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Chairman of the Bangladesh Public Service Commission: Mobasser Monem: 9 October 2024 [4] Chairman of the Anti-Corruption Commission: Mohammad Abdul Momen: 12 December 2024 Comptroller and Auditor General: Md. Nurul Islam 26 July 2023 Attorney General: Md Asaduzzaman: 8 August 2024
As the jobs for women who were raped during the war were unclaimed, the quota was changed to include all women in 1985. [10] The district-based quota was reduced to 10 percent. [10] The government created a new five percent quota for indigenous communities of Bangladesh. This change in 1985 increased the merit-based jobs to 45 percent. [10]
The government of Bangladesh has set an ambitious target of generating 30 million new job opportunities by the year 2030. [3] 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."
This article is a list of domestic and international non-governmental organisations operating in the People's Republic of Bangladesh
The Government agencies in Bangladesh are state controlled organizations that act independently to carry out the policies of the Government of Bangladesh. The Government Ministries are relatively small and merely policy-making organizations, allowed to control agencies by policy decisions.
An officer ranked Deputy Secretary works as the Chief Executive of the council. The District Council, being the highest tier of Local Government, is supposed to be an autonomous and the supreme body to look after the overall development activities in district level. But in practice, it is merely a setup confined with few charitable works.
A district council (or zila parishad) is a local government body at the district level. [4] The Bengali word parishad means council and zila parishad translates to district council. The functions of a district council include the construction and maintenance of roads and bridges.
There are 330 such municipal corporations in eight divisions of Bangladesh. A municipal corporation serving a town may be called a town council , and a municipal corporation serving a city is styled a city council ; these bodies are divided into wards, which are further divided into mauzas and mahallas .