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Nearly half of Bangladesh voters undecided about their choice in elections: Survey
Nearly half of Bangladesh voters undecided about their choice in elections: Survey

Deccan Herald

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Deccan Herald

Nearly half of Bangladesh voters undecided about their choice in elections: Survey

Dhaka: Nearly half of the voters in Bangladesh have not yet decided which party they will vote for in the general elections scheduled for early February, said a survey released here on number of people in indecision about whom they are going to vote has further increased, according to the survey conducted by the BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD), a research wing of private BRAC October, 38 per cent of respondents said they had yet to make up their minds. That figure has now climbed to 48.5 per cent, the survey found, signalling growing uncertainty among the electorate as the election fellow Syeda Selina Aziz presented the survey results, saying their study collected opinions from 5,489 people from various professions in both rural and urban areas and of them, 53 per cent were men and 47 per cent were women. Seventy-three per cent were from rural areas and 27 per cent from urban elections in first week of February 2026: interim government chief adviser, Muhammad Yunus, last week said the elections would be held in February. Later, the Election Commission announced that the polls would be held in the first week of that prime minister Khaleda Zia's Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) has emerged as the single largest party in Awami League's absence after Yunus' government disbanded its activities under an executive order..A large offshoot of the Students Against Discrimination (SAD), which led the protests against then-premier Sheikh Hasina, formed the National Citizen Party (NCP) in February, apparently with Yunus' blessings. The NCP is believed to have developed ties with the far-right Jamaat-e-Islami and other Islamist groups against the which party they intended to vote for, 12 per cent of respondents named the BNP, 10.4 per cent Jamaat-e-Islami, and 2.8 per cent the to a question whether Bangladesh was on the right political track, 42 per cent of respondents said 'yes', a figure down from 56 per cent in to the survey, about 70 per cent of respondents believe the upcoming election will be free, fair and impartial, while 15 per cent expressed doubt about its credibility.

Bangladesh brick industry tries to clean up its act
Bangladesh brick industry tries to clean up its act

Kuwait Times

time07-08-2025

  • Business
  • Kuwait Times

Bangladesh brick industry tries to clean up its act

NARAYANGANJ, Bangladesh: Across Bangladesh, clay-fired kilns for brick making send filth into the air, spew toxic gasses and use up topsoil that could be producing food. To clean the air and meet environmental goals, the government has been closing the polluting kilns, but the adoption of cleaner alternatives is badly lagging, industry insiders say. Cleaner alternatives include automated, energy-efficient brick-making technology or the production of concrete blocks, increasingly being adopted by other Asian countries like China and Vietnam. The government environment agency in Bangladesh has shut more than 600 kilns, while 3,500 of the country's 8,000 kilns are designated for closure, according to official figures. The shutdowns began with kilns that lacked proper documents to operate. Many were set up near villages, schools or forests in violation of government rules, said Syeda Rizwana Hasan, the country's environment adviser. 'This is about switching to alternative materials that other countries have already adopted,' Hasan said. Manufacturing clay bricks mostly runs on burning coal, generating greenhouse gases and particulate matter that harm human health, and uses topsoil that is critically needed for growing crops in the densely populated country. Over the last 15 years, Bangladesh has attempted to move to cleaner alternatives such as less-polluting kilns, but the effort is held up by cost considerations. With government encouragement, brick kiln owners converted many long-necked fixed-chimney kilns to zigzag kilns that make better use of energy and emit fewer toxic gases. Development organizations have been pushing for more energy-efficient technologies as well such as hybrid Hoffman kilns (HHK), which capture and use their own waste heat to halve energy usage. The large initial investment costs of $2 million for each HHK kiln, however, is about 15 times the cost of making a zigzag kiln, slowing their large-scale adoption, according to the World Bank. Under Bangladesh's air quality management plan, the government is tasked with shifting away from clay-fired bricks to concrete blocks in its construction projects. Blocks too have a significant environmental footprint as they require carbon-emitting cement, but they would save agricultural topsoil, said Hasan. In 2019, the government had planned to phase out clay brick kilns altogether and use 100 percent concrete blocks in public constructions by 2025, a widely missed target. A lack of availability of concrete blocks in the market has been the biggest barrier, said a 2023 study by researchers from the BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD). Concrete block availability currently meets less than 10 percent of market needs, according to members of the Bangladesh building industry. This year, the government campaign against illegal brick kilns has been intense, but fining and shutting down kilns is neither new nor particularly effective, said brick producers. Brick kilns are banned near residential neighborhoods and natural areas like forests and mountains, but many kilns are set up in such areas without approval from local authorities. The ban does not work as kiln owners pay the fines and absorb shutdown losses to wait for the right time to restart operations or set up a new kiln elsewhere, according to insiders. At the same time, the high cost of setting up a concrete block factory is beyond the reach of most brick makers, said Moogdho Mahzab, a development economist and associate research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). 'Right now, local, informal brick makers are more well-adapted to the market compared to large, formal concrete block factories,' he said. In rural Bangladesh, when families see their income grow, their priority is to build a brick house, and local brick makers readily meet this vast demand from the small buyers, Mahzab said. – Reuters

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