Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Department of Inspection for Factories and Establishments (DIFE) is an autonomous government agency responsible for health and safety inspection in factories and industries in Bangladesh with its Inspection units RMG Sustainability Council (RSC) and Remediation Coordination Cell (RCC) and is located in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
The project is being implemented by NIC. [2] The software for vehicle registration service is called Sarathi. and the software for driver's license services is called Sarathi. [3] Below is the list of services provided under the Sarathi Project: Learner Driving Licence; Driving Licence; Conductor Licence; Driving School License; Appointment for ...
Conducting regular activities like: Issuing driving license, fitness certificates, registration certificates and Driving Instructor's licenses; Registering schools for motoring; Organizing and conducting workshop seminars for delivering information regarding safe driving and traffic regulations
License from the Authority is mandatory to operate microfinance operation in Bangladesh as an NGO. On September 28, 2012 at the Alliance for Financial Inclusion 's Global Policy Forum 2012, the bank made a commitment under the Maya Declaration to promote agent and mobile banking, implement consumer protection initiatives, and establish a credit ...
www.boiler.gov.bd The Office of The Chief Inspector of Boilers ( Bengali : প্রধান বয়লার পরিদর্শকের কার্যালয় ) is a Bangladesh government regulatory agency that is responsible for inspection of commercial boilers in factories in Bangladesh. [ 1 ]
The Divisional Commissioner is the administrative head of a division. The Divisional Commissioner is appointed by the government from a Senior secretary of the B.C.S. Administration Cadre.
BEZA's management structure consists of a governing board, executive board and BEZA secretariat. [8] The chairman of the governing board is the prime minister and members include the governor of Bangladesh Bank, the finance minister and other high-level ministers and elected policymakers. [9]
Bangladesh has instituted a unique system of transfer of power; at the end of the tenure of the government, power is handed over to members of a civil society for three months, who run the general elections and transfer the power to elected representatives. This system was first practiced in 1991 and adopted to the constitution in 1996. [5]