Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha (BSS), the official government-owned news agency of Bangladesh, was created on 1 January 1972 from the Dhaka bureau of the state-owned. Abul Kalam Azad , who was formerly Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina 's press secretary, became its chief editor in 2014. [ 34 ]
Son of Nirmalananda Sengupta and Ranibala Devi, Barun Sengupta was born in Barisal (in present-day Bangladesh). Sengupta, along with his family, moved to Kolkata before the partition of India in 1947 and rented a house near Baithakkhana Market in north-central Kolkata. His education started in B.M. School, Barisal.
It is the first Bengali newsweekly published outside Bangladesh. [25] Potrika was established in 1997. It is published every Monday for £0.50 (or for annual subscription of £82.16). It is the only broadsheet Bengali newspaper published from the UK and follows issues relating to the British Bangladeshi community, reflecting their concerns and ...
Saptahik Bartaman is a Bengali language weekly magazine published by Bartaman Pvt. Ltd. (the publisher of the newspaper Bartaman) from Kolkata, India. It had a circulation of 1,48,378, in January–June, 2011.
Saptahik was a weekly tabloid published by Kantipur Publications in Nepal. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was one of the popular newspapers among youth in Nepal. It stopped publishing after Covid-19 hit the nation.
Bartaman Patrika (Bengali: বর্তমান) is an Indian Bengali daily newspaper published from Kolkata, West Bengal, India, by Bartaman Pvt. Ltd. Apart from the Kolkata edition, the newspaper has three other simultaneous editions, published daily from three major towns of West Bengal: Siliguri, Bardhaman, and Midnapore.
Jayanta Dey (Bengali: জয়ন্ত দে; born 29 February 1964 [1])is a novelist and short story writer in Bengali living in Kolkata, West Bengal, India.He is also the editor of Saptahik Bartaman Magazine and works at daily Bartaman Patrika. [2]
In the 1980s, 'Saptahik Khaborer Kagoj', also published by Kazi Shahid Ahmed, became a popular weekly for its firm stand in favour of the masses during the Movement against the Autocrat. Soon after the fall of the autocrat, hence, the 'Ajker Kagoj' emerged as a daily to follow in the footsteps of its predecessor.