said, “They are saying this for the sake of saying something.”

He declined to comment further.

After a programme in the capital, Home Minister Asaduzzaman Khan said section 57 was discussed for a long time in the cabinet meeting. The draft will be finalised after many inclusions and exclusions, he added.

REACTIONS 
Khandaker Muniruzzaman, acting editor of daily Sangbad, termed Digital Security Act more draconian, more dangerous than section 57 of the ICT Act.

“It can be accepted in no way,” he told The Daily Star over the phone. “We have been demanding cancellation of section 57. But things have not improved; rather, more bad elements have been introduced. Actually, the government has duped the people.”

The act will not only curb the freedom of speech and expression but also impede independent journalism. Asked about section 32 of the proposed act, which deals with spying on government and non-government offices, he said the provision will make journalism more difficult.

“A reporter collects information in various ways. This law will make his or her work more difficult,” he said.

Bangladesh Pratidin Editor Nayeem Nizam said they have raised their voices following the misuse of section 57 as a number of cases were filed against journalists and some were detained. 

“If this law [Digital Security Act] is passed [in the JS], the media independence will be under threat. I hope lawmakers will recommend removal of these provisions when the draft will be placed in parliament,” he told The Daily Star yesterday. Under the new law, he said, any journalist may face the charge of spying when he/she tries to collect government documents for writing a report.  “Independent journalism will not march forward if the draft is passed,” he added.

Jyotirmoy Barua, a Supreme Court lawyer working on human rights, told The Daily Star that incorporating elements of section 57 in the draft law will create more ambiguity and scope for using it in harassing people. “It [the new law] could be used as a tool to harass people the way section 57 was used,” he said.

About section 32, he said it will shrink the scope for journalists and researchers in their professional and academic activities.

Rights activist Nur Khan Liton said after the Digital Security Act is passed, the freedom of expression will be curtailed, the door for discussion on some specific topics will be shut down and free voice will be muzzled. There should be a section in the new act binding the authorities concerned to do some scrutiny before taking cases over defamation or hurting religious sentiments, he said.

Baki Billah, an online activist, said the move to enact such a law goes with the characteristic of the government. The government wants to curb the freedom of expression more, which reflects its “undemocratic character”, he said.

“The government has incorporated the very provisions that we have been criticising for long,” he told this newspaper last night.

WHAT NEW SECTIONS SAY
Section 21 says anyone spreading negative propaganda against the Liberation War or the Father of the Nation, using digital devices or instigates to do so, will risk being sentenced up to 14 years' jail or a fine of up to Tk 1 crore lakh or both.

He or she will face up to life sentence or Tk 3 crore fine or both for committing the offence for the second time, it said.

Section 25 of the proposed law says, a person may face up to three years in jail or Tk 3 lakh fine or both if he or she is found to have deliberately published or broadcast in the website or electronic form something which is attacking or intimidating or which can make someone dishonest or disgruntled; knowingly publish or broadcast false and distorted (full or partial) information to annoy or humiliate someone; knowingly publish or broadcast false and distorted (full or partial) information to tarnish the image of the state or to spread rumour.

A person will face up to five years in jail or Tk 10 Lakh or both for committing the offence for second time, it said.

Section 28 says a person may face up to seven years in jail or Tk 10 lakh fine or both if he or she is found to have deliberately publishes or broadcasts something in the website or in electronic form or get it done to hurt one's religious sentiment and values. A person will face up to ten years in jail or Tk 20 Lakh or both for committing the offence for the second time, it said.

Section 29 says a person may face maximum three years in jail or Tk 5 lakh fine or both if he or she commits offence stipulated in section 499 of the Penal Code through website or in electronic form.  He or she will face up to five years in jail or Tk 10 Lakh fine or both for committing the offence for the second time, it said.

Section 499 of the Penal Code reads, “Whoever by words either spoken or intended to be read, or by signs or by visible representations, makes or publishes any imputation concerning any person intending to harm, or knowing or having reason to believe that such imputation will harm, the reputation of such person, is said, except in the cases hereinafter excepted, to defame that person.”

Section 31 of the proposed law says a person may face up to seven years in jail or Tk 5lakh fine or both if he or she is found to have deliberately published or broadcast something in the website or in electronic form which can spread hatred and create enmity among different groups and communities and can cause deterioration of law and order. Punishment will be up to 10 years in jail or Tk 10 lakh fine or both for committing the offence for the second time, it said.

Section 32 says a person may face up to 14 years in jail or Tk 20 lakh fine or both on the charge of spying if he or she illegally enters the offices of government, semi-government and autonomous bodies to gather information and uses electronic device to record something secretly. A person may face up to 14 years in jail or Tk 1 crore or both for hacking, according to section 34 of the act.

If anyone illegally enters any critical information infrastructure, he or she will face maximum seven years' imprisonment or Tk 25 lakh fine or both, and he or she may face up to 14 years in jail or 1 crore in fine or both for doing any harm to the infrastructure, according to section 17.

The new law stipulates some crimes under sections including 17, 28, 31, 32 and 34 as “non-bailable”, considering the gravity of crimes and magnitude of punishment, the cabinet secretary said.

SOME OTHER PROVISIONS
According to the draft law, the government will form a Digital Security Agency to ensure national digital security and combating cyber crimes. A director general will lead the body.

To discuss the overall digital security of the country and to take “nationally important decision” over the issue, there will be a National Digital Security Council headed by the prime minister, the draft reads.

The government, through a gazette notification, will declare some specific computer systems, networks and information infrastructures, as “Essential Information Infrastructures” to serve the purpose of the act.

NO NEED FOR ARREST WARRANT
As per section 43 of the draft, a police official can search or arrest anyone without any warrant issued by a court.

If a police officer believes that an offence under the act has been committed in a certain place or is being committed, or there is a possibility of crimes, or there is a possibility of destroying evidence, he or she can search the place or any person present there.

The officer can arrest any person if he or she suspects that the person has committed or is committing crimes. In such a case, the officer has to submit a report to the court after carrying out the search, it added. 

  • Courtesy: The Daily Star/Jan 30, 2013  



Demonstration at DU: BCL backed it, blocked it too



 Aashiq Abdullah


At the Dhaka University, Bangladesh Chhatra League first added fuel to the fire and then tried to douse it.

Leaders and activists of BCL, who have twice foiled the demonstration of students against the university's affiliation with seven colleges on the campus, had actually initiated the very movement.

Four of the five administrators of Dhaka Bishwabidyalay Paribar (Dhaka University Family), a Facebook group that launched the campaign against the affiliation, are leaders of different units of the pro-Awami League student body in the university.

They are: Motakabbir Khan Probas, vice-president of DU BCL; Zihadul Islam Nirob and SM Rakib, vice-president and organising secretary of Fazlul Haq Hall BCL; and Sadman Sakil, publication affairs secretary of political science department BCL, shows the FB group. Several BCL sources and students have confirmed their identities.

The fifth administrator, Nur Hossain, appears to have no political affiliation. 

In the first week of this month, students from various departments started uploading posts in the group, expressing anger over the affiliation. They claimed that many from those seven colleges were damaging the university's reputation as they were "committing crimes after introducing themselves as DU students".

On January 7, Moshiur Rahman Sadik, a student of the university's software engineering department, created an event in the group, calling for demonstration near the TSC on January 11 for scrapping the affiliation.   

Three days later, BCL leader Probas in a post in the group said, "DU itself is in trouble. DU does not have the ability to look after seven colleges. Take back the seven colleges under the National University."

He also urged the group members to share news regarding the anti-affiliation protests on their Facebook timelines, saying, "Let the countrymen know how unhappy the DU students are with the affiliation".

On January 11, several hundred students, including BCL activists, demonstrated on the campus as planned. Later, the protestors announced that they would boycott classes on January 14 and besiege the vice-chancellor's office the next day to press home their demand.

Sensing more trouble, the university authorities reportedly held a meeting with some top BCL leaders the same day and asked them to retreat. The Chhatra League leaders agreed to do that, alleged one of the coordinators of the demonstrators, wishing not to be named.

The BCL leaders then told the coordinators of the movement to stop the agitation right away, assuring them that the VC, Prof Md Akhtaruzzaman, would take initiatives to solve the crisis. 

The coordinators, however, did not agree and the protest continued.

At 1:15am on January 15, Probas, who seemed to have been unaware of the developments, in another post uploaded in the group said, "As the seven colleges have been affiliated, some of their students were trying to misuse the logo of Dhaka University for their own means."

The next day, the protesters staged a sit-in in front of the VC's office. The VC reportedly called some BCL leaders to control the crowd without even talking to the demonstrators, alleged the coordinator.

About half an hour later, around 300 BCL activists, led by its top leaders, appeared there and started to hurl abuses at the female demonstrators. They also asked the male students to leave immediately.

The demo was foiled.

The Chhatra League men also took Sadik, one of the coordinators, inside the VC's office and roughed him up there.

The VC denied calling in the Chhatra League men.

Surprisingly, all posts made on the Facebook group were deleted the same night and the administrators, who run the group, were seen coming up with posts saying that the VC gave "clear solution" to the crisis.

  • Courtesy: The Daily Star/Jan 30, 2013



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āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏুāĻ• āϜāύāϤা




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āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒ্āϰāϤি āĻāĻŽāύ āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻ—ুāĻŽ-āĻ…āĻĒāĻšāϰāĻŖ āĻ েāĻ•ি⧟ে āĻĻিāϞ āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏুāĻ• āϜāύāϤা। āĻĒা‌āϞি⧟ে āϝা⧟ āϏাāĻĻা āĻĒোāĻļাāĻ•েāϰ āϞোāĻ•েāϰা। 


āĻĄেāχāϞি āϏ্āϟাāϰ āϰিāĻĒোāϰ্āϟ - 

āϰাāϜāϧাāύীāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāϏ্āϤāϤāĻŽ āĻāϞাāĻ•া āĻŽāĻ—āĻŦাāϜাāϰে āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻāĻ• āĻŦ্āϝāϏ্āϤāϤāĻŽ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿে āϘāϟেāĻ›িāϞো āϘāϟāύাāϟি। āĻĄিāĻŦি āĻĒāϰিāϚ⧟āϧাāϰী āϚাāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤি āϟেāύে-āĻšিঁāϚ⧜ে āĻāĻ•āϜāύāĻ•ে āϤুāϞে āύিāϞো āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏে। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু, āϜীāĻŦāύ āĻŦাঁāϚাāϤে āϏেāχ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāϰ āϚিā§ŽāĻ•াāϰ āϏāύ্āĻĻেāĻš āϜাāĻ—াāϞো āĻĒāĻĨāϚাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻŽāύে।

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āϏāĻŦ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻĻেāĻ–ে āĻļুāύে āĻŽāύে āĻšāϤে āĻĒাāϰে āĻāϟি āĻ•োāύো āϏিāύেāĻŽাāϰ āĻ•াāĻšিāύি। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু, āϘāϟāύাāϟি āϘāϟেāĻ›িāϞো āĻŦৃāĻšāϏ্āĻĒāϤিāĻŦাāϰ, āϜাāύু⧟াāϰি ⧍ā§Ģ, āϏāĻ•াāϞ āϏা⧜ে ā§§ā§Ļāϟাāϰ āĻĻিāĻ•ে। āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝāĻ•্āώāĻĻāϰ্āĻļীāĻĻেāϰ āĻŦāϰাāϤ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āϜাāύাāύ, āĻŦ্āϝাংāĻ• āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒ্āϰা⧟ āϏাāϤ āϞাāĻ– āϟাāĻ•া āϤুāϞে āĻŦাāχāϰে āĻāϞে āϏেāχ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāĻ•ে āϜোāϰ āĻ•āϰে āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏে āĻ“āĻ া⧟ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧীāϰা। āϏেāϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻšাāϤে āĻš্āϝাāύ্āĻĄāĻ•াāĻĢ āĻ“ āĻ“ā§ŸাāĻ•িāϟāĻ•ি āĻ›িāϞো। āϤাāϰা āύিāϜেāĻĻেāϰ āĻĄিāĻŦি āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻĒāϰিāϚ⧟ āĻĻে⧟।

āϏেāχ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāĻ•ে āĻĢেāϞে āĻĒাāϞি⧟ে āϝা⧟ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧীāϰা। āĻĢেāϞে āϝা⧟ āĻš্āϝাāύ্āĻĄāĻ•াāĻĢ, āĻ“ā§ŸাāĻ•িāϟāĻ•ি āĻ“ āĻĸাāĻ•া āĻŽেāϟ্āϰো āϚ-ā§§ā§Šā§¯ā§Ģā§Ģā§§ āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏāϟিāĻ“। āϜāύāϤা āϏেāχ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāĻ•ে āωāĻĻ্āϧাāϰ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻšাāĻŽāϞা āϚাāϞা⧟ āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏāϟিāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ।

āϰাāϏ্āϤাāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āĻĢāϞ āĻŦিāĻ•্āϰেāϤা āĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝāĻ•্āώāĻĻāϰ্āĻļী āĻŽোāϤাāϞেāĻŦ āĻšোāϏেāύ āĻŦāϞেāύ, “āĻŽāύে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›িāϞ āĻāϟি āϏিāύেāĻŽাāϰ āĻ•োāύো āϘāϟāύা। āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏেāϰ āĻ­েāϤāϰ āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ•āϜāύ āϞোāĻ• āĻāĻ• āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāĻ•ে āϜাāĻĒāϟে āϧāϰে āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে āφāϰ āϏেāχ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāϟি āϏাāĻšাāϝ্āϝ āϚে⧟ে āϚিā§ŽāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āϰāĻ›েāύ।”
āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āϰāĻŽāύা āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ āωāĻĒ-āĻ•āĻŽিāĻļāύাāϰ āĻŽাāϰুāĻĢ āĻšোāϏেāύ āϏāϰāĻĻাāϰ āĻ—āϤāĻ•াāϞ āĻŦāϞেāĻ›িāϞেāύ, “āφāĻŽāϰা āĻŦিāφāϰāϟিāĻ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŽাāχāĻ•্āϰোāĻŦাāϏāϟিāϰ āĻŽাāϞিāĻ• āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•ে āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āύেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āϚেāώ্āϟা āĻ•āϰāĻ›ি।”

āϝāĻ–āύ āϜāύāĻ—āĻŖ āĻ…āϏāĻšা⧟, āϤāĻ–āύ āϏāĻŽ্āĻŽিāϞিāϤ āϜāύāĻ—āĻŖেāϰ āĻļāĻ•্āϤিāχ āϤাঁāĻĻেāϰāĻ•ে āϰāĻ•্āώা āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻĒাāϰে, āĻŽāĻ—āĻŦাāϜাāϰেāϰ āĻ—ুāĻŽ āĻ েāĻ•ি⧟ে āĻĻে⧟াāϰ āϘāϟāύাāϟি āĻāχ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŽাāĻŖ āĻ•āϰে। 

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āĻ…-āύীāϤিāϰ āĻšোāϤা āϟিāĻ­িāϤে āύৈāϤিāĻ• āĻŦিāĻļ্āϞেāώāĻ•


- āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏুāĻ• āϜāύāϤা


āĻŦāϰ্āϤāĻŽাāύ āĻ­োāϟাāϰāĻŦিāĻšীāύ āϏāϰāĻ•াāϰেāϰ āφāĻŽāϞেāϰ āĻ…āύ্āϝāϤāĻŽ āĻĒ্āϰāϚাāϰāĻ• āĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰোāĻĒাāĻ—্āϝাāύ্āĻĄা āĻŦিāĻļাāϰāĻĻ āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ  āĻāĻ•āϜāύ  āϰাāϤাāϰাāϤি āĻšā§Ÿে āĻ“āĻ া  āĻŽিāĻĄি⧟া āĻŽুāϘāϞ  āφāϰ āĻ—ā§œে āϤোāϞেāύ āĻ…āĻĸেāϞ āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāĻĻ। āϟিāĻ­িāϤে āύাāύা āύীāϤি āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞেāύ, āϏংāĻŦাāĻĻ āĻŦিāĻļ্āϞেāώāĻŖ āĻ•āϰেāύ। āĻ•ে āĻ­ুāϞ āĻŦāϞāϞো, āĻ•ে āĻŽিāĻĨ্āϝা āĻŦāϞāϞ, āĻ•োāύāϟা āωāϚিāϤ, āĻ•োāύāϟা āĻ…āύুāϚিāϤ āĻāχāϏāĻŦ āĻ…āĻŽি⧟ āĻŦাāĻŖী āϝিāύি āϟিāĻ­ি āϚ্āϝāύেāϞে  āφāĻ“ā§œাāύ, āϤিāύি āύিāϜেāχ āϟ্āϰাāĻĢিāĻ• āφāχāύ āĻ­ংāĻ— āĻ•āϰে āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āĻ—া⧜ি āϚাāϞাāύ। āĻļুāϧু āϤাāχ āύ⧟, āĻ•āϰ্āϤāĻŦ্āϝāϰāϤ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļāĻ•ে āĻ—া⧜িāϰ āĻ•াāĻ—āϜāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āĻĻেāĻ–াāύোāϰ āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāϜāύāĻ“ āĻŦোāϧ āĻ•āϰেāύāύি। āϤāĻŦে āϤিāύি  āĻĒুāϞিāĻļāĻ•ে āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻি⧟ে āϜাāύি⧟ে  āĻĻিāϤে āĻ­ুāϞ āĻ•āϰেāύāύি, āϤিāύি āĻĻেāĻ–ি⧟ে āĻĻেāĻŦেāύ। āĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤাāĻĒে āĻ āύি⧟ে āĻļেāώ āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞাāĻ“ āĻšā§Ÿāύি। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻāĻ• āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏাāĻšী āϜāύāϤাāϰ āϏাāĻšāϏে āϘāϟāύাāϰ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻ…ংāĻļ āϞাāχāĻ­ āĻĒ্āϰāϚাāϰ āĻšā§Ÿ āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে। āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻĨাāĻŦা āĻĻি⧟ে āϐ āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞāϏেāϟāϟি āĻ•ে⧜ে āύে⧟াāϰ āϚেāώ্āϟা āĻ•āϰেāύ। āĻāχāĻ–াāύেāχ āĻļেāώ āύ⧟, āϘāϟāύাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻĻুঃāĻ– āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļ āύা āĻ•āϰে, āĻŦāϰং āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āϏ্āϟ্āϝাāϟাāϏ āĻĻি⧟ে āύিāϜেāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ্āϝে āϏাāĻĢাāχ āĻ—ে⧟েāĻ›ে। 

āχāύ্āϟাāϰāύেāϟ āĻĒোāϰ্āϟাāϞ āĻĒ্āϰি⧟.āĻ•āĻŽ āĻ āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļিāϤ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে āĻĒুāϰো āϘāϟāύা - 

āϰাāϜāϧাāύীāϤে āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āĻ—া⧜ি āϚাāϞাāύো⧟ āύাāύা āĻĒেāĻļাāϰ āϞোāĻ•āĻ•ে āϜāϰিāĻŽাāύা āĻ—ুāύāϤে āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে, āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ• āĻŽাāϏ āϧāϰে āĻŦিāώ⧟āϟিāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āĻŦেāĻļ āϜোāϰ āĻĻে⧟া āĻšā§Ÿ। āϤাāϰāĻĒāϰāĻ“ āĻĨেāĻŽে āύেāχ āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āϚāϞা। āĻāĻŦাāϰ āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āĻ—া⧜ি āϚাāϞি⧟ে ‘āϧāϰা āĻ–ে⧟েāĻ›েāύ’ āĻĻুāχ āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤা। āϝāĻĻিāĻ“ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āϊāϰ্āϧ্āĻŦāϤāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤাāϰ āϰেāĻĢাāϰেāύ্āϏে āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āύাāĻŽে āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻšā§Ÿāύি। āφāĻŦাāϰ āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āϝাāĻ“ā§Ÿা⧟ āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϟāĻ•ে āĻĻি⧟ে āĻ•াāĻ—āϜāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āϚাāĻ“ā§Ÿা⧟ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟāĻ•ে āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›েāύ āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤাāĻĻ্āĻŦ⧟। āϘāϟāύাāϰ āĻāĻ•āϟি āϞাāχāĻ­ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“ āϏাāĻŽাāϜিāĻ• āϝোāĻ—াāϝোāĻ— āĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽ āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āĻ›ā§œি⧟ে āĻĒ⧜āϞে āĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒāĻ• āφāϞোāϚāύা-āϏāĻŽাāϞোāϚāύা āĻšā§Ÿ।

āĻ āĻŦিāώ⧟ে ⧍⧍ āϜাāύু⧟াāϰি, āϏোāĻŽāĻŦাāϰ āϏāύ্āϧ্āϝা⧟ āϝোāĻ—াāϝোāĻ— āĻ•āϰা āĻšāϞে āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤা āĻĻুāϜāύ āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰেāύ, ‘āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻ…āύ্āϝা⧟ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›িāϞ, āĻāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦাāĻĻ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ āϤাāϰা। āĻ…āύ্āϝা⧟ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖেāχ āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›েāύ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟāĻ•ে।’ āφāϰ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻŦāϞāĻ›েāύ, ‘āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āϝাāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖেāχ āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϟāĻ•ে āĻ•াāĻ—āϜāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āϚাāύ āϤিāύি।’

āϘāϟāύাāϟি āϘāϟেāĻ›ে ⧧⧝ āϜাāύু⧟াāϰি, āĻļুāĻ•্āϰāĻŦাāϰ āϰাāϤ ⧝āϟা ⧍ā§Ģ āĻŽিāύিāϟেāϰ āĻĻিāĻ•ে āϰাāϜāϧাāύীāϰ āĻŦেāχāϞি āϰোāĻĄেāϰ āϏিāĻĻ্āϧেāĻļ্āĻŦāϰী āĻ—াāϰ্āϞāϏ āĻ•āϞেāϜেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে।

āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤা, āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝāĻ•্āώāĻĻāϰ্āĻļীāĻĻেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞে āϜাāύা āĻ—েāĻ›ে, āĻļুāĻ•্āϰāĻŦাāϰ āĻ…āĻĢিāϏাāϰ্āϏ āĻ•্āϞাāĻŦ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āĻĢেāĻĄাāϰেāϞ āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āχāωāύি⧟āύেāϰ (āĻŦিāĻāĻĢāχāωāϜে) āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤি āĻ“ āĻāĻ•ুāĻļে āϟেāϞিāĻ­িāĻļāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāĻšী āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻāĻŦং āĻāĻ•āχ āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύেāϰ āĻŽāĻšাāϏāϚিāĻŦ āĻ“āĻŽāϰ āĻĢাāϰুāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰাāχāĻ­েāϟ āĻ•াāϰে āĻ•āϰে āĻŦেāχāϞি āϰোāĻĄ āĻšā§Ÿে āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āĻĢিāϰāĻ›িāϞেāύ। āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ—া⧜ি āϏিāĻĻ্āϧেāĻļ্āĻŦāϰী āĻ—াāϰ্āϞāϏ āĻ•āϞেāϜেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āĻāϞে āφāϟāĻ•ে āĻĻেāύ āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĒাāϞāύāϰāϤ āϟ্āϰাāĻĢিāĻ• āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ। āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা āĻ•াāϟাāĻ•াāϟি āĻšā§Ÿ।

āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āĻ›ā§œি⧟ে āĻĒ⧜া āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“āϤে āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāĻ›ে, āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϟāĻ•ে āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻĒāϰ āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻ“ āĻ“āĻŽāϰ āĻĢাāϰুāĻ• āĻĻাঁ⧜ি⧟ে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāĻ›েāύ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে। āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰেāύ, āϤিāύি āϊāϰ্āϧ্āĻŦāϤāύ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤাāϰ āĻ…āύুāĻŽāϤি āύি⧟ে āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦেāĻļ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ, āĻ“āύাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻĒ্āϰāĻŽাāĻŖ āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে। āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ—া⧜িāϰ āĻ•াāĻ—āϜāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āϚাāχāϞে āϤিāύি āϤা āĻĻিāϤে āϚাāύāύি।

āϘāϟāύাāϟি āϏāϰাāϏāϰি āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āϞাāχāĻ­ āĻĻেāĻ–াāϚ্āĻ›িāϞেāύ āĻŽুāύāϜাāϰিāύ āχāĻļāϤি⧟াāĻ• āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āĻŦাāχāĻ•াāϰ। āĻāĻ•āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে āϤাāϰ āĻšাāϤ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞāϟি āĻ•ে⧜ে āύেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āϚেāώ্āϟা āĻ•āϰেāύ āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ। āϤিāύি āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞ āĻ›ুঁāϤে āύা āĻĒাāϰāϞেāĻ“ āĻĒāϰে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞ āύি⧟ে āϏāĻŦ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“ āĻŽুāĻ›ে āĻĻে⧟ āĻŦāϞে āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰেāύ āχāĻļāϤি⧟াāĻ•। āϤāĻŦে āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āϏāϰাāϏāϰি āϞাāχāĻ­ āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা⧟ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“āϟি āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻ—েāĻ›ে।

āĻ“āχ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“’āϰ āĻ•āĻĨোāĻĒāĻ•āĻĨāύ āύিāϚে āϤুāϞে āϧāϰা āĻšāϞো-

āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻ…āĻĢিāϏাāϰ āϝāĻ–āύ āĻ…্āϝাāϞাāĻ“ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে, āϤāĻ–āύ āφāĻŽāϰা āφāϏāĻ›ি। āωāχ āĻšেāĻ­ āĻĻ্āϝ āĻĄāĻ•ুāĻŽেāύ্āϟāϏ। 
āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ : āφāϚ্āĻ›া āĻĄāĻ•ুāĻŽেāύ্āϟāϏ āĻĒāϰে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāĻŦে।
āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āφāĻŽāϰাāĻ“ āĻĒāϰে āĻĻেāĻ–āĻŦ āφāĻĒāύাāϰāϟা। āφāĻĒāύাāϰāϟা āύি⧟ে āϤো āφāχāϜিāĻĒিāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāĻ›ি āĻ…āϞāϰেāĻĄি। āωāχ āωāχāϞ āϏি āχāω āϟুāĻŽāϰো। āφāĻŽāϰা āĻ•াāϞāĻ•ে āĻĻেāĻ–āĻŦ, āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦāĻļীāϞেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāĻ›ি āϤো।
āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ•াāωāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻ…āĻŦāĻšিāϤ āĻ•āϰেāύ, āωāϞ্āϟাāĻĒāĻĨে āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϏāϞে āφāϟāĻ•াāύো āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে āĻāĻŦং āĻ•াāĻ—āϜāĻĒāϤ্āϰ āϚাāχāϞে āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›ে āύা।
āĻŽāĻž্āϜুāϰুāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāύ āĻ…āĻĢিāϏাāϰāĻ•ে āĻĄাāĻ•াāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ। āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āφāĻĒāύি āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰāĻ•ে āĻ…্āϝাāϰেāϏ্āϟ āĻ•āϰে āĻĨাāύা⧟ āύি⧟ে āϝাāύ।‘
āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ : āĻĨাāύা⧟ āύিāĻŦ āύা, āφāĻŽি āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻ•āϰāĻŦ।
āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āĻ•āϰেāύ āύা। āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻ•āϰে āĻ…্āϝাāϰেāϏ্āϟ āĻ•āϰে āĻĨাāύা⧟ āύি⧟ে āϝাāύ।
āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ : āĻ•াāĻ—āϜ āĻ•āχ āφāĻĒāύাāϰ?
āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āĻ•াāĻ—āϜ āĻĻিāĻŦ āĻ•েāύ? āĻ•াāĻ—āϜ āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›ি āύা āφāĻĒāύাāĻ•ে।
āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϤিāύি āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻŦāϞেāύ, āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻ…āĻĢিāϏাāϰ āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ…্āϝাāϞাāĻ“ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে। āφāĻĒāύি āĻļুāϰু āĻĨেāĻ•ে āωāϞ্āϟাāĻĒাāϞ্āϟা āφāϚāϰāĻŖ āĻ•āϰāĻ›েāύ।
āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ : āφāĻŽি āωāϞ্āϟাāĻĒাāϞ্āϟা āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻ•āϰিāύি। 
āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āφāĻŽি āĻ…āύেāĻ• āĻŦাāϜে āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ। āĻļুāύেāύ āφāĻĒāύাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āϏ্āϟাāĻĢ āĻ•āϞেāϜে āφāĻŽি āϏ্āϟুāĻĄেāύ্āϟ āĻĒ⧜াāχ।
āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ : āĻāϜāύ্āϝ āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āφāχāύ āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•ে āĻ­াāϞো āϜ্āĻžাāύ āĻĨাāĻ•া āωāϚিāϤ।
āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ : āφāĻĒāύি āϝে āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ, āϏেāϟা āϤো āĻ িāĻ• āύা।

āϘāϟāύাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝāĻ•্āώāĻĻāϰ্āĻļী āĻŽুāύāϜাāϰিāύ āχāĻļāϤি⧟াāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰি⧟.āĻ•āĻŽāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āϘāϟāύাāϰ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āφāĻŽি āĻ“āχāĻ–াāύে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ। āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻাāĻŽেāϞা āĻĻেāĻ–ে āφāĻŽি āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞে āĻāϟা āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āϞাāχāĻ­ āĻ•āϰা āĻļুāϰু āĻ•āϰি। āĻāĻ•āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে āϤিāύি āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞ āϟাāύাāϟাāύি āĻļুāϰু āĻ•āϰেāύ। āĻĒāϰে āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞ āύি⧟ে āύে⧟ āĻāĻŦং āϏāĻŦ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“ āĻĄিāϞিāϟ āĻ•āϰে āĻĻে⧟। āϞাāχāĻ­ āϝেāϟা āĻ•āϰেāĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ āĻ“āχāϟাāχ āĻļুāϧু āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে। āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻĨেāĻ•ে āύেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻ…āύেāĻ• āϚেāώ্āϟা āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে, āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āφāĻŽি āĻĢোāύ āĻĻিāχ āύাāχ। āĻĢোāύ āĻĒāĻ•েāϟে āϰেāĻ–েāĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ। āĻĒāϰে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āύি⧟ে āϏāĻŦ āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“ āĻĄিāϞেāϟ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে।’

āϤিāύি āφāϰāĻ“ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āωāύি (āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞāĻ“) āφāĻŽাāĻ•ে āϜিāϜ্āĻžাāϏ āĻ•āϰে āφāĻĒাāύি āĻ•ে? āφāĻŽি āĻŦāϞেāĻ›ি āφāĻŽি āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āύাāĻ—āϰিāĻ•। āφāĻĒāύাāϰা āωāϞ্āϟোāĻĒāĻĨ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻāϏেāĻ›েāύ āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļāĻ•ে āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›েāύ āĻ•েāύ? āĻĒāϰে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āφāĻŽাāĻ•ে āϰāĻ•্āώা āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে, āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ› āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŽোāĻŦাāχāϞ āύি⧟ে āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āϏāĻŦ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻĄিāϞিāϟ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে। āĻāĻŦং āφāĻŽি āϏেāĻ–াāύ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āϏāϰি āĻŦāϞে āϚāϞে āĻāϏেāĻ›ি। āϤিāύি (āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞāĻ“) āĻ…āύেāĻ•āĻŦাāϰ āφāχāϜিāĻĒি āϏাāĻšেāĻŦāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āϟ্āϰাāĻĢিāĻ•েāϰ āϊāϰ্āϧ্āĻŦāϤāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤাāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āĻŦাāϧ্āϝ āĻšā§Ÿে āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āϤাāĻĻেāϰāĻ•ে āĻ•োāύো āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āύা āĻ•āϰে āϝেāϤে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ে।’

āĻāχ āĻŦিāώ⧟ে āϜাāύāϤে āϚাāχāϞে āĻāĻ•ুāĻļে āϟেāϞিāĻ­িāĻļāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāĻšী āĻ“ āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤা āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ ⧍⧍ āϜাāύু⧟াāϰি, āϏোāĻŽāĻŦাāϰ āϏāύ্āϧ্⧟া ā§­āϟা⧟ āĻĒ্āϰি⧟.āĻ•āĻŽāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āϏে āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒ āφāϚāϰāĻŖ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে, āϤাāĻ•ে āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ি। āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻ“āĻŽāϰ āĻĢাāϰুāĻ• āĻ›িāϞ। āϤাāĻ•ে āϜিāϜ্āĻžাāϏ āĻ•āϰāϞে āϏে āϏāĻŦ āĻŦāϞāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦে।’

āϘāϟāύা āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•ে āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āύেāϤা āĻ“āĻŽāϰ āĻĢাāϰুāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰি⧟.āĻ•āĻŽāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻ“āĻ–াāύে āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ•āϜāύ āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰāĻ›িāϞ। āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āĻ­āĻĻ্āϰ āĻŽāĻšিāϞা āĻ›িāϞ, āϤাāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰāĻ›িāϞ। āĻ“āχ āĻĻিāύ āĻ…āĻĢিāϏাāϰ্āϏ āĻ•্āϞাāĻŦেāϰ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻ›িāϞ, āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύেāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖে āĻŽāĻ—āĻŦাāϜাāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāĻ•ে āϝে āϏোāϜা āϰাāϏ্āϤাāϟা, āĻ“āχāϟা āĻĒুāϰাāϟাāχ āĻĒাāϰ্āĻ•িং āĻ•āϰা। āϰাāϏ্āϤাāϟা āĻŦāύ্āϧ āĻĨাāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖে āϝাāϰা āĻŦেāχāϞি āϰোāĻĄে āĻĨাāĻ•ে, āϤাāϰা āĻ•েāωāχ āϝাāχāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻ›িāϞ āύা। āϤāĻ–āύ āĻļাāύ্āϤিāύāĻ—āϰ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻ•āϰ্āĻŖāĻĢুāϞীāϰ āĻāĻ–াāύ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻ—ি⧟ে āĻ“ā§ŸাāύāĻ“ā§Ÿে āϰোāĻĄ āĻĻি⧟ে āϝাāχ। āϝেāĻšেāϤু āϰাāϤ ā§§ā§Ļāϟা āĻŦাāϜে āĻ“ā§ŸাāύāĻ“ā§Ÿে āϰোāĻĄ āĻĢ্āϰি āĻšā§Ÿে āϝা⧟। āϏāĻŦাāχ āϝাāχāϤে āφāϏāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āĻāĻ–āύ āĻ“āĻ–াāύ āĻĻি⧟ে āϏāĻŦাāχ āϝাāϚ্āĻ›ে, āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ—া⧜িāϟাāĻ“ āϝাāϚ্āĻ›িāϞ। āĻāĻ• āĻŽāĻšিāϞা āϝেāϤে āϚাāχāĻ›ে āϤাāĻ•ে āφāϟāĻ•াāχāĻ›ে, āĻāχ āύি⧟ে āĻাāĻŽেāϞা āϚāϞāĻ›িāϞ। āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻāĻ• āĻ•āύāϏ্āϟেāĻŦāϞ āĻĻেāĻ–াāχ āĻĻিāĻ›ে āφāĻĒāύাāϰা āĻāχ āĻĻিāĻ• āĻĻি⧟ে āϝাāύ, āϤāĻ–āύ āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻĄ্āϰাāχāĻ­াāϰ āĻ“āχ āϰাāϏ্āϤা āĻĻি⧟ে āϝাāϚ্āĻ›িāϞ। āĻ•োāĻĨা āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻāĻ• āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻāϏে āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻĄ্āϰাāχāĻ­াāϰāĻ•ে āĻ…āĻ•āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ­াāώা⧟ āĻ—াāϞাāĻ—াāϞি āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻ›িāϞ। āĻ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āφāĻŽি āϧāĻŽāĻ• āĻĻিāϞাāĻŽ, āĻ•েāύ āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻ•āύāϏ্āϟেāĻŦāϞāχ āϤো āĻĻেāĻ–াāĻ‡ā§Ÿা āĻĻিāϞো। āϏে āĻ•ā§Ÿ, āύা āϝাāχāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦেāύ āύা। āφāϰāĻ“ āϜোāϰে āĻ—াāϞাāĻ—াāϞি āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻļুāϰু āĻ•āϰāϞ। āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻ­াāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—েāĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰāϚুāϰ āωāϤ্āϤেāϜিāϤāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāĻ›িāϞ। āφāĻŽāϰা āĻĻুāχāϜāύ āĻāĻ• āĻ—া⧜িāϤেāχ āĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ। āφāĻŽি āϤāĻ–āύ āĻŦেāϰ āĻšā§Ÿে āĻāϏে āĻŦāϞāϞাāĻŽ, āĻāχ āĻŽি⧟া āϤুāĻŽি āĻ•াāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ•ী āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞো। āϏাāĻŦāϧাāύে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞো। āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āφāĻŽāϰা āĻ—া⧜িāϟা āĻāĻ•āĻĒাāĻļে āύি⧟ে āϰাāĻ–āϞাāĻŽ। āϰেāĻ–ে āφāĻŽāϰা āĻ“āĻ–াāύে āĻĻাঁ⧜াāĻ‡ā§Ÿা āĻĒুāϞিāĻļāϰে āĻŦāϞāϞাāĻŽ, āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻĻুāϰ্āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•েāύ āĻ•āϰāϤেāĻ›? āĻāϰ āĻĻুāχ āĻĻিāύ āφāĻ—েāχ āφāχāϜি āĻŦāϞāĻ›ে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļāϰে āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ­াāϞো āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ। āϤোāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āφāχāϜিāĻĒি āĻŦāϞে āĻ­াāϞো āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰāϤে āφāϰ āϤুāĻŽি āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰো। āĻāχ āĻ•āĻĨা āĻļুāύে āφāϰāĻ“ āϰেāĻ—ে āĻ—েāĻ›ে। āωāϞ্āϟাāĻĒাāϞ্āϟা āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāϤাāĻ›ে, āĻāχ āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻļিāĻ–āϤে āĻšāĻŦে āĻāχ āϏāĻŦ।’

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞāϤে āĻĨাāĻ•েāύ, ‘āϤāĻ–āύ āφāχāϜিāĻĒিāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞ āĻ­াāχ। āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে āĻ•ি, āĻ“āĻĻেāϰ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āϏোāϰ্āϏ āĻĨাāĻ•ে, āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻ—ুāĻŖ্āĻĄাāĻĒাāĻŖ্āĻĄা āĻĨাāĻ•ে, āĻ“āĻĻেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āύি⧟ে āĻĻাঁ⧜াāĻ‡ā§ŸাāĻ›িāϞ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ। āĻ“āϰাāχ āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ›āĻŦি āϤুāϞāĻ›ে, āĻ­িāĻĄিāĻ“ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে। āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻ•োāύো āĻ›āĻŦি āϤোāϞে āύাāχ। āφāĻŽāϰা āĻāϟা āĻ–ে⧟াāϞ āĻ•āϰি āύাāχ। āϝāĻ–āύāχ āφāχāϜিāĻĒিāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে āϤāĻ–āύ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ“āĻ–াāύ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒাāϞাāĻ‡ā§Ÿা āĻ—েāĻ›ে। āϤāĻ–āύ āĻāĻ• āĻ•āύāϏ্āϟেāĻŦāϞ āĻŦāϞāϞ, āϏ্āϝাāϰ āφāĻĒāύাāϰা āϚāϞে āϝাāύ। āϝāĻ–āύāχ āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻ—া⧜ি āϏ্āϟাāϰ্āϟ āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ে, āϏিāĻĻ্āϧেāĻļ্āĻŦāϰী āĻ•āϞেāϜেāϰ āĻāĻ–াāύে āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻĻাঁ⧜াāĻ‡ā§Ÿা āĻ›িāϞ। āϤāĻ–āύ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻāĻ–াāύে āĻ“ā§ŸাāϰāϞেāϏে āĻŦāϞে āĻĻে⧟ āĻ“āχ āĻ—া⧜িāϟা āφāϟāĻ•াāĻ“। āϤāĻ–āύ āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϟāĻ•াāύোāϰ āĻĒāϰে āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻāϏে āĻŦāϞে, āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āĻ—া⧜িāϰ āĻ•াāĻ—āϜ āĻĻেāύ। āϤāĻ–āύ āĻ“āĻ–াāύে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ…āĻĒāϰ āĻāĻ• āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āϟ্āϰাāĻĢিāĻ•েāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻāĻ•āϜāύāĻ•ে āĻĢোāύ āĻĻি⧟ে āφāĻŽাāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞা⧟। āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟেāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ•āĻĨা āĻšā§Ÿ, āϤāĻ–āύ āĻ“āχ āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻŦāϞে āφāĻĒāύাāϰা āϚāϞে āϝাāύ। āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āφāĻŽāϰা āϚāϞে āφāϏি।’

āĻ āĻŦিāώ⧟ে āϜাāύāϤে āϚাāχāϞে āϏাāϰ্āϜেāύ্āϟ āĻ•াāĻ“āϏাāϰ āĻšাāĻŽিāĻĻ āĻĒ্āϰি⧟.āĻ•āĻŽāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āφāĻŽি āĻ“āύাāϰ āĻĒāϰিāϚ⧟ āϜাāύāϤাāĻŽ āύা। āωāύি āωāϞ্āϟো āφāϏāĻ›িāϞেāύ। āĻ āϜāύ্āϝ āϤাāϰ āĻ—া⧜ি āφāϟāĻ•ি⧟েāĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ। āĻĒāϰে āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻĄিāϏি āϏ্āϝাāϰেāϰ āϰেāĻĢাāϰেāύ্āϏে āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āύা āĻĻি⧟েāχ āĻ›ে⧜ে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ি।’

āĻŽāύāϜুāϰুāϞ āφāĻšāϏাāύ āĻŦুāϞāĻŦুāϞেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϝোāĻ—াāϝোāĻ—েāϰ āĻāĻ• āϘāĻŖ্āϟা āĻĒāϰ āĻĢেāϏāĻŦুāĻ•ে āϤিāύি āĻāĻ• āϏ্āϟ্āϝাāϟাāϏ āĻĻেāύ। āĻāϤে āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻ­াāχāϰাāϞ āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻ›āĻŦিāϟি āύি⧟ে āφāĻŽি āĻŦেāĻļ āĻ–ুāĻļিāχ। āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āĻŦাāĻšিāύী āϤো āφāϰ āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒ āύা, āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āχāωāύিāĻĢāϰ্āĻŽ āĻĒāϰে, āϏিāĻ­িāϞ āĻŽাāϏ্āϤাāύāĻ•ে āύি⧟ে, āĻŽাāύুāώāĻ•ে āĻšā§Ÿāϰাāύি āĻ•āϰে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āϏāĻŽ্āĻŽাāύ āϝাāϰা āϧুāϞা⧟ āϞুāϟা⧟, āϤাāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦাāĻĻ āϤো āĻ•āϰāϤেāχ āĻšāĻŦে। āĻ–াāϞি āϟāĻ•āĻļোāϤে āύীāϤিāĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞāĻŦে āφāϰ āϰাāϜāĻĒāĻĨে āϚোāĻ–েāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āĻ…āύ্āϝা⧟ āĻšāϞে āϚুāĻĒ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে āϤা āϤো āĻšā§Ÿ āύা। āύাāĻŽেāϰ āĻĒāϰিāϚিāϤি āĻ›া⧜া āχāωāύিāĻĢāϰ্āĻŽ āĻĒāϰা āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āφāϰ āϤাāϰ ‘āϏিāĻ­িāϞ āĻ•াāϞেāĻ•āϟāϰ’-āĻāϰ āĻ›āĻŦি āĻāĻŦং āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āφāϚāϰāĻŖ āϰেāĻ•āϰ্āĻĄ āĻ•āϰা āφāĻ›ে। āφāĻ›ে āĻĻুāχ āĻ­āĻĻ্āϰ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰāĻ“ āĻ›āĻŦি। āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āϚাāχāϞে āϏāĻŦ āĻĻিāϤে āĻĒাāϰি, āĻŦিāĻŦāϰāĻŖāĻ“ āϜাāύাāϤে āĻĒাāϰি। āϝিāύি āĻ­াāχāϰাāϞāϟি āĻ›ā§œি⧟েāĻ›েāύ āϤাāĻ•ে āϧāύ্āϝāĻŦাāĻĻ, āĻ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒুāϞিāĻļেāϰ āĻĒোāĻļাāĻ• āĻĒāϰা āĻ•াāϰোāϰ āĻŽাāϏ্āϤাāύিāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦাāĻĻ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϏাāĻšāϏ āĻĒেāϤে āĻĒাāϰেāύ āĻ…āύেāĻ•ে।’

‘āĻ…āύ্āϝা⧟ āĻ“ āĻ…āϏāĻ­্āϝāϤাāϰ āĻļāĻ•্āϤ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦাāĻĻে āϏেāĻĻিāύ āϏেāχ āχāωāύিāĻĢāϰ্āĻŽāϧাāϰী āĻ…āϏāĻ­্āϝāϟি āϞেāϜ āĻ—ুāϟাāϤে āĻŦাāϧ্āϝ āĻšā§Ÿ। āĻĒ্āϰেāϏāĻ•্āϞাāĻŦেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āĻŽাāύāĻŦāĻŦāύ্āϧāύেāϰ āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ āĻšā§Ÿ āύাāχ’, āĻŦāϞেāύ āϤিāύি।

  • āĻĒ্āϰি⧟ āϏংāĻŦাāĻĻ/āϰিāĻŽāύ/āφāϜাāĻĻ āϚৌāϧুāϰী


Monday, January 29, 2018

āφāĻŽāϰা āωāύ্āύ⧟āύেāϰ āĻ•োāύ āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে ?










āϰাāĻļিāĻĻ āϰি⧟াāϜ: āĻĢ্āϰাāύ্āϏ ⧍ā§Ļ⧍⧧ āϏাāϞেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϏāĻŦ āĻ•ā§ŸāϞা āϤাāĻĒāĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝুā§Ž āĻ•েāύ্āĻĻ্āϰ āĻŦāύ্āϧ āĻ•āϰāĻŦে। āφāĻŽāϰা āϏāĻŦে āĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āĻ•ā§ŸāϞা āϤাāĻĒ āĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝুā§Ž āĻ•েāύ্āĻĻ্āϰ āϏ্āĻĨাāĻĒāύেāϰ āωāĻĻ্āϝোāĻ— āύিāϚ্āĻ›ি। āĻāĻ• āĻĻāĻļāĻ• āφāĻ—ে āĻ•াāύাāĻĄা āĻŦেāĻŦি āĻ“ā§ŸাāĻ•াāϰ āĻŦাāϚ্āϚাāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝে āĻŦিāĻĒāĻĻāϜāύāĻ• āĻŦāϞে āĻŦাāϤিāϞ āĻ•āϰে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›িāϞ। āφāĻŽāϰা āĻŽাāύে āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻāĻ–āύো āϤা āĻŦাāϤিāϞ āĻšā§Ÿāύি। āϧূāĻŽāĻĒাāύেāϰ āĻŦিāϰুāĻĻ্āϧে āĻāϤ āĻ•āĻ োāϰ āĻŦিāϧি āύিāώেāϧ āφāϰোāĻĒ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āωāύ্āύāϤ āĻĻেāĻļে āϝে āĻāĻ• āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϤা āĻĒুāϰোāĻĒুāϰি āĻŦাāϤিāϞ āĻ•āϰে āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻŦিāώ⧟āϟি āĻāĻ–āύ āϏāĻ•্āϰি⧟āĻ­াāĻŦে āĻ­াāĻŦāĻ›ে āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ•āϟি āĻĻেāĻļ। āϤা āĻšāϞে āϏিāĻ—াāϰেāϟāĻ—ুāϞো āĻŦিāĻĻেāĻļি āĻĒāĻŖ্āϝ āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āφāϏāĻŦে āϏāύ্āĻĻেāĻš āύেāχ। āĻ•ā§ŸāϞা āĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝুā§Ž āĻ•েāύ্āĻĻ্āϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϝুāĻ•্āϤিāĻ—āϤāĻ­াāĻŦে āφāĻŽāϰা āĻĒেāĻ›āύে āĻĒ⧜ে āφāĻ›ি āĻŦāϞেāχ āĻšā§ŸāϤ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āĻ āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•ে āĻļ্āϰāĻĻ্āϧে⧟ āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ• āχāĻ•āĻŦাāϞ āĻŽোāĻšাāĻŽ্āĻŽāĻĻ āĻ–াāύ āĻŦāϞāϞেāύ, āĻ“āϰা āĻāĻ•āϟা āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে āϝে⧟ে āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻŦāύ্āϧ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে, āφāĻŽāϰা āϤো āϏে āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে āϝাāχāύি।

āϏুāύীāϞ āĻ—āĻ™্āĻ—োāĻĒাāϧ্āϝা⧟েāϰ āϏেāχ āĻ•āĻŦিāϤাāϰ āĻŽāϤ, ‘ āύাāĻĻেāϰ āφāϞী āφāĻŽি āφāϰ āĻ•āϤ āĻŦ⧜ āĻšāĻŦ? āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻŽাāĻĨা⧟ āϘāϰেāϰ āĻ›াāĻĻ āĻĢুঁ⧜ে āφāĻ•াāĻļ āϏ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻļ āĻ•āϰāϞে āϤাāϰāĻĒāϰ āϤুāĻŽি āφāĻŽা⧟ āϤিāύ āĻĒ্āϰāĻšāϰেāϰ āĻŦিāϞ āĻĻেāĻ–াāĻŦে। āϤাāϰ āĻŽাāύে āωāύ্āύāϤ āĻĻেāĻļ āϝে āϏāĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰāϝুāĻ•্āϤি āĻŦ্āϝাāĻ•āĻĄেāϟ āĻŦāϞে āφāĻĒāĻĄেāϟ āϏংāϏ্āĻ•āϰāĻŖ āĻ•āϰāĻŦে āφāĻŽāϰা āϤাāϰ āĻŦাāϏ্āϤāĻŦা⧟āύ āĻļুāϰু āĻ•āϰāĻŦ। āĻāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻĢি āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āĻ—্āϝাāϏেāϰ āĻĻাāĻŽ, āĻŦিāĻĻ্āϝুāϤেāϰ āĻĻাāĻŽ, āĻĒাāύিāϰ āĻĻাāĻŽ āĻŦা⧜ি⧟ে āĻ“āĻĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏāĻ•্āϰিāĻĒāĻļāύ āύি⧟ে āϚāϞāϞে āϤো āĻ•োāύোāĻĻিāύāχ āφāύ্āϤāϰ্āϜাāϤিāĻ• āĻŦাāϜাāϰে āĻŦাāĻŖিāϜ্āϝ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϝোāĻ—িāϤা⧟ āϟিāĻ•ে āĻĨাāĻ•āϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦ āύা। āϝা āĻĒাāϰāĻŦ āϤা āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻŦিāĻĻেāĻļে āĻ…āĻĻāĻ•্āώ āϏāϏ্āϤা āĻļ্āϰāĻŽ āĻŦিāĻ•্āϰি āĻ•āϰে āĻĨ্āϰি āĻĄি āĻ…āϰ্āĻĨাā§Ž āĻĄাāϰ্āϟি, āĻĄিāĻĢিāĻ•াāϞ্āϟ āĻ“ āĻĄেāĻž্āϜাāϰাāϏ āĻ•াāϜāĻ—ুāϞো āĻ•āϰেāχ āϏোāύাāϰ āϝৌāĻŦāύ āĻļেāώ āĻ•āϰে āĻĻেāĻŦ। āφāϰ āĻ—াāϰ্āĻŽেāύ্āϟāϏāĻāϰ āĻ•াāϰাāĻ–াāύা āĻ•āϰে āĻ­্āϝাāϞু āĻ্āϝাāĻĄ āĻ•āϤ āĻšāĻŦে āϏে āĻšিāϏাāĻŦেāϰ āĻŦাāχāϰেāĻ“ āύāĻĻী āĻĻূāώিāϤ āĻ•āϰে āϝে āĻĒāϰিāĻŦেāĻļ āϧংāϏ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ি āϏে āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻāĻ–āύো āĻ…āύেāĻ• āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻŦাāĻ•ি। āĻ•োāύো āωāύ্āύāϤ āĻĻেāĻļে āĻ—াāϰ্āĻŽেāύ্āϟāϏ āĻ•াāϰāĻ–াāύা āύা āĻ•āϰে āϤৃāϤী⧟ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦেāϰ āĻĻেāĻļāĻ—ুāϞোāϤেāχ āĻ•েāύ āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻ•াāϰাāĻ–াāύা āĻ েāϞে āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻšā§Ÿ āϏেāĻ“ āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻ–āύো āĻ…āϜাāύা। āϤো āφāĻŽāϰা āύিāϜেāϰা āĻ•েāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϝুāĻ•্āϤি āϤৈāϰি āĻ•āϰি āύা?

āϝāĻ–āύ āϝāĻŽুāύা āϏেāϤু āĻšāϞ āϤāĻ–āύ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦেāϰ āύাāĻŽāĻ•āϰা āύāĻĻী āĻŦিāĻļেāώāϜ্āĻžāϰা āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻāϏে āĻŦāϞেāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āϟাāύেāϞ āĻ•āϰāϤে। āϝেāĻŽāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŖāĻĢুāϞি āύāĻĻীāϰ āϤāϞāĻĻেāĻļে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āĻāϤে āϝāĻŽুāύা āĻŦা āĻĒāĻĻ্āĻŽা āύāĻĻী āϏেāϤুāϰ āϤāϞāĻĻেāĻļে āĻĒāϞি āϜāĻŽāϤ āύা, āύাāĻŦ্āϝāϤা āĻ িāĻ• āĻĨাāĻ•āϤ āφāϰ ‘āĻŦ্āϞু’ āĻ“ā§Ÿাāϟাāϰেāϰ āĻ‰ā§ŽāϏ āϟিāĻ•ে āϝেāϤ। āĻāχ āĻŦ্āϞু āĻ“ā§Ÿাāϟাāϰ āĻ•ি āϤা āĻšā§ŸāϤ āĻšাāϰাāύোāϰ āĻĒāϰ āφāĻŽāϰা āϟেāϰ āĻĒাāĻŦ। āĻ…āύ্āϤāϤ ā§Šā§Ļāϟি āύāĻĻী āĻāĻ–āύ āĻĢāϏিāϞ āύāĻĻীāϤে āĻĒāϰিāĻŖāϤ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে। āĻšā§ŸāϤ āĻ āύি⧟েāĻ“ āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ—āϰ্āĻŦেāϰ āĻ•āĻŽāϤি āĻšāĻŦে āύা। āφāϰ āĻāĻ•āϟা āϏ্āĻĒ্āϝাāύ āĻĒāĻĻ্āĻŽা āϏেāϤুāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āĻŦāϏāϞেāχ āĻĸাāĻ•āĻĸোāϞ āĻĒিāϟি⧟ে āύিāωāϜ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ—āχ āĻŦা āĻ•োāĻĨা⧟ āĻĒেāϤাāĻŽ। āĻĒāĻĻ্āĻŽা āϏেāϤুāϰ āφāϰেāĻ• āĻŦৈāĻļিāώ্āϟ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦ āĻŦ্āϝাংāĻ• āĻ›া⧜াāχ āφāĻŽāϰা āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āύিāϜেāĻĻেāϰ āĻ…āϰ্āĻĨে ( āĻ‹āĻŖেāϰ āϏুāĻĻ āĻ•āϤ āĻ­ুāϞে āϝাāύ) āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻ›ি āϤাāϰ āĻāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāϤীāĻ•ি āύিāĻĻāϰ্āĻļāύ। āφāĻŦাāϰ āĻĒāĻĻ্āĻŽাāϰ āĻŦুāĻ•ে āĻ•āϤāĻ—ুāϞো āϏ্āĻĒ্āϝাāύ āĻŦা āĻ•āĻĢিāύে āĻļেāώ āĻĒেāϰেāĻ• āĻŽেāϰে āύāĻĻীāϟিāĻ•ে āĻšāϤ্āϝা āĻ•āϰāĻ›ি āĻ•ি āύা āϤা āϝāĻŽুāύা⧟ āϚāϰেāϰ āĻĻিāĻ•ে āϤাāĻ•াāϞে āϏ্āĻĒāώ্āϟ āĻšā§Ÿে āϝাāĻŦে।

āϰাāϜāύীāϤিāϤে āφāĻŽāϰা āĻāĻ–āύো āĻ—āĻŖāϤāύ্āϤ্āϰেāϰ āĻ›āĻŦāĻ• āĻĻি⧟ে āϚāϞāĻ›ি। āĻāĻ• āĻĻāϞ āĻ…āύ্āϝāĻĻāϞāĻ•ে। āϏ্āĻŦৈāϰাāϚাāϰāĻ“ āĻ āĻĻেāĻ–ে āĻšাāϏāĻ›ে। āĻŦিāϰোāϧী āĻĻāϞ āϝāϤ āĻļāĻ•্āϤ āĻšāĻŦে āϏāϰāĻ•াāϰেāϰ āĻ•াāϜ āϤāϤāχ āϤ্āϰুāϟিāĻŽুāĻ•্āϤ āĻšāĻŦে। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϰাāϜāύীāϤি āĻāĻ–āύ āĻŦāϞāĻ›ে, āĻŽাāĻĨাāχ āĻ•েāϟে āĻŦাāĻĻ āĻĻাāĻ“, āĻĻেāĻ–ি āĻŽাāĻĨা āĻŦ্āϝāĻĨা āĻ•িāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻšā§Ÿ। āϏāϰāĻ•াāϰ āϝāϤ āĻļāĻ•্āϤিāĻļাāϞী āĻšā§Ÿ āϤāϤ āĻ­াāϞ, āĻāϤে āĻĻাāĻĒāϟ āĻĨাāĻ•ে āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āϏāĻš্āϝ āĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤা āĻ•āĻŽে āĻ—েāϞে āϤāĻ–āύ āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰāĻ“ āϏāĻš্āϝāĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤা āĻšাāϰি⧟ে āϝা⧟।

āϏāĻšāĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী āϏাāψāĻĻা āĻŽুāύীāϰ āϏāĻŦāϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻļৃāĻ™্āĻ–āϞাāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞেāύ। āφāϰো āĻŦāϞেāύ āĻĒāϰিāϏ্āĻ•াāϰ āĻĒāϰিāϚ্āĻ›āύ্āύāϤা āĻ•āĻĨা। āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻĻিāύ āϏāĻ•াāϞে āĻŽাāύিāĻ• āĻŽি⧟া āĻāĻ­িāύিāω āĻĻি⧟ে āφāϏāϤে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟ āϜাāϤী⧟ āϏংāϏāĻĻেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύেāϰ āϚāϤ্āĻŦāϰে āϚিāĻĒāϏ, āϏিāĻ—াāϰেāϟ, āĻাāϞāĻŽু⧜ি āĻ“ āĻŦাāĻĻাāĻŽেāϰ āĻ…āϏংāĻ–্āϝ āĻ োāĻ™্āĻ—া āĻŦা āĻĒāϞিāĻĨিāύ āĻা⧜ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻĒāϰিāϏ্āĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে āϏিāϟি āĻ•āϰ্āĻĒোāϰেāĻļāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী। āφāĻ—েāϰ āĻĻিāύ āϤো āĻāϏāĻŦ āφāĻŽāϰাāχ āĻĢেāϞি āϝāϤ্āϰāϤāϤ্āϰ। āĻ•āχ āϏিāĻ™্āĻ—াāĻĒুāϰ, āφāĻŽেāϰিāĻ•া, āĻŦ্āϰিāϟেāύ, āĻĢ্āϰাāύ্āϏে āϝে⧟ে āφāĻŽāϰা āϤো āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻ•āϰি āύা।

  • Courtesy: Amadershonoy.com / Jan 29, 2018

āĻŦ⧜ āϏংāĻ•āϟেāϰ āϞāĻ•্āώāĻŖ āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāϚ্āĻ›ে - āĻŦ্āϝাāϰিāϏ্āϟাāϰ āφāĻŽীāϰুāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽ




āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϪ⧟āύ āĻ•āĻŽিāϟিāϰ āĻ…āύ্āϝāϤāĻŽ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āĻŦ্āϝাāϰিāϏ্āϟাāϰ āĻāĻŽ āφāĻŽীāϰ-āωāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāĻ›েāύ, āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύে āĻŦিāϚাāϰ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āϝে āĻŦিāώ⧟āĻ—ুāϞো āϞেāĻ–া āφāĻ›ে, āϏেāĻ—ুāϞো āύāϜāϰে āφāϏāĻ›ে āύা। āĻāϰ āĻĢāϞ āφāĻŽāϰা āĻĒাāϚ্āĻ›ি। āĻĒেāϤে āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦ। āĻ•োāύো āĻāĻ•āϟা āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āφāϏāĻŦে, āϝāĻ–āύ āĻāϟা āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻ•āϟা āĻŦ⧜ āϰāĻ•āĻŽেāϰ āϏংāĻ•āϟে āĻĒāϰিāĻŖāϤ āĻšāĻŦে, āϝাāϰ āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŦ āϏিāύāĻĄ্āϰāĻŽāĻ—ুāϞো (āϞāĻ•্āώāĻŖāĻ—ুāϞো) āφāĻŽāϰা āĻĻেāĻ–āϤে āĻĒাāϚ্āĻ›ি। āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύ āĻ­া⧟োāϞেāϟ āĻ•āϰে, āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύ āύা āĻŽেāύে āφāĻŽāϰা āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āĻ•ী āĻ•āϰে āύি⧟োāĻ— āĻ•āϰি?

āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ ‘āĻŽāύāϜিāϞ āĻŽোāϰāϏেāĻĻ āĻĒāϰিāϚাāϞিāϤ āϜāύāϏ্āĻŦাāϰ্āĻĨ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞাāϰ āϰা⧟’ āĻļীāϰ্āώāĻ• āĻŦāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āĻŽো⧜āĻ• āωāύ্āĻŽোāϚāύ āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻŦ্āϝাāϰিāϏ্āϟাāϰ āφāĻŽীāϰ āĻ āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύ āϤোāϞেāύ।

āϏুāĻĒ্āϰিāĻŽāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āϏāĻŽিāϤি āĻŽিāϞāύা⧟āϤāύে āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ িāϤ āĻ āĻŽো⧜āĻ• āωāύ্āĻŽোāϚāύ āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āϤিāύি āφāϰāĻ“ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻĒাāϰ্āϞাāĻŽেāύ্āϟ āϤো āĻ…āύেāĻ• āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰāϤে āϚা⧟। āĻŦāϞāϤে āϚা⧟, āĻ•ীāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āĻŦিāĻĻা⧟ āĻ•āϰা āϝাāĻŦে, āϏেāχ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰāĻŦ। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āĻ•ীāĻ­াāĻŦে āύি⧟োāĻ— āĻ•āϰা āϝাāĻŦে, āϏে āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϝে āύিāϰ্āĻĻেāĻļ āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āφāĻ›ে āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύে, āϏে āφāχāύ āĻĒাāϏ āĻ•āϰা āĻšā§Ÿ āύা āĻ•েāύ? āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āύি⧟োāĻ—ে āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύ āĻ…āύুāϝা⧟ী āϝে āφāχāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϪ⧟āύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা, āϏেāϟা āĻĒ্āϰāϪ⧟āύ āύা āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা⧟ āĻŦāϰ্āϤāĻŽাāύে āϝে āĻ…āĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে, āϤাāϤে āφāĻŽāϰা āĻ…্āϝাāĻĄāĻšāĻ• āĻ…āĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা⧟ āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āύি⧟োāĻ— āĻ•āϰāĻ›ি। āĻāϟা āĻ…āύেāĻ•āϟা āφāύ্āĻĻাāϜে āĻĸিāϞ āĻ›ো⧜াāϰ āĻŽāϤো। āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āύাāĻŽāĻ•āϰা āϜুāϰিāϏ্āϟāĻ“ āĻŦāϞেāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āφāĻŽāϰা āϝāĻ–āύ āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āύি⧟োāĻ— āĻ•āϰি, āϤāĻ–āύ āφāύ্āĻĻাāϜে āĻĸিāϞ āĻ›ু⧜ি। āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āύি⧟োāĻ—ে āφāχāύ āϤৈāϰিāϰ āĻŦিāώ⧟ে āϜāύāĻŽāϤ āϏৃāώ্āϟিāϰ āφāĻš্āĻŦাāύ āϜাāύাāύ āϤিāύি।

āĻŦ্āϝাāϰিāϏ্āϟাāϰ āφāĻŽীāϰ āĻŦāϞেāύ, āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύে āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ— āĻŦāϞে āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ— āĻ›িāϞ। āĻāĻ–āύ āϤো āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ— āĻŦāϞে āφāϞাāĻĻা āĻ•োāύো āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ— āĻ–ুঁāϜে āĻĒা⧟ āύা। āĻŦিāϚাāϰ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ āύি⧟āύ্āϤ্āϰāĻŖ āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ āĻĨাāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা। āφāĻŽি āĻ•āĻ–āύāχ āĻŽেāϞাāϤে āĻĒাāϰি āύা āϝে, āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āχāĻ•্āϝু⧟াāϞ āϟু āϏুāĻĒ্āϰিāĻŽāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ, āϏুāĻĒ্āϰিāĻŽāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āχāĻ•্āϝু⧟াāϞ āϟু āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ, āύāϰ āϚিāĻĢ āϜাāϏ্āϟিāϏ āχāĻ•্āϝু⧟াāϞ āϟু āϏুāĻĒ্āϰিāĻŽāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ। āĻāχ āĻ…্āϝাāϞāϜেāĻŦ্āϰাāĻ—ুāϞো āĻŽেāϞাāϤে āĻĒাāϰি āύা। āϏে āϜāύ্āϝ āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻŽāύে āĻĒ্āϰāϚ- āĻ•āώ্āϟ āĻŦāĻšāύ āĻ•āϰে āϚāϞেāĻ›ি। āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āϏংāĻŦিāϧাāύেāϰ āϝে āϚ্āϝাāĻĒ্āϟাāϰ āφāĻŽāϰা āϞিāĻ–েāĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ, āĻāϤে āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āϝে āϏ্āĻŦāĻĒ্āύ āĻ›িāϞ, āϏেāχ āϏ্āĻŦāĻĒ্āύ āĻĒূāϰāĻŖ āφāϜāĻ“ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻĒাāϰিāύি। āϏে āϜāύ্āϝ āφāĻļা āĻ•āϰি āĻ āĻŦিāώ⧟ āύি⧟ে āϏāĻŦাāχ āφāϞাāĻĒ-āφāϞোāϚāύা āĻ•āϰāĻŦে।

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āφāϜ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āĻŦ⧜ āϏংāĻ•āϟ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻŽাāύāĻŦāϤাāϰ āϏ্āĻ–āϞāύ। āĻŽাāύāĻŦāϤাāϰ āϝে āϏ্āĻ–āϞāύ āϘāϟেāĻ›ে, āϏেāĻ–াāύ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŦেāϰি⧟ে āφāϏাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ āĻĒিāϏ āĻ…্āϝাāύ্āĻĄ āĻšিāωāĻŽ্āϝাāύিāϟি। āĻļাāύ্āϤিāϰ āĻŦ⧜ āĻ…āĻ­াāĻŦ। āϝে āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύ āĻŽāύāϜিāϞ āĻŽোāϰāϏেāĻĻ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে, āϤাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϤাāĻ•ে āφāϰāĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰো-āĻ…্āϝাāĻ•āϟিāĻ­ āĻ­ূāĻŽিāĻ•া āϰাāĻ–āϤে āĻšāĻŦে āĻāχ āĻĒিāϏ āĻ…্āϝাāύ্āĻĄ āĻšিāωāĻŽ্āϝাāύিāϟিāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে।

āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύ āĻ…āϤিāĻĨি āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ āϏাāĻŦেāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύ āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āϤাāĻĢাāϜ্āϜুāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽ, āϏুāĻĒ্āϰিāĻŽāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āϏāĻŽিāϤিāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤি āĻ…্āϝাāĻĄāĻ­োāĻ•েāϟ āϜ⧟āύুāϞ āφāĻŦেāĻĻীāύ, āϏিāύি⧟āϰ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻāĻŦিāĻāĻŽ āύুāϰুāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽ, āϏাāĻŦেāĻ• āφāχāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻŦ্āϝাāϰিāϏ্āϟাāϰ āĻŽāĻ“āĻĻুāĻĻ āφāĻšāĻŽāĻĻ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŽুāĻ–। āĻ āĻ›া⧜াāĻ“ āĻšাāχāĻ•োāϰ্āϟ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ āĻŦেāĻļ āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ•āϜāύ āĻŦিāϚাāϰāĻĒāϤি āĻ“ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ।

  • Courtesy: Amadershomoy.com/Jan 29, 2018

āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ - āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰ ā§Ģā§Ģ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ




āĻāĻŽāύিāϤেāχ ⧍⧭ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āĻŽ āϜāύāĻŦāϞ āύি⧟ে āϚāϞāĻ›ে āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—। āφāĻŦাāϰ āϝাāϰা āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽে āύি⧟োāϜিāϤ, āϤাāĻĻেāϰāĻ“ āĻŦ⧜ āĻ…ংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻĨাāĻ•āĻ›েāύ āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ। āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āϜেāϞা-āωāĻĒāϜেāϞা⧟ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϰāϤ āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•, āύাāϰ্āϏ āĻ“ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤা-āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϚাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻšাāϜিāϰা āĻĒāϰ্āϝাāϞোāϚāύা⧟ āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāĻ›ে, āĻāĻĻেāϰ ā§Ģā§Ģ āĻļāϤাংāĻļেāϰ āĻŦেāĻļি āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ āύা।

āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝāϏেāĻŦা⧟ āύি⧟োāϜিāϤāĻĻেāϰ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āύিāĻļ্āϚিāϤ āĻ•āϰāϤে ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§§-⧧⧍ āϏাāϞে āϜেāϞা-āωāĻĒāϜেāϞা āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟েāϰ ā§Ē⧭⧝āϟি āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞে āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āϟাāχāĻŽ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽ āϚাāϞু āĻ•āϰে āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ…āϧিāĻĻāĻĒ্āϤāϰ। āϏাāϰা āĻĻেāĻļে āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰা⧟ ā§Ģā§Ģ āĻšাāϜাāϰ āϜāύāĻŦāϞেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে ā§¨ā§Ž āĻšাāϜাāϰ ā§Šā§Ģā§§ āϜāύ āĻ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›েāύ। āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻšাāϜিāϰাāϰ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ…āϧিāĻĻāĻĒ্āϤāϰ āĻ•েāύ্āĻĻ্āϰী⧟āĻ­াāĻŦে āĻĒāϰ্āϝāĻŦেāĻ•্āώāĻŖ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে। āϚāϞāϤি āĻŽাāϏেāϰ ā§¨ā§Ž āĻĻিāύেāϰ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āĻĒāϰ্āϝাāϞোāϚāύা⧟ āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāĻ›ে, āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āϟাāχāĻŽ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāĻĻেāϰ āĻ—ā§œে ā§Ģā§Ģ āĻĻāĻļāĻŽিāĻ• ā§­ā§§ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ।

āϝাāϰা āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻ›েāύ, āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒাāϰে āĻ–োঁāϜāĻ–āĻŦāϰ āύি⧟ে āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āϰা āĻšāĻŦে āĻŦāϞে āϜাāύাāύ āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ…āϧিāĻĻāĻĒ্āϤāϰেāϰ āĻŽāĻšাāĻĒāϰিāϚাāϞāĻ• āĻ…āϧ্āϝাāĻĒāĻ• āĻĄা. āφāĻŦুāϞ āĻ•াāϞাāĻŽ āφāϜাāĻĻ। āĻŦāĻŖিāĻ• āĻŦাāϰ্āϤাāĻ•ে āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•, āύাāϰ্āϏ āĻ•িংāĻŦা āĻ…āύ্āϝāϰা āĻ•াāϜ āĻ•āϰāϞেāĻ“ āĻ…āύেāĻ•েāχ āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏে āϏা⧜া āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›েāύ āύা। āĻ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āĻŦেāĻļি āĻĻেāĻ–াāϚ্āĻ›ে। āϰেāϜিāϏ্āϟ্āϰেāĻļāύ āĻ•āϰা āύি⧟েāĻ“ āĻ…āύীāĻšা āφāĻ›ে āĻ…āύেāĻ•েāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে। āϤāĻŦে āϏাāϰ্āĻŦিāĻ• āĻŦিāώ⧟ āĻĒāϰ্āϝাāϞোāϚāύা āĻ•āϰে āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে।

āĻ…āύ্āϝাāύ্āϝ āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āϟাāχāĻŽ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽ āϚাāϞু āφāĻ›ে āύ⧜াāχāϞ āϏāĻĻāϰ āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞেāĻ“। āĻ—āϤāĻ•াāϞ āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞāϟিāϤে āĻ—ি⧟ে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟, ā§§ā§Š āϜāύ āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•েāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻĻুāϜāύ āĻ›ুāϟিāϤে। āĻ āĻšিāϏাāĻŦে āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĒাāϞāύেāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা ā§§ā§§ āϜāύেāϰ। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻāĻĻিāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ›িāϞেāύ āĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āϏাāϤāϜāύ। āĻ āĻ…āĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āĻ…āϧিāĻ•াংāĻļ āϏāϰāĻ•াāϰি āϜেāϞা-āωāĻĒāϜেāϞা āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞেāϰāχ।

āĻ—āϤāĻ•াāϞ āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ ā§Ē⧭⧝āϟি āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝāϏেāĻŦা āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে ā§Šā§Ŧā§Ŧāϟিāϰ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ…āϧিāĻĻāĻĒ্āϤāϰে āĻĒাāĻ াāύো āĻšā§Ÿ। āĻĒ্āϰাāĻĒ্āϤ āϤāĻĨ্āϝে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟, āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰ ā§Šā§¯ āĻĻāĻļāĻŽিāĻ• ā§­ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ। āĻ…āϰ্āĻĨাā§Ž āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ ā§Ŧā§Ļ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāχ āĻāĻĻিāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āϝাāύāύি। āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—āĻ­িāϤ্āϤিāĻ• āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰ āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āĻŦেāĻļি āĻ›িāϞ āĻŽā§ŸāĻŽāύāϏিংāĻšে, ā§­ā§Š āĻļāϤাংāĻļ। āĻāĻ›া⧜া āϰাāϜāĻļাāĻšী āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—ে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰ ā§Ŧā§Ž, āϰংāĻĒুāϰে ā§Ŧā§Ē, āϚāϟ্āϟāĻ—্āϰাāĻŽে ā§Ŧ⧍ āĻ“ āĻĸাāĻ•া āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—ে āĻĒ্āϰা⧟ ā§Ŧā§§ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ। āϤāĻŦে āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āĻŦেāĻļি āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে āĻ–ুāϞāύা āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—ে। āĻ āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—ে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰ ā§Ģā§Ŧ āĻĻāĻļāĻŽিāĻ• ā§Ž āĻļāϤাংāĻļ।

⧍⧭ āϜাāύু⧟াāϰিāϰ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āĻĒāϰ্āϝাāϞোāϚāύা⧟ āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟, āĻāĻĻিāύ ā§Šā§Žā§Žāϟি āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύ āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻšাāϜিāϰাāϰ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āĻĒ্āϰেāϰāĻŖ āĻ•āϰে। āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύেāϰ ā§Ģā§Ē āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāχ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ। āĻ“āχāĻĻিāύāĻ“ āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰে āĻļীāϰ্āώে āĻ›িāϞ āĻŽā§ŸāĻŽāύāϏিংāĻš। āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—āϟিāϰ āϏāϰāĻ•াāϰি āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞāĻ—ুāϞো⧟ āĻāĻĻিāύ ā§Ŧā§­ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻšāύāύি। āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āϰাāϜāĻļাāĻšী āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—েāϰāĻ“ ā§Ŧ⧍ āĻļāϤাংāĻļ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী ⧍⧭ āϜাāύু⧟াāϰি āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻ›িāϞেāύ। āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāϰ āĻ…āύেāĻ•েāχ āĻĒাāϞাāĻ•্āϰāĻŽে āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĒাāϞāύ āĻ•āϰেāύ।

āĻĻোāĻšাāϰ āωāĻĒāϜেāϞা āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤা āĻĄা. āϜāϏিāĻŽ āωāĻĻ্āĻĻিāύ āϜাāύাāύ, āϤাāϰ āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞে āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•, āύাāϰ্āϏ, āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāĻ•āϰ্āϤা-āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϚাāϰীāϏāĻš āĻŽোāϟ ā§Ŧ⧍ āϜāύ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী āϰ⧟েāĻ›েāύ। āĻāĻĻেāϰ āϏāĻŦাāχ āχāϞেāĻ•āϟ্āϰāύিāĻ• āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏ āϏিāϏ্āϟেāĻŽে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ। āϤāĻŦে āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•āĻĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰা⧟āχ āĻĄেāĻĒুāϟেāĻļāύে āĻ…āύ্āϝāϤ্āϰ āĻ•াāϜ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšā§Ÿ। āĻĢāϞে āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏে āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āĻ•āĻŽ āĻĨাāĻ•ে।

āϝāĻĻিāĻ“ āĻĢāϰিāĻĻāĻĒুāϰ āϏāĻĻāϰ āĻšাāϏāĻĒাāϤাāϞে āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϰāϤ āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ• āύাāĻŽ āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļ āύা āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻļāϰ্āϤে āϜাāύাāύ, āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏāĻ•āĻĻেāϰ āĻ…āύেāĻ•েāχ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻŦেāĻļি āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻ›েāύ। āϤাāϰা āĻ•োāύো āϰোāĻ—ীāĻ“ āĻĻেāĻ–āĻ›েāύ āύা।

āϤāĻĻাāϰāĻ•িāϰ āĻĻুāϰ্āĻŦāϞāϤাāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖে āϚিāĻ•িā§ŽāϏাāϏেāĻŦা⧟ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻšাāϰ āĻŦেāĻļি āĻŦāϞে āĻŽāύে āĻ•āϰেāύ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝ āϏংāϏ্āĻĨাāϰ (āĻĄāĻŦ্āϞিāωāĻāχāϚāĻ“) āϏাāĻŦেāĻ• āφāĻž্āϚāϞিāĻ• āωāĻĒāĻĻেāώ্āϟা āĻ…āϧ্āϝাāĻĒāĻ• āĻĄা. āĻŽোāϜাāĻšেāϰুāϞ āĻšāĻ•। āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āϏāϰ্āĻŦāϜāύীāύ āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝāϏেāĻŦা āύিāĻļ্āϚিāϤ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāϞে āϏেāĻŦাāĻĻাāύেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϜ⧜িāϤāĻĻেāϰ āωāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āύিāĻļ্āϚিāϤ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāĻŦে। āĻĒাāĻļাāĻĒাāĻļি āϜāύāĻ—āĻŖ āϝাāϤে āĻ•াāĻ™্āĻ•্āώিāϤ āϏেāĻŦা āĻĒা⧟, āϏেāĻĻিāĻ•েāĻ“ āύāϜāϰ āϰাāĻ–āϤে āĻšāĻŦে। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āϝৌāĻ•্āϤিāĻ• āĻ•াāϰāĻŖ āĻ›া⧜াāχ āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤ āĻĨেāĻ•েāĻ“ āĻ…āύেāĻ•ে āĻĒাāϰ āĻĒে⧟ে āϝাāϚ্āĻ›েāύ, āϝা āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϏ্āĻĨāϞে āĻ…āύুāĻĒāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤা āĻŦা⧜ি⧟ে āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›ে।

āϜাāύা āĻ—েāĻ›ে, āϏাāϰা āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āφāϟāϟি āĻŦিāĻ­াāĻ—ে āϜেāϞা āĻ“ āωāĻĒāϜেāϞা āϏ্āĻŦাāϏ্āĻĨ্āϝāϏেāĻŦা āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύ āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে ā§Ē⧭⧝āϟি। āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻŽোāϟ āĻĒāĻĻ āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে ā§­ā§Ģ āĻšাāϜাāϰ ā§Ŧā§Ēā§Ēāϟি। āĻāϏāĻŦ āĻĒāĻĻেāϰ āĻŦিāĻĒāϰীāϤে āĻ•āϰ্āĻŽāϰāϤ āϰ⧟েāĻ›েāύ ā§Ģā§Ē āĻšাāϜাāϰ ā§¯ā§¯ā§Š āϜāύ। āφāϰ āĻĄিāϜিāϟাāϞ āĻ…্āϝাāϟেāύāĻĄেāύ্āϏে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āφāĻ›েāύ ā§¨ā§Ž āĻšাāϜাāϰ ā§Šā§Ģā§§ āϜāύ। āĻ āĻšিāϏাāĻŦে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧāύেāϰ āĻŦাāχāϰে āϰ⧟েāĻ›েāύ ⧍ā§Ŧ āĻšাāϜাāϰ ā§Ŧā§Ē⧍ āϜāύ।

  • Courtesy - Bonikbarta Jan 29, 2018

Three airlines leave Bangladesh for good

Sajjadur Rahman




Three foreign airlines Oman Air, Bangkok Airways and Thai Smile shut down their Bangladesh operations last year as they found the route to be commercially unsustainable.

The move has not only caused job losses of about 50 Bangladeshis but also revenue losses for the civil aviation authority and Bangladesh Biman that conducts the ground handling works at Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, industry insiders said.

Oman Air operated on Dhaka-Chittagong route for nearly a decade, but the Middle Eastern carrier suspended its operations from Chittagong in May last year and from Dhaka five months later.

Bangkok Airways that spread its wings to Dhaka in 2011 suspended operations in November last year, and Thai Smile, the lower cost version of Thai Airways, in July, just after four months of operations.

“Oman Air shut down its operations in Bangladesh and some other places due to commercial reasons,” said Ashraful Kabir, the former country manager of the national carrier of the Sultanate of Oman.

Rising oil price in recent months has made the business difficult, he said.

Kabir, however, said Oman Air will introduce a low-cost flight from Bangladesh soon.

There are about 30 foreign airlines operating from Bangladesh. All the carriers are from Asia; no European or American airlines have operations here.

Kazi Wahidul Alam, an aviation expert, said the shutting down of any foreign airline's operations gives a wrong message to the rest of the aviation world.

He gave the example of KLM, the royal Dutch airline that wound up its operations from Bangladesh several years ago.

Lufthansa, which is the largest German airline, was thinking of entering the Bangladesh market, but KLM's decision made them change their mind.

“More airlines mean more competition, which gives price benefits to passengers,” said Alam, a former director of state-run Biman Bangladesh Airlines. On the revenue side, he said an airline has to pay $7,000 to $10,000 for ground handling of each flight, while the civil aviation authority earns another $3,000 to $4,000 by rendering other services.

Revenue is also generated from cargo handling, he said.

“The government should take the issue seriously. The authorities concerned should have sat with the three airlines to find out why they were closing their operations here.” 

  • Courtesy: The Daily Star Jan 29, 2013

A government failure with double jeopardy for farmers




THE government’s failure to give out information to farmers that they badly need has a double jeopardy in the process. While the farmers cannot receive expert suggestions tailored to their farming needs, what more harm it does is that the farmers are unknowingly getting ensnared by the agricultural input sales and marketing companies that set up help-lines where people employed by the companies give out information drawn from a set of questions and answers primarily geared to the expansion of the business of the private companies.

This failure of successive governments has only pushed the farmers to quit their traditional ways of cultivation and done almost nothing to equip the farmers with the required knowledge. The companies selling agricultural inputs have opened help-lines that are toll-free while farmers need to count Tk 0.25 a minute if the call to government agricultural information services, which are far too inadequate to cater to the need of about 18.5 million farmers. The Agricultural Information Services at the Department of Agricultural Extension headquarters runs a call centre with five agriculturists, who could attend only a half of the calls, which account for 60 calls a day on an average.

On the other front, as New Age reported on Sunday, a private company could grow its business by 30 per cent every year since it set up a helpline in the middle of 2014. Another company, which received only six calls a day in 2015, now needs to attend 250 calls a day. It has already reached more than a quarter million farmers and hoped to reach out to 2 million more by 2020.

Such a stark difference shows that something has been awry in the government information services for the farmers. It at least calls for, on part of the government, more efforts in plans to help the farmers in their farming process. What remains worrisome about this is that the help-lines of private companies, which claim to cater to the farming needs of the farmers, are, in effect, run to expand the business of the companies. When farmers call to these help-lines, they are given information and are mostly linked to specific products, leaving uninformed farmers vulnerable to manipulation of various kinds. This raises the concern for an overuse of pesticide and fertiliser, and even chemical reagents that could be harmful in more than the designated volume.

If the farmers got the information from the agricultural information services, they would not need to depend on the help-lines that are set up by private companies. By so doing, they could get expert suggestions tailored to their farming needs and would not be exposed to manipulation aimed at business expansion of private companies. The government, in such a situation, must effectively attend to the weaknesses of the system. The government must strengthen its farming information dissemination services, and that too entirely free as the private company help-lines are run, with proper logistics and human resources, to extend proper support for farmers in a meaningful way.
  • Courtesy: New Age/Jan 29, 2018