Bangladesh
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View all videosCaring Talk Save Lives
Great audioslideshow with stories from pregnant women in Bangladesh. It also shows...
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View all galleriesBANGLADESH GOVERNMENT ATTACK OPPOSI...
BANGLADESH PRESENT GOVERNMENT SERIOUSLY ATTACK OPPOSITION PARTY . NO REASON TH...
Bookmarks (7)
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‘A River named Titas’ was killed! An Appeal to World Lead...
This articles described how India has built dam on a live river in Bangladesh.
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Thais 'leave boat people to die'
So you try to escape a Burmese regime, only to be met with brutal indifference to the worth of yo...
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MI5 faces fresh torture allegations
Very serious claims. Have blogged on it here: http://blogs.amnesty.org.uk/blogs_entry.asp?eid=32...
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New Bangladesh 'mass grave' found
Some days the violence man perpetrates on man just breaks my heart. Will we ever learn?






Please read and stand for Bangladesh!
Women play a very significant role in the family. The future of the children lies on their hands. One of the common chores of women is to prepare food. To avoid suffering from any food related problems, they should be knowledgeable about the nutritional value of any food or drinks taken by the children. A recent news states that some brands of fruit juice contains excessive amount of arsenic. Arsenic interferes with cellular longevity by allosteric inhibition of an essential metabolic enzyme. Symptoms of arsenic poisoning include headache, confusion, convulsion, diarrhea, vomiting, and in severe cases coma and death. The FDA’s limit is 23 parts per billion for juice, as the FDA believes that people will consumer more water than juice in a day. Therefore, the agency allows more arsenic in juice because the greater consumption of water will “balance out” the greater arsenic content. Read more: http://www.newsytype.com/13...
pls visit
www.extrajudicialkilling.info
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Shehan
over 2 years ago
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smkhaled
over 2 years ago
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Aloha
over 2 years ago
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Aloha
over 2 years ago
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smkhaled
over 2 years ago
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DrPot
over 3 years ago
View all comments (6 more)This orgainsiation really is inspirational! Just goes to show the importance of education and women taking matters into their own hands despite the pressures imposed by tradition and poverty. Thanks for the post!
THANKS ALOHA ....
I meant '...I understand your ''thoughts'' well, ... :-))
Not sure I understand well your ''thoughts'', Smkhaled, but basically you are trying to say that the present Bangladesh government is authoritarian, right? That's bad..
PLEASE STOP STOP
Good artilce. Disagree with one thing...
"Third: Once we're no longer [oil] junkies, we can pressure our governments to create a programme of real economic empowerment for Muslim women." Thats far too late and will never therefore happen in my lifetime. Our reliance on oil will last generations and governmental lobbying must be done i) now and ii) in parallel with the micro-credit programmes and other liberalising activities. Delay isn't an option.