Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Bangladesh Special (Remuneration and Privileges) Order, 1972 (President's Order) The Finance (1971-1972) Order, 1972 (President's Order) The Bangladesh Nationalised Enterprises and Statutory Corporation (Prohibition of Strikes and Unfair Labour Practices) Order, 1972 (President's Order)
The government of Bangladesh founded the Department of Women Affairs on 18 February 1972. [3] The department is under the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs. [4] The center founded a national helpline to prevent violence against women. [5] National Trauma Counselling Centre is located at the headquarters of the building. [6]
The 2008, Awami League manifesto promised to increased the number of reserved seats for women. [9] In 2009, for the first time women from reserved seats were elected parliament already held the inaugural session. [3] On 30 June 2011, the 15th amendment to the Constitution of Bangladesh was passed which increase the reserved seats from 45 to 50 ...
Improving law and order in Bangladesh is a priority for the new caretaker government, the adviser to the interior ministry said on Friday, as the battered nation limps back to normality after ...
The Women and Children Affairs Minister of Bangladesh is the minister in charge of the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs of the Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. He is also the minister of all departments, directorates and agencies under the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs. [1] [2]
Women, in custom and practice, remained subordinate to men in almost all aspects of their lives; greater autonomy was the privilege of the rich or the necessity of the very poor. Most women's lives remained centred on their traditional roles, and they had limited access to markets, productive services, education, health care, and local government.
Nurjahan Begum, pioneer female journalist and editor of Begum, the first women's magazine in Bangladesh. [14] Nurun Nahar Faizannesa was a leader of the feminist movement in Bangladesh-[15] Mahmuda Khatun Siddiqua, Bangladeshi poet, essayist, and a pioneering women's liberation activist. Sultana Kamal is a Bangladeshi lawyer and human rights ...
The first priority of Bangladesh's caretaker government is to improve law and order in the strife-torn country by restoring the morale of law enforcement agencies, its newly-appointed interior ...