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Non government teachers contribute six percent of their salaries to the trust for a retirement fund that will be available to them after retirement and with additional funding from the Government of Bangladesh. In April 2019, the government increased it to ten percent which was protested by the Bangladesh Shikkhak Union, a teachers union. The ...
Bangladesh is a unitary state [1] and the central government has the authority to govern over the entirety of the nation. The seat of the government is located in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh. [2] [3] [4] The executive government is led by the prime minister, who selects all the remaining ministers. The prime minister and the other most ...
Non-Government Employee Retirement Benefits Board was established in 2002 to provide and manage the pensions of non government teachers. [2] After retirement teachers receive welfare and retirement benefit from the board. According to the rules of the board teachers retire at 60 and can start receiving their benefits.
Women in Bangladesh are especially vulnerable to a form of domestic violence known as acid throwing, in which concentrated acid is thrown onto an individual (usually at the face) with the aims of extreme disfiguration and social isolation. In Bangladesh, women are discriminately targeted: according to one study, from 1999 to 2009, 68% of acid ...
Kazi Habibul Awal. 27 February 2022 [6] Chairman of the Bangladesh Public Service Commission. Mohammed Sohrab Hossain. 21 September 2020. Chairman of the Anti-Corruption Commission. Mohammad Moinuddin Abdullah. 3 March 2021 [7] Comptroller and Auditor General.
The government of Bangladesh has set an ambitious target of generating 30 million new job opportunities by the year 2030. In its endeavor to improve labor conditions and expand employment opportunities, the Government of Bangladesh has undertaken significant initiatives to establish a specialized entity known as the "Directorate of Employment."
The Bangladesh Employees Welfare Board was established on 29 January 2004. [2] In 2013, protestors from Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh and Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh damaged 53 buses of the board kept at its depot at Dilkusha. The government announced plans to build a 30-story highrise to generate income for the board. [3]
The first connectivity in Bangladesh with the internet was in 1996. In the past few years, growth has been rapid. The government's high internet tariff is impeding the growth of this sector, claims Norwegian-owned Telenor. [citation needed] Recently the government has decided to reduce the tariff by 50%.