Counterpoint

The Guns of November

November 1975 was one of those months when, to paraphrase Lenin, decades happen. Fifty years on from that month of coup and counter-coup, we can hope that the guns have been forever silenced in Bangladesh, and that we will never again see rule from the cantonment.

Can Bangladesh Build a Truly Liberal Democratic Party?

We stand today at a critical juncture. The authoritarian state has collapsed, but the authoritarian mind endures. The struggle for democracy, therefore, is no longer against a regime -- it is against ourselves.

Gulshan Is Not Dhaka

If you attend these festivals, you owe it to yourself and to Dhaka to also step outside the gates. Don't be someone who celebrates local and artisanal only when it's packaged with a price tag and a velvet rope. Don't be someone who feels cultured because you paid for the privilege.

A New Bangladesh Must be Built on New Ideas

As we chart our future as an innovating nation, we must ask ourselves: Will we continue to be a nation that tolerates and even encourages heresy, heterodoxy and esoterism, or will we ignore the lessons of history and become a closed society, one that is hostile to new ideas?

A Question of Trust

Why is Bangladesh rushing a typhoid vaccine lacking sufficient -- in fact any -- efficacy data? This level of irresponsibility is unacceptable. We have the capacity to supply good-quality vaccines for the protection of our children, and this should be a national priority.

India’s Foreign Policy and the Game Theory of Power

India has made non-alignment and multi-lateralism the cornerstone of its foreign policy since independence. But now the time may be coming when it will have to choose a side.

The Guns of November

November 1975 was one of those months when, to paraphrase Lenin, decades happen. Fifty years on from that month of coup and counter-coup, we can hope that the guns have been forever silenced in Bangladesh, and that we will never again see rule from the cantonment.

Can Bangladesh Build a Truly Liberal Democratic Party?

We stand today at a critical juncture. The authoritarian state has collapsed, but the authoritarian mind endures. The struggle for democracy, therefore, is no longer against a regime -- it is against ourselves.

The Crisis of Liberal Politics in Bangladesh

Bangladesh’s politics stands today at a critical crossroads. If a new political force grounded in liberal values does not emerge, the state will inevitably drift further into extremism, fanaticism, and division.

Gulshan Is Not Dhaka

If you attend these festivals, you owe it to yourself and to Dhaka to also step outside the gates. Don't be someone who celebrates local and artisanal only when it's packaged with a price tag and a velvet rope. Don't be someone who feels cultured because you paid for the privilege.

The Disguised Democracy of the Global South

Until democracy regains its moral soul -- until citizens can question without fear and leaders can lose power without vengeance -- it will remain a performance, not a principle. And if this performance continues, one morning we will awaken to discover that democracy has quietly turned into its opposite.

Ringing Out the Old, Ringing in the New

The conventional view of politics is an old-fashioned journey

11 Things You Need to Know About Enforced Disappearances and the Detention of Army Officers

Everything you wanted to know about the detention of the 15 army officers and the cases against them but were afraid to ask

We Need a National Artificial Intelligence Policy

We are already behind, but it is not too late and it need not continue to be that way. AI can help Bangladesh take a quantum leap into the future.

An Open Letter to WHO: You Knew Who Her Mother Was. Why Did You Wait?

The WHO placing Saima Wazed on "indefinite leave" is too little, too late. She should never have been given the post to begin with, and it should not have taken so long to remove her.

The Future of Islamic Politics in Bangladesh

The truth is: the only path by which Islamists can succeed is exactly the path the League had chased them down. But will it be enough now that the League is history? Only time and the wisdom -- or lack thereof -- of the other political parties will tell.

The Reform Reality Check

It is all very well to chart out a pathway to reform, but it is in the implementation that the wheels hit the road, and it is here that the process lacks clarity and cohesion.

Understanding Bangladesh’s Post-Uprising Reality

The constrained authority of the interim government, disparate power centers, and a crisis of accountability have all led to the unique challenges facing the nation today and that the incoming government will inherit

Subaltern Women and the Islamic Feminist Turn

It's time to rethink the representation and rights of women in Bangladesh. Should elite secular feminism neglect to recognize and engage with Islamic feminist frameworks, it risks irrelevance or worse.

The Road to Net-Zero

The important global choice is whether to focus first on the most efficient policies to tackle the world’s most urgent problems of disease, hunger, and poverty, or on the climate concerns of the world’s rich. The world’s poor need billions for health, nutrition and growth, not trillions for inefficient gestures.

Rethinking Bangladesh’s Rohingya Response

Bangladesh’s model of Rohingya containment is not a temporary holding pattern -- it is politically and economically rewarding for the state. International actors must stop sustaining it.

What Bangladesh Can Learn from Dr. Jane Goodall

Her warning that humanity has only a narrow window to reverse the degradation of Earth’s life-support systems, and that unless societies change their ways of living and their overall strategy for economic development, civilization will run out of time, is especially relevant to Bangladesh

Your Home in the Sky and the House in Disarray

It is long past due for Biman to start fulfilling its potential and becoming a cornerstone of the Bangladesh development story

August 3: The Gulshan Protest

A sit-in of professionals transforms to a spontaneous mass protest

The Future of Islamic Politics in Bangladesh

The truth is: the only path by which Islamists can succeed is exactly the path the League had chased them down. But will it be enough now that the League is history? Only time and the wisdom -- or lack thereof -- of the other political parties will tell.

The Reform Reality Check

It is all very well to chart out a pathway to reform, but it is in the implementation that the wheels hit the road, and it is here that the process lacks clarity and cohesion.

Khaleda Zia and the Hardest Revolution of All

Not the overthrow of dictators, but the revolution of humility, compassion, and forgiveness. A lesson Bangladesh has never practiced, but one leader showed us how it is done.

Tariff Relief or Strategic Trade-Off?

20% is better than 35, but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done if Bangladesh wishes to remain competitive in the global marketplace

Bangladesh Bank Is What Needs Reform

Without urgent steps to make Bangladesh Bank truly autonomous and accountable, meaningful economic reform will remain incomplete.

Productivity Is Almost Everything

Bangladesh's future prosperity depends in large part on enhancing our productivity, but we still lag behind when it comes to gathering the data needed to address the issue, let alone making it a policy priority

Soundtrack for the Apocalypse: A Dhaka Gridlock Playlist

You can't defeat Dhaka traffic. But these tunes can minimize your pain.

When Bangladesh’s Demographic Dividend Turns Into a Curse

The demographic dividend is not destiny -- it’s a choice. Bangladesh has 15 years to act, but  the window shrinks daily. Without a bold vision, this youth bulge could ignite unrest rather than prosperity, echoing the Arab Spring’s unfulfilled promise.  

In Defence of the Word Unspoken

Societies that silence dissent eventually silence innovation, justice, and even hope. The cemetery of nations is filled not with those who spoke too much, but with those who spoke too little.

Special

Culture

Videos

The J-Z Show।Ep. 8

A deep dive into the July Charter, referendum debates, and NCP’s roadmap for the coming national election.

The J-Z Show।Ep. 7। Saimum Parvez। July Charter, Trial of Army officers and Return of Tarique Rahman

Jon and Zafar talk with Dr. Saimum Parvez about Bangladesh’s shifting political landscape, the BNP’s evolving strategy, and what lies ahead in the country’s path to reform.

The J-Z Show।Ep. 6।Jon & Zafar talk with Nakibur Rahman on UNGA at New York, DUCSU & Innovision Poll

Jon and Zafar sit down with Nakibur Rahman to unpack Jamaat’s global positioning, the DUCSU upset, and what the Innovision Poll signals for Bangladesh’s next election.

Interview