IN 1968, the Phillip Morris Company launched a memorable campaign to
sell Virginia Slims, a new brand of cigarettes targeting women, itself a
new phenomenon. It had a brand-new slogan: ‘You’ve come a long way,
baby.’ The company plastered it on billboards nationwide and put it in
TV ads that featured women of the early twentieth century being punished
for smoking. In all their advertising, smoking was equated with a set
of traits meant to capture the essence of women in a new era of equality
— independence, slimness, glamour, and liberation.
As it happened, the only equality this campaign ended up supporting
involved lung cancer. Today, women and men die at similar rates from
that disease.
Still, women have come a long way since the mid-twentieth century, and
it’s worth considering just how far — and just how far we have to go.
Once upon a time
THESE days it may be hard for some to believe, but before the women’s
movement burst on the scene in the late 1960s, newspapers published ads
for jobs on different pages, segregated by gender. Employers legally
paid women less than men for the same work. Some bars refused to serve
women and all banks denied married women credit or loans, a practice
which didn’t change until 1974. Some states even excluded women from
jury duty.
Radio producers considered women’s voices too abrasive to be on the air
and television executives believed that women didn’t have sufficient
credibility to anchor the news. Few women ran big corporations or
universities, or worked as fire-fighters and police officers. None sat
on the Supreme Court, installed electrical equipment, climbed telephone
poles, or owned construction companies. All hurricanes had female names,
due to the widely held view that women brought chaos and destruction to
society.
As late as 1970, Dr Edgar Berman, a consultant to presidents and to
Medicare, proclaimed on television that women were too tortured by
hormonal disturbances to assume the presidency. Few people ran into
women professors, doctors, or lawyers. Everyone addressed a woman as
either Miss or Mrs, depending on her marital status, and if a woman
needed an abortion, legal nowhere in America, she risked her life
searching among quacks in back alleys for a competent and compassionate
doctor.
The public generally believed that rape victims had probably ‘asked for
it’, most women felt too ashamed to report rape, and no language existed
to make sense of what we now call domestic violence, sexual harassment,
marital rape, or date rape. One simple phrase seemed to sum up the
hidden injuries women suffered in silence: ‘That’s life’.
On August 27, 1970, in response to such injustice, 50,000 women marched
down New York’s Fifth Avenue, announcing the birth of a new movement.
They demanded three rights: legal abortion, universal childcare, and
equal pay. These were preconditions for women’s equality with men at
home and in the workplace. Astonishingly, they didn’t include the ending
of violence against women among their demands — though the experience
and fear of male violence was widespread — because women still suffered
these crimes in silence.
Those three demands, and the fourth one that couldn’t yet be articulated, have yet to be met.
The hidden injuries of sex
AS THE women’s movement grew, women activists did, however, begin to
‘name’ their grievances. Once named, they could be identified, debated,
and — with a growing feminist political voice — turned into policy or
used to change the law.
It turned out that there were plenty of hidden injuries, which women
activists discovered and publicized through consciousness-raising
groups, pamphlets, and books. Rape, once a subject of great shame,
became redefined as a physical assault that had little to do with lust.
Date rape, for which there was plenty of experience but no name, opened
up a national conversation about what constituted consensual sex. Few
people had ever heard the words ‘marital rape’. (‘If you can’t rape your
wife,’ California Senator Bob Wilson allegedly said, ‘then who can you
rape?’) In this way, a new conversation began about the right of wives
to have consensual sex and the nature of power relations within
marriage.
From the very beginning, the mainstream media and the public labelled
women activists as ‘lesbians’. Why else would they complain about male
behaviour? Provoked by constant efforts to ‘tarnish’ all feminists as
lesbians, activists chose to embrace the label, rather than exclude
lesbians from the movement. In the process, they also began to write
about and then discuss compulsory heterosexuality. Together with a
burgeoning men’s gay movement, feminist lesbians and gay men formed the
Gay Liberation Front in the 1969. Soon, lesbian feminists created an
all-women’s group called the Lavender Menace.
The birth control pill and the sexual liberation movement of the
mid-1960s gave women new freedoms. Grasping the limitations of such
changes without abortion being legalised, feminists soon joined the
medical abortion rights campaign of that era. Determined to repeal laws
against abortion, in New York they testified before the state
legislature and passed out copies of a ‘model abortion bill’: a blank
piece of paper. Through ‘public speak-outs’, they openly discussed their
own illegal abortions and explained why they had made such choices. In
Chicago and San Francisco, activists created clandestine organisations
to help women seek qualified doctors. Some feminists even learned how to
perform abortions for those who could not find a competent doctor.
Then, in 1973, the Supreme Court handed down its famous Roe v Wade
decision, which legalised abortion and ignited the abortion wars that
still rage today. You could even say that this is where the culture wars
of the coming decades really began, and you wouldn’t be wrong.
What had feminists started? In essence, they had begun to redefine one
‘custom’ after another as crimes. For instance, one of the greatest
hidden injuries suffered by women in those years was the predatory
sexual behaviour of male bosses. In 1975, a group of women at Cornell
University coined the term sexual harassment. Previously, some women had
called it ‘sexual blackmail’, but when legal scholar Catherine
Mackinnon used the new phrase in the title of her 1979 book, Sexual
Harassment of Working Women, both feminists and judges began using it in
litigation against predatory bosses. After Anita Hill’s accusations
against Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas in 1991, the phrase became
a household term. In that same year, Congress added amendments to Title
VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, accepting the feminist argument that
sexual harassment violated a woman’s right to earn a living and work in a
non-hostile atmosphere.
If the naming of sexual harassment changed the workplace, the reframing
of wife-beating as domestic violence turned a custom into a felonious
crime. At the same time, feminists spread a network of battered women’s
shelters across the nation, offering havens from marital violence and
possible death.
A half-century to go
IF THE women’s movement often surprised and sometimes blindsided men, it
also radically expanded America’s democratic promise of equality. Women
are now everywhere. No one is shocked in 2013 when a woman enters an
operating room or a lecture hall. More than half the undergraduates at
most universities are women.
Now, if your boss drives you crazy with sexual advances, you can report
him for sexual harassment and sue him in court. If your husband beats
you, he can be charged with a felony and, in most urban areas, you can
escape to a battered women’s shelter. Women like Marissa Mayer, the CEO
of Yahoo!, and Ruchi Sanghvi, head of operations at Dropbox, are some of
the most powerful players in the new technology universe. Three women
have served as secretary of state and one as national security advisor.
Three women sit on the Supreme Court. Hillary Clinton almost became the
first woman president and may still achieve that goal. Major magazines
and newspapers have women executive editors and managing editors — even
the New York Times, which waited until 1986 before reluctantly putting
‘Ms’ in front of women’s names on its pages. Hurricanes now bear male
and female names. Women in the US military fight alongside men. They
work as fire-fighters and police detectives, and when a female plumber
shows up to fix an overflowing toilet, most people don’t panic.
Because so much has changed, many people, including young women, believe
that the longest revolution is over, that we should stop complaining,
be proud of our successes, and go home. Consider for a moment, though,
the three demands made in 1970, and the fourth one that couldn’t even be
articulated.
As anyone who’s been awake for the last decade knows, despite Roe v
Wade, women can’t access abortion providers in many parts of the
country. States have passed laws requiring pregnant women to watch
ultrasound ‘pictures’ of their ‘babies’, and forced them to endure 24-
or 48-hour waiting periods so that they can ‘rethink’ their abortion
decisions. In May 2012, Utah established the longest waiting period in
the nation: 72 hours. In that year, in fact, anti-abortion legislatures
managed to pass 43 new laws that, in one way or another, restricted
abortion.
In big cities, finding an abortion provider is often not difficult —
unless of course you are poor (because the government won’t pay for
abortions). Women in rural areas have, however, been hit particularly
hard. They have to travel long distances, pay to stay in hotels while
they ‘rethink’, and then, and only then, can they make the choice that
was promised in 1973. So yes, women still have the right to legal
abortion, but less and less access to abortion providers.
And what about child care? In 1971, Congress passed the Comprehensive
Childcare Act (CCA), providing national day care to women who needed it.
(Such a law wouldn’t have a chance today.) President Richard Nixon
vetoed it that December. Using Cold War rhetoric, he argued that the
legislation would harm the family and turn American women into their
Soviet counterparts — that is, working drudges. His veto was also
payback to his religious supporters in the South who opposed women
working outside the home, and so using child care. It set childcare
legislation back until, well, this very moment.
Ask any young working mother about the nightmare of finding day care for
her infant or a space in a preschool for her child. Childcare, as
feminists recognised, was a major precondition for women entering the
labour force on an equal footing with men. Instead of comprehensive
childcare, however, this country chose the more acceptable American way
of dealing with problems, namely, that everyone find an individual
solution. If you’re wealthy, you pay for a live-in nanny. If you’re
middle class, you hire someone to arrive every day, ready to take care
of your young children. Or you luck out and find a place in a good
preschool — or a not-so-good one.
If you’re poor, you rely on a series of exhausted and generous
grandparents, unemployed husbands, over-worked sisters, and goodhearted
neighbours. Unlike every nation in Europe, we have no guaranteed
preschool or after-school childcare, despite our endless political
platitudes about how much we cherish our children. And sadly, childcare
has remained off the national political agenda since 1971. It was never
even mentioned during the 2012 presidential debates.
And let’s not forget women’s wages. In 1970, women earned, on average,
59 per cent of men’s wages. More than four decades later, the figure is
77 per cent. When a university recently invited me to give a keynote
address at a conference, they asked what fee I expected. I wasn’t quite
sure how to respond. The best advice I got — from my husband — was:
‘Just tell them to give you 77% of whatever they’re paying the male
keynote speaker.’ That response resulted in a generous honorarium.
But what about all the women — widowed, divorced, or single — who can’t
draw on a second income from a man? How can we claim we’ve reached the
1970 equal pay demand when 70 per cent of the nation’s poor are women
and children? This isn’t about glass ceilings. What concerns me are all
the women glued to the sticky floor of dead-end jobs that provide no
benefits and no health insurance, women who, at the end of each month,
have to decide whether to pay the electricity bill or feed their
children.
As an activist and historian, I’m still shocked that women activists
(myself included) didn’t add violence against women to those three
demands back in 1970. Fear of male violence was such a normal part of
our lives that it didn’t occur to us to highlight it — not until
feminists began, during the 1970s, to publicize the wife-beating that
took place behind closed doors and to reveal how many women were raped
by strangers, the men they dated, or even their husbands.
Nor did we see how any laws could end it. As Rebecca Solnit wrote in a
powerful essay recently, one in five women will be raped during her
lifetime and gang rape is pandemic around the world. There are now laws
against rape and violence toward women. There is even a UN international
resolution on the subject. In 1993, the World Conference on Human
Rights in Vienna declared that violence against girls and women violated
their human rights. After much debate, member nations ratified the
resolution and dared to begin calling supposedly time-honoured ‘customs’
— wife beating, honour killings, dowry deaths, genital mutilation —
what they really are: brutal and gruesome crimes. Now, the nations of
the world had a new moral compass for judging one another’s cultures. In
this instance, the demands made by global feminists trumped cultural
relativism, at least when it involved violence against women.
Still, little enough has changed. Such violence continues to keep women
from walking in public spaces. Rape, as feminists have always argued, is
a form of social control, meant to make women invisible and shut them
in their homes, out of public sight. That’s why activists created ‘take
back the night’ protests in the late 1970s. They sought to reclaim the
right to public space without fear of rape.
The daytime brutal rape and killing of a 23-year-old in India last
December prompted the first international protest around violence
against women. Maybe that will raise the consciousness of some men. But
it’s hard to feel optimistic when you realise how many rapes are still
regularly being committed globally.
So, yes, we’ve come a long way, but without achieving full access to
legal abortion, comprehensive childcare, or equal pay — those three
demands from so many decades ago. Nor have we won the right to enjoy
public space without fearing violence, rape, or worse.
I always knew this was the longest revolution, one that would take a
century or more to unfold. It’s upended most of our lives, and
significantly improved so many of them. Nothing will ever be the same.
Yet there’s still such a long way to go. I doubt I’ll see full gender
equality in my lifetime.
TomDispatch.com, February 21. Ruth Rosen, a former columnist for
the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle, is professor
emerita of history at the University of California at Davis and a
scholar in residence
at UC Berkeley.
Monday, February 25, 2013
Four killed as police, Islamists trade fire
At least
four villagers and pro-hartal activists were shot dead and more than 15
people sustained bullet wounds in bloody fighting between Islamists and
law enforcers at Gobinddhal village under Singair upazila of Manikganj
on Sunday.
Of the bullet-injured, village girl Helena Aktar, 18, was fighting for life at the intensive care unit of Enam Medical College Hospital at Savar though it was primarily reported that she had died.
About 55 people, including 21 policemen, were injured in the fighting, locals and police said.
Singair police officer-in-charge Liaquat Ali, who sustained critical injuries, was shifted to Square Hospital in Dhaka, said Manikganj superintendent of police Mohammad Ali Mia.
Some locals alleged that law enforcers and ruling party men had opened fire ‘indiscriminately’ on demonstrators demanding punishment of the bloggers whom the Islamists accused of maligning Islam and its Prophet(SM), a charge the bloggers denied.
A number of Islamist parties and groups enforced the countrywide dawn-to-dusk hartal on the day also in protest at the killing of four of their activists in Friday’s violence.
The hartal was supported by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
Jahangir Hossain of Gobinddhal said that the violence erupted after police and ruling party men had attacked pro-hartal activists.
Shahidul, a pro-hartal activist, alleged that ruling party men had shot dead two of the four deceased after snatching them away from the law enforcers.
Both police and local leaders of Awami League denied the allegations saying the villagers were killed when the Islamists fired on the law enforcers.
‘The police fired 269 gunshots and more than 150 rubber bullets in self- defense after several hundred villagers attacked us with firearms, other lethal weapons and bamboo sticks,’ the additional superintendent of police of Manikganj, Mizanur Rahman, told New Age.
‘The area is dominated by radical Islamists, not only Jamaat. You can call the village a Pakistani neighbourhood where nine madrassahs are located. So you can guess the mentality of the villagers,’ he said.
At least 21 police personnel were injured while police arrested 14 people and process were under way for filing three cases in this connection, he said.
Protesting at the killings, ‘Ulema Mashaikh O Towhidi Janata’ called a daylong general strike in Manikganj district for today.
Besides, leaders of seven Islamist parties, which enforced the nationwide shutdown on Sunday, denounced the killing of villagers in police firing and announced demonstrations for today and Friday across the country in protest.
They also gave an ‘ultimatum’ to some national dailies, including Prothom Alo, The Daily Star, Kaler Kantha, Samakal and Ekattor television, to shun ‘atheist mindset’ by next Thursday.
‘Otherwise, we will urge the countrymen on next Friday to boycott the products of the groups and companies running those newspapers, including Transcom group, City group, Meghna group and Bashundhara group,’ said Khalafat Andolan organising secretary Fakhrul Islam who announced the programme.
Twenty-four people, including blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider, were killed in violence all over the country since the Shahbagh protests began on February 5 to press death penalty for the war criminals of 1971.
Some witnesses said the trouble at Gobindhhal began when pro-hartal pickets blocked the Manikganj-Singair road but faced obstruction from Awami League activists led by its Singair upazila secretary Abdul Majed.
Moments later, the Islamists regrouped and pounced on Majed leaving him injured. He was admitted to the upazila health complex.
As the news of the attack spread, AL activists rushed to the spot and vandalised the local office of BNP and some nearby shops.
In the face of the counter-attack, the Islamists urged the villagers through the PA system of different local mosques to resist the police and AL activists.
Hearing the call, several hundred armed villagers, both men and women, came out and attacked the police and ruling party men triggering a fierce gunfight.
The deceased were identified by locals and relatives as Alamgir Hossain, 35, Nasir Uddin, 27, Nazimuddin, 26, BNP’s Singair municipality unit disaster and relief secretary, and Shah Alam, imam of a local mosque.
Locals said the law enforcers had fired gunshots even by entering into houses where the pro-hartal activists had taken shelters, leaving Helena Aktar injured. New Age correspondents found the tin-made walls of Aktar’s house riddled with bullets.
Police shot Nasir Uddin, brother-in-law of Helena Aktar, when he was going to the hospital where the girl was admitted, according to the accounts of some villagers.
On-duty doctors at the hospital declared Nasir dead.
Besides, the pro-hartal activists said that the ruling party men had snatched away Nazimuddin and Shah Alam from the custody of police in front of Proshika office and shot them dead when they were being taken to the local police station on charge of attack on law enforcers.
The general strike in other places of the country, including Dhaka, passed off peacefully barring stray incidents with relatively less presence of pickets on the streets.
The ruling Awami League and its associate bodies brought out anti-hartal processions in the capital and different district towns. The main opposition BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami extended support to the shutdown but there was no visible presence of their activists on the streets.
Shahbagh protesters brought out processions in the capital on the day calling upon the people to reject the hartal and in protest against the burning of the national flag, vandalism of shaheed minars and desecration of mosques by Islamists on Friday.
Educational institutions and most businesses remained closed during the shutdown. Traffic was thinner than usual in the capital and long route buses were off the road.
Police were seen idling away their time as there were virtually no pickets on the streets. Some pickets set a human hauler ablaze at Jatrabari early in the morning.
At about the same time, another group of pickets exploded several crude bombs at Janapath intersection. At about 7:15 am, the hartal supporters brought out a procession in the city’s Shahjahanpur area but police dispersed them.
In Gazipur, hartal supporters vandalised three buses at Bhogra bypass intersection in the morning.
In Natore, Islamists brought out processions and staged demonstrations burning tyres on Natore-Bogra highway at Haguria in the morning.
In Joypurhat, pickets torched a microbus carrying newspapers on Joypurhat-Bogra highway at about 7:00am.
In Bogra, police fired in the air to disperse processions of Olama-Mashayekh Parishad at Khandar and Godarpara of the town in the morning. Police also fired 19 rounds of rubber bullets to bring the situation under control when hartal supporters blocked Naogaon-Bogra highway.
In Laxmipur, three people, including Chhatra League activists Mohan and Russell, were injured in an attack by Islamists at Dalal Bazar of sadar upazila in the morning.
The pickets damaged three vehicles in front of Alia Madrassah and on Mia Road at about 7:00am while police detained three people.
In Jhenaidah town, police arrested two activists of Jamaat-e-Islami.
In Khulna, the general strike affected life as most shops remained closed and vehicles were off the road. Awami League activists brought out a procession led by city mayor Talukder Abdul Khaleque in the morning. The marchers stormed the office of Jamaat’s labour wing Sramik Kalyan Federation at Khalishpur. They burned furniture and books in the office.
At Moulvibazar, police arrested Abdul Karim, president of Moulvibazar Government College unit of Chhatra Shibir, at court road of the town on during hartal hours.
In Chittagong, Mostaque Ahmed, additional deputy commissioner of police, said pickets had set a human hauler on fire at Andarkillah in the morning.
AFM Nizam Uddin, assistant superintendent of police, said hartal supporters had halted a city-bound train from Nazirhat near Hathazari station, but the police removed the barricade after an hour.
The Chittagong Port sources said handling of containers at the port jetties was as usual during the hartal hours. But delivery of containers from the port was affected a little.
In Sylhet, a few Jamaat-Shibir activists brought out sudden processions from Bagbari, Upa-Shahar and Payra area in the city early in the morning.
In Brahmanbaria, pickets put barricades on Dhaka-Sylhet highway on Brahmanbaria bypass road. Ruling party activists damaged two ATM booths and a branch office of Islami Bank in the town.
Of the bullet-injured, village girl Helena Aktar, 18, was fighting for life at the intensive care unit of Enam Medical College Hospital at Savar though it was primarily reported that she had died.
About 55 people, including 21 policemen, were injured in the fighting, locals and police said.
Singair police officer-in-charge Liaquat Ali, who sustained critical injuries, was shifted to Square Hospital in Dhaka, said Manikganj superintendent of police Mohammad Ali Mia.
Some locals alleged that law enforcers and ruling party men had opened fire ‘indiscriminately’ on demonstrators demanding punishment of the bloggers whom the Islamists accused of maligning Islam and its Prophet(SM), a charge the bloggers denied.
A number of Islamist parties and groups enforced the countrywide dawn-to-dusk hartal on the day also in protest at the killing of four of their activists in Friday’s violence.
The hartal was supported by the Bangladesh Nationalist Party.
Jahangir Hossain of Gobinddhal said that the violence erupted after police and ruling party men had attacked pro-hartal activists.
Shahidul, a pro-hartal activist, alleged that ruling party men had shot dead two of the four deceased after snatching them away from the law enforcers.
Both police and local leaders of Awami League denied the allegations saying the villagers were killed when the Islamists fired on the law enforcers.
‘The police fired 269 gunshots and more than 150 rubber bullets in self- defense after several hundred villagers attacked us with firearms, other lethal weapons and bamboo sticks,’ the additional superintendent of police of Manikganj, Mizanur Rahman, told New Age.
‘The area is dominated by radical Islamists, not only Jamaat. You can call the village a Pakistani neighbourhood where nine madrassahs are located. So you can guess the mentality of the villagers,’ he said.
At least 21 police personnel were injured while police arrested 14 people and process were under way for filing three cases in this connection, he said.
Protesting at the killings, ‘Ulema Mashaikh O Towhidi Janata’ called a daylong general strike in Manikganj district for today.
Besides, leaders of seven Islamist parties, which enforced the nationwide shutdown on Sunday, denounced the killing of villagers in police firing and announced demonstrations for today and Friday across the country in protest.
They also gave an ‘ultimatum’ to some national dailies, including Prothom Alo, The Daily Star, Kaler Kantha, Samakal and Ekattor television, to shun ‘atheist mindset’ by next Thursday.
‘Otherwise, we will urge the countrymen on next Friday to boycott the products of the groups and companies running those newspapers, including Transcom group, City group, Meghna group and Bashundhara group,’ said Khalafat Andolan organising secretary Fakhrul Islam who announced the programme.
Twenty-four people, including blogger Ahmed Rajib Haider, were killed in violence all over the country since the Shahbagh protests began on February 5 to press death penalty for the war criminals of 1971.
Some witnesses said the trouble at Gobindhhal began when pro-hartal pickets blocked the Manikganj-Singair road but faced obstruction from Awami League activists led by its Singair upazila secretary Abdul Majed.
Moments later, the Islamists regrouped and pounced on Majed leaving him injured. He was admitted to the upazila health complex.
As the news of the attack spread, AL activists rushed to the spot and vandalised the local office of BNP and some nearby shops.
In the face of the counter-attack, the Islamists urged the villagers through the PA system of different local mosques to resist the police and AL activists.
Hearing the call, several hundred armed villagers, both men and women, came out and attacked the police and ruling party men triggering a fierce gunfight.
The deceased were identified by locals and relatives as Alamgir Hossain, 35, Nasir Uddin, 27, Nazimuddin, 26, BNP’s Singair municipality unit disaster and relief secretary, and Shah Alam, imam of a local mosque.
Locals said the law enforcers had fired gunshots even by entering into houses where the pro-hartal activists had taken shelters, leaving Helena Aktar injured. New Age correspondents found the tin-made walls of Aktar’s house riddled with bullets.
Police shot Nasir Uddin, brother-in-law of Helena Aktar, when he was going to the hospital where the girl was admitted, according to the accounts of some villagers.
On-duty doctors at the hospital declared Nasir dead.
Besides, the pro-hartal activists said that the ruling party men had snatched away Nazimuddin and Shah Alam from the custody of police in front of Proshika office and shot them dead when they were being taken to the local police station on charge of attack on law enforcers.
The general strike in other places of the country, including Dhaka, passed off peacefully barring stray incidents with relatively less presence of pickets on the streets.
The ruling Awami League and its associate bodies brought out anti-hartal processions in the capital and different district towns. The main opposition BNP and Jamaat-e-Islami extended support to the shutdown but there was no visible presence of their activists on the streets.
Shahbagh protesters brought out processions in the capital on the day calling upon the people to reject the hartal and in protest against the burning of the national flag, vandalism of shaheed minars and desecration of mosques by Islamists on Friday.
Educational institutions and most businesses remained closed during the shutdown. Traffic was thinner than usual in the capital and long route buses were off the road.
Police were seen idling away their time as there were virtually no pickets on the streets. Some pickets set a human hauler ablaze at Jatrabari early in the morning.
At about the same time, another group of pickets exploded several crude bombs at Janapath intersection. At about 7:15 am, the hartal supporters brought out a procession in the city’s Shahjahanpur area but police dispersed them.
In Gazipur, hartal supporters vandalised three buses at Bhogra bypass intersection in the morning.
In Natore, Islamists brought out processions and staged demonstrations burning tyres on Natore-Bogra highway at Haguria in the morning.
In Joypurhat, pickets torched a microbus carrying newspapers on Joypurhat-Bogra highway at about 7:00am.
In Bogra, police fired in the air to disperse processions of Olama-Mashayekh Parishad at Khandar and Godarpara of the town in the morning. Police also fired 19 rounds of rubber bullets to bring the situation under control when hartal supporters blocked Naogaon-Bogra highway.
In Laxmipur, three people, including Chhatra League activists Mohan and Russell, were injured in an attack by Islamists at Dalal Bazar of sadar upazila in the morning.
The pickets damaged three vehicles in front of Alia Madrassah and on Mia Road at about 7:00am while police detained three people.
In Jhenaidah town, police arrested two activists of Jamaat-e-Islami.
In Khulna, the general strike affected life as most shops remained closed and vehicles were off the road. Awami League activists brought out a procession led by city mayor Talukder Abdul Khaleque in the morning. The marchers stormed the office of Jamaat’s labour wing Sramik Kalyan Federation at Khalishpur. They burned furniture and books in the office.
At Moulvibazar, police arrested Abdul Karim, president of Moulvibazar Government College unit of Chhatra Shibir, at court road of the town on during hartal hours.
In Chittagong, Mostaque Ahmed, additional deputy commissioner of police, said pickets had set a human hauler on fire at Andarkillah in the morning.
AFM Nizam Uddin, assistant superintendent of police, said hartal supporters had halted a city-bound train from Nazirhat near Hathazari station, but the police removed the barricade after an hour.
The Chittagong Port sources said handling of containers at the port jetties was as usual during the hartal hours. But delivery of containers from the port was affected a little.
In Sylhet, a few Jamaat-Shibir activists brought out sudden processions from Bagbari, Upa-Shahar and Payra area in the city early in the morning.
In Brahmanbaria, pickets put barricades on Dhaka-Sylhet highway on Brahmanbaria bypass road. Ruling party activists damaged two ATM booths and a branch office of Islami Bank in the town.
City corpns built no public toilets in 10 years
None of the two city corporations of Dhaka built any public toilets in
the last one decade in the city while its population continued to swell
during the period.
The existing toilets are too inadequate to serve the city people, observed environmentalists, adding that many pedestrians are forced to defecate by roadside and thus pollute the environment.
According to official enumeration, there are only 37 public toilets under the Dhaka North City Corporation and 61 under the Dhaka South City Corporation while the total population now stands at about 1.5 crore.
Most of the public toilets are unhygienic while some are being used for washing cars, selling water for eateries and storing goods, toilet users have alleged.
In front of Mohakhali DCC kitchen market public toilet, one Minhaz Uddin said for more than an hour he was searching for a toilet.
‘When I got it, there was no water inside and its floor and surroundings were unusable and filthy,’ said Minhaz, who came from Mymeningh.
In front of the Muktangan public toilet, people were seen taking water by jars for a nearby a restaurant.
The surroundings of Gulishtan public toilets were so unhygienic and filthy that people avoid using the toilets.
Faruq Sheikh, a nearby shop owner, said water of the toilets is used to wash vehicles and at night it turns a heaven for drug addicts.
Azimpur public toilet’s caretaker raised a partition inside the toilet to live in and he is living there for many years.
The condition of the public toilets is so dirty that city dwellers, especially women and children, refrain from using them until they get back to their houses or offices, said Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University Nephrology assistant professor AH Hamid Ahmed.
He told New Age that holding stool for long time causes infection in the bladder wall, leading to complications in the entire urinary system.
Public toilets are not only causing health hazards but also polluting the city roadsides.
Slum dwellers and floating people use open spaces for defecation, mostly for lack of awareness and sometimes for being unable to pay the charges, polluting the environment, said Bangladesh Paribesh Andolan secretary general Abdul Matin.
He said the existing public toilets need to be maintained properly and the government should ensure this service.
Dhaka North City Corporation chief estate officer Fosiullah told New Age that the existing public toilets were built at least 10 years ago and the toilets which were not facing court’s injunction were being maintained and repaired by the city corporations.
Acknowledging the shortage of public toilets for the city dwellers, Fosiullah said they were planning to build new toilets in crowded areas, especially near foot bridges of the capital.
The existing toilets are too inadequate to serve the city people, observed environmentalists, adding that many pedestrians are forced to defecate by roadside and thus pollute the environment.
According to official enumeration, there are only 37 public toilets under the Dhaka North City Corporation and 61 under the Dhaka South City Corporation while the total population now stands at about 1.5 crore.
Most of the public toilets are unhygienic while some are being used for washing cars, selling water for eateries and storing goods, toilet users have alleged.
In front of Mohakhali DCC kitchen market public toilet, one Minhaz Uddin said for more than an hour he was searching for a toilet.
‘When I got it, there was no water inside and its floor and surroundings were unusable and filthy,’ said Minhaz, who came from Mymeningh.
In front of the Muktangan public toilet, people were seen taking water by jars for a nearby a restaurant.
The surroundings of Gulishtan public toilets were so unhygienic and filthy that people avoid using the toilets.
Faruq Sheikh, a nearby shop owner, said water of the toilets is used to wash vehicles and at night it turns a heaven for drug addicts.
Azimpur public toilet’s caretaker raised a partition inside the toilet to live in and he is living there for many years.
The condition of the public toilets is so dirty that city dwellers, especially women and children, refrain from using them until they get back to their houses or offices, said Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University Nephrology assistant professor AH Hamid Ahmed.
He told New Age that holding stool for long time causes infection in the bladder wall, leading to complications in the entire urinary system.
Public toilets are not only causing health hazards but also polluting the city roadsides.
Slum dwellers and floating people use open spaces for defecation, mostly for lack of awareness and sometimes for being unable to pay the charges, polluting the environment, said Bangladesh Paribesh Andolan secretary general Abdul Matin.
He said the existing public toilets need to be maintained properly and the government should ensure this service.
Dhaka North City Corporation chief estate officer Fosiullah told New Age that the existing public toilets were built at least 10 years ago and the toilets which were not facing court’s injunction were being maintained and repaired by the city corporations.
Acknowledging the shortage of public toilets for the city dwellers, Fosiullah said they were planning to build new toilets in crowded areas, especially near foot bridges of the capital.
BDR tragedy day today
The nation will recall with heavy hearts today the carnage that took
place at the headquarters of Bangladesh Rifles, later renamed Border
Guard Bangladesh, four years ago.
At least 75 people, 57 of them army officers, mostly on deputation to BDR, lost their lives in the 36-hour mutiny by troops when celebrations of BDR Week was in progress at Peelkhana Durbar Hall on February 25, 2009.
Relatives and officers will lay wreaths today at the graves of army officers and their family members who were killed by the mutineers.
Officials on behalf of the president and prime minister, families of the slain officers, their colleagues and admirers will place flowers at the graves and offer prayers at Banani Military Graveyard in the capital at about 10:00am.
Special prayers will be offered at mosques at the headquarters of the army and BGB.
Social and political organisations will also observe the fourth anniversary of the great tragedy.
The then BDR director general Major General Shakil Ahmed and his wife were among those slain in the carnage. The mutiny ended on the following day with the surrender of the rebels.
The BGB in a press statement on Sunday said that special prayers would be offered at its four regional headquarters and all battalions.
On Tuesday, the special prayer will be held at Durbar Hall, now renamed as Bir Uttam Fazlur Rahman Khandaker Auditorium, at about 4:30pm, it said.
National People’s Party at a programme at the National Press Club on Sunday urged the government to observe the day as ‘national morning day.’
At least 75 people, 57 of them army officers, mostly on deputation to BDR, lost their lives in the 36-hour mutiny by troops when celebrations of BDR Week was in progress at Peelkhana Durbar Hall on February 25, 2009.
Relatives and officers will lay wreaths today at the graves of army officers and their family members who were killed by the mutineers.
Officials on behalf of the president and prime minister, families of the slain officers, their colleagues and admirers will place flowers at the graves and offer prayers at Banani Military Graveyard in the capital at about 10:00am.
Special prayers will be offered at mosques at the headquarters of the army and BGB.
Social and political organisations will also observe the fourth anniversary of the great tragedy.
The then BDR director general Major General Shakil Ahmed and his wife were among those slain in the carnage. The mutiny ended on the following day with the surrender of the rebels.
The BGB in a press statement on Sunday said that special prayers would be offered at its four regional headquarters and all battalions.
On Tuesday, the special prayer will be held at Durbar Hall, now renamed as Bir Uttam Fazlur Rahman Khandaker Auditorium, at about 4:30pm, it said.
National People’s Party at a programme at the National Press Club on Sunday urged the government to observe the day as ‘national morning day.’
এইচএসসি ২০১৩ প্রস্তুতি ইংরেজি প্রথম পত্র
Read the passage below and answer the questions 1-4:
Ismail Hossain is an affluent man now. Through hard work and devotion, he has managed to turn the wheels of fortune. He was an unemployed youth of an impoverished family from Ekdala village in Natore Sadar Thana. Through new knowledge, hard work and perseverance he has brought prosperity to his family. Ismail Hossain, son of Zohar Ali, studied up to class eight. Poverty then forced him to look for work. He worked as a labourer before he joined the training programme of the Natore Horticulture Centre (NHC) and has remained associated with it since then.
The officer-in-charge of NHC said that Ismail seemed to be an en thusiastic and energetic youth during the selection of villages under NHC�s command area. Ismail first received training in cultivation. Then he got a lease of land in his village and applied his new and improved knowledge for cultivating vegetables. He earned take 25,000 as profit that year. In the same way he made a profit of taka one lakh by cultivating quality cauliflowers the next year. Later he bought some land and used it entirely to cultivate cauliflowers. He has also been raising hybrid cows for milk as well as to produce manure.
Ismail�s lot has changed radically. He said with a satisfactory smile, ''I am very happy to be self-sufficient now.'' I had nothing of my own before, but now I have so much. It has been possible through my hard labour and systemic cultivation. The credit also goes to the NHC of course, he added. The officer-in-charge of NHC said, ''I feel very proud of Ismail Hossain. He deserves national recognition for his outstanding success.''
1. Choose the right word/expression to complete each sentence.
(a) At present, Ismail Hossain is rich/poor/idle man.
(b) Poverty dispelled/compelled/curtailed him to look for work.
(c) Ismail Hossain looked for work for his satisfaction/poverty/family.
(d) Ismail got a lease of land before his traing/after his training/during his training.
(e) Ismail has been able to change his fortune for his hard labour/the Natore Horituclute Centre/hard labour and the Natore Horitucluter Centre.
2. True/False. If false, give the correct information.
a) Ismail Hossain left school of his own accord.
b) Ismail earned take 100000 as profit for the first time.
c) Ismail has raised hybrid cows only for milk.
d) The officer in charge of NHC feels jealous of Ismail�s success.
e) Ismail�s family was poor.
3. Fill in the gaps with the correct form of the words in brackets.
a) Before he got a lease of land, he (receive) __ training.
b) He bought some land in order to use it for (cultivate) __ cauliflowers.
c) His fortune (change) __ for his hard labour.
d) He was (pride) __ of his success in life.
e) He proved that he was a (self-make) __ man.
Answers
1. (a) rich (b) compelled (c) poverty (d) after his training (e) hard labour and the Natore Horticulture Centre.
2. (a) False: Ismail Hossain left school because of his poverty.
(b) False: Ismail earned Tk 25000 as profit for the first time.
(c) False: Ismail has raised hybrid cows not only for milk but also for manure.
(d) False: The officer in charge of NHC feels proud of Ismail�s success.
(e) True.
3. (a) received (b) cultivating (c) has been changed/is changed (d) proud (e) self-made.
মুহম্মদ মাছুম বিল্লাহ
সাবেক অধ্যাপক
সিলেট, মির্জাপুর ও কুমিল্লা ক্যাডেট কলেজ
এবং রাজউক উত্তরা মডেল কলেজ
Ismail Hossain is an affluent man now. Through hard work and devotion, he has managed to turn the wheels of fortune. He was an unemployed youth of an impoverished family from Ekdala village in Natore Sadar Thana. Through new knowledge, hard work and perseverance he has brought prosperity to his family. Ismail Hossain, son of Zohar Ali, studied up to class eight. Poverty then forced him to look for work. He worked as a labourer before he joined the training programme of the Natore Horticulture Centre (NHC) and has remained associated with it since then.
The officer-in-charge of NHC said that Ismail seemed to be an en thusiastic and energetic youth during the selection of villages under NHC�s command area. Ismail first received training in cultivation. Then he got a lease of land in his village and applied his new and improved knowledge for cultivating vegetables. He earned take 25,000 as profit that year. In the same way he made a profit of taka one lakh by cultivating quality cauliflowers the next year. Later he bought some land and used it entirely to cultivate cauliflowers. He has also been raising hybrid cows for milk as well as to produce manure.
Ismail�s lot has changed radically. He said with a satisfactory smile, ''I am very happy to be self-sufficient now.'' I had nothing of my own before, but now I have so much. It has been possible through my hard labour and systemic cultivation. The credit also goes to the NHC of course, he added. The officer-in-charge of NHC said, ''I feel very proud of Ismail Hossain. He deserves national recognition for his outstanding success.''
1. Choose the right word/expression to complete each sentence.
(a) At present, Ismail Hossain is rich/poor/idle man.
(b) Poverty dispelled/compelled/curtailed him to look for work.
(c) Ismail Hossain looked for work for his satisfaction/poverty/family.
(d) Ismail got a lease of land before his traing/after his training/during his training.
(e) Ismail has been able to change his fortune for his hard labour/the Natore Horituclute Centre/hard labour and the Natore Horitucluter Centre.
2. True/False. If false, give the correct information.
a) Ismail Hossain left school of his own accord.
b) Ismail earned take 100000 as profit for the first time.
c) Ismail has raised hybrid cows only for milk.
d) The officer in charge of NHC feels jealous of Ismail�s success.
e) Ismail�s family was poor.
3. Fill in the gaps with the correct form of the words in brackets.
a) Before he got a lease of land, he (receive) __ training.
b) He bought some land in order to use it for (cultivate) __ cauliflowers.
c) His fortune (change) __ for his hard labour.
d) He was (pride) __ of his success in life.
e) He proved that he was a (self-make) __ man.
Answers
1. (a) rich (b) compelled (c) poverty (d) after his training (e) hard labour and the Natore Horticulture Centre.
2. (a) False: Ismail Hossain left school because of his poverty.
(b) False: Ismail earned Tk 25000 as profit for the first time.
(c) False: Ismail has raised hybrid cows not only for milk but also for manure.
(d) False: The officer in charge of NHC feels proud of Ismail�s success.
(e) True.
3. (a) received (b) cultivating (c) has been changed/is changed (d) proud (e) self-made.
মুহম্মদ মাছুম বিল্লাহ
সাবেক অধ্যাপক
সিলেট, মির্জাপুর ও কুমিল্লা ক্যাডেট কলেজ
এবং রাজউক উত্তরা মডেল কলেজ
ফেইসবুকে বিনা মূল্যে ভয়েস কল
আইফোন
ও আইপ্যাড ব্যবহারকারীদের জন্য বিনা মূল্যে 'ভয়েস কল' সুযোগ চালু করল
ফেইসবুক। এ জন্য 'ফেইসবুক ৫.৫' নামের নতুন একটি অ্যাপ্লিকেশনও বাজারে
ছেড়েছে তারা। ইন্টারনেট বা ওয়াইফাই সংযোগ ব্যবহার করেই এ সুবিধা পাওয়া
যাবে। তাই কথা বলা যাবে বিনা মূল্যেই। অ্যাপ্লিকেশনটির মাধ্যমে অনলাইনে
থাকা ফেইসবুক বন্ধুদের সঙ্গে কথা বলা যাবে। এ জন্য অ্যাপ্লিকেশনটিতে থাকছে
বিশেষ ধরনের আইকন 'ফ্রি কল'।
প্রাথমিকভাবে শুধু যুক্তরাষ্ট্র ও কানাডার আইফোন ব্যবহারকারীরা এ সুবিধা পাবেন। কিছুদিনের মধ্যে সব ব্যবহারকারীর জন্যই সেবাটি চালু হবে।
প্রাথমিকভাবে শুধু যুক্তরাষ্ট্র ও কানাডার আইফোন ব্যবহারকারীরা এ সুবিধা পাবেন। কিছুদিনের মধ্যে সব ব্যবহারকারীর জন্যই সেবাটি চালু হবে।
এবার মাইক্রোসফটে সাইবার হামলা
ফেইসবুক
ও অ্যাপলের পর হ্যাকাররা এবার আক্রমণ করল বিশ্বের বৃহত্তম সফটওয়্যার
নির্মাতা মাইক্রোসফট কার্যালয়ের কয়েকটি কম্পিউটারে। হামলার সত্যতা স্বীকার
করেছে মাইক্রোসফট।
এক ব্লগ বার্তায় মাইক্রোসফট জানায়, আমাদের অল্প কিছু কম্পিউটারে সাইবার হামলায় আক্রান্ত হওয়ার প্রমাণ পাওয়া গেছে। এর মধ্যে কয়েকটি ম্যাক কম্পিউটারও আছে। তবে হ্যাকাররা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ কোনো তথ্য চুরি করতে পারেনি। হামলায় কারা জড়িত, জানার চেষ্টা চলছে।
ফেইসবুক ও অ্যাপলে হামলার সঙ্গে মাইক্রোসফটে হামলার মিল পাওয়া গেছে। গত সপ্তাহে ফেইসবুক ও অ্যাপল কার্যালয়ের কয়েকটি কম্পিউটার হ্যাকিংয়ের শিকার হয়। পূর্ব ইউরোপের কয়েক হ্যাকার এ হামলার কথা স্বীকার করে।
এক ব্লগ বার্তায় মাইক্রোসফট জানায়, আমাদের অল্প কিছু কম্পিউটারে সাইবার হামলায় আক্রান্ত হওয়ার প্রমাণ পাওয়া গেছে। এর মধ্যে কয়েকটি ম্যাক কম্পিউটারও আছে। তবে হ্যাকাররা গুরুত্বপূর্ণ কোনো তথ্য চুরি করতে পারেনি। হামলায় কারা জড়িত, জানার চেষ্টা চলছে।
ফেইসবুক ও অ্যাপলে হামলার সঙ্গে মাইক্রোসফটে হামলার মিল পাওয়া গেছে। গত সপ্তাহে ফেইসবুক ও অ্যাপল কার্যালয়ের কয়েকটি কম্পিউটার হ্যাকিংয়ের শিকার হয়। পূর্ব ইউরোপের কয়েক হ্যাকার এ হামলার কথা স্বীকার করে।
বাংলাদেশ থেকে ৩০ হাজার শ্রমিক নেবে বাহরাইন
সরকার
টু সরকার (জিটুজি) পদ্ধতিতে বাংলাদেশ থেকে বাহরাইন খুব শিগগির প্রায় ৩০
হাজার শ্রমিক নেবে বলে জানিয়েছেন প্রবাসীকল্যাণ ও বৈদেশিক
কর্মসংস্থানমন্ত্রী ইঞ্জিনিয়ার খন্দকার মোশাররফ হোসেন। তিনি বলেছেন, অল্প
সময়ের মধ্যেই মালয়েশিয়ার মতো সরকারিভাবে ওইসব শ্রমিক নেওয়া হবে। বাহরাইনে
যেতে একজন শ্রমিকের খরচ পড়বে ৫০ হাজার টাকার কম। গতকাল রবিবার প্রবাসী
কল্যাণ ভবনে সাংবাদিকদের তিনি এসব তথ্য জানান। এর আগে গ্রিসের জনশৃঙ্খলা ও
নাগরিক অধিকার রক্ষামন্ত্রী নিকোলাস ডেনিয়াসের সঙ্গে শ্রমবাজার সম্প্রসারণ
বিষয়ে বৈঠক করেন তিনি। সাংবাদিকদের এক প্রশ্নের জবাবে মন্ত্রী জানান,
জিটুজি পদ্ধতিতে বাংলাদেশ থেকে শ্রমিক নিতে আগ্রহী বাহরাইন সরকার। এ কারণে
সরেজমিনে দেখতে একটি প্রতিনিধিদল বাংলাদেশে এসেছে। বাংলাদেশ থেকে দক্ষ ও
অদক্ষ এই দুই ধরনের শ্রমিকই তারা নেবে বলে জানান তিনি।
Sunday, February 24, 2013
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what is the way ?
1. Join in LEO with any package.
LEO Packages name & price : 1. Lion code --- £ 10
2. Lion code + --- £ 20
3. Startup ------ £125
4. Business------£500
5. Professional ---£1000
2. Invite ur all friends to join in LEO .
3. Sell product package to suit their needs
( 100% money received from the selected products sales is used to pay out for Royalty bonus during this "100 power weeks" promotion )
4. This promotion will be start in JUNE 2013 but if u want to earn £1000 per week ,this is time u grow ur team in the world .
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LEO package & product website : webshop
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Contact : Atique Rahman
skype : boundola
phone : +8801917749618
mail : boundola@ gmail.com
নারী বেশি কথা বলে কেন?
নারীর মস্তিষ্কে বিশেষ ‘ল্যাঙ্গুয়েজ প্রোটিন’ বেশি পরিমাণে থাকে। এ জন্য
তারা পুরুষের তুলনায় বেশি কথা বলে। যুক্তরাষ্ট্রের মেরিল্যান্ড
বিশ্ববিদ্যালয়ের স্নায়ুবিজ্ঞান ও মনস্তত্ত্ব গবেষকেরা এ তথ্য জানিয়েছেন।
জার্নাল অব নিউরোসায়েন্স সাময়িকীতে প্রকাশিত গবেষণা প্রতিবেদনে বলা হয়, নারীর মস্তিষ্কে ফক্সপিটু নামের ‘ল্যাঙ্গুয়েজ প্রোটিন’ বেশি থাকে। নারীরা প্রতিদিন প্রায় ২০ হাজার শব্দ উচ্চারণ করে। এ সংখ্যা পুরুষের তুলনায় অন্তত ১৩ হাজার বেশি।
সংশ্লিষ্ট গবেষক মার্গারেট ম্যাককার্থি বলেন, বিশেষ প্রোটিনের উপস্থিতির কারণে প্রাণীর লৈঙ্গিক পার্থক্যবিষয়ক গবেষণা এটিই প্রথম। এতে নারী-পুরুষের মস্তিষ্ক ও আচরণগত ব্যবধানের বিষয়টি আগের তুলনায় স্পষ্ট হয়েছে। পর্যবেক্ষণে নারীর মস্তিষ্কে ফক্সপিটুর অধিক মাত্রা এবং প্রভাব প্রমাণিত হয়েছে। স্নায়ুজীববিদ্যার ভিত্তিতে স্তন্যপায়ী প্রাণীর কথা বলার ধরন বিবেচনায় এই গবেষণার ফলাফল নির্ধারিত হয়েছে। টেলিগ্রাফ।
জার্নাল অব নিউরোসায়েন্স সাময়িকীতে প্রকাশিত গবেষণা প্রতিবেদনে বলা হয়, নারীর মস্তিষ্কে ফক্সপিটু নামের ‘ল্যাঙ্গুয়েজ প্রোটিন’ বেশি থাকে। নারীরা প্রতিদিন প্রায় ২০ হাজার শব্দ উচ্চারণ করে। এ সংখ্যা পুরুষের তুলনায় অন্তত ১৩ হাজার বেশি।
সংশ্লিষ্ট গবেষক মার্গারেট ম্যাককার্থি বলেন, বিশেষ প্রোটিনের উপস্থিতির কারণে প্রাণীর লৈঙ্গিক পার্থক্যবিষয়ক গবেষণা এটিই প্রথম। এতে নারী-পুরুষের মস্তিষ্ক ও আচরণগত ব্যবধানের বিষয়টি আগের তুলনায় স্পষ্ট হয়েছে। পর্যবেক্ষণে নারীর মস্তিষ্কে ফক্সপিটুর অধিক মাত্রা এবং প্রভাব প্রমাণিত হয়েছে। স্নায়ুজীববিদ্যার ভিত্তিতে স্তন্যপায়ী প্রাণীর কথা বলার ধরন বিবেচনায় এই গবেষণার ফলাফল নির্ধারিত হয়েছে। টেলিগ্রাফ।
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