which may include achieving minimum reserve targets

Kal Kantha’s headline on the occupation of Ghazipur forest reads, “One and a half hundred factories on forest land, hundreds of crores of rupees in trade.”

According to the report,

More than two hundred and fifty companies do business worth hundreds of millions of rupees annually by building factories, farms, luxury resorts, picnic and shooting grounds in the reserved forest lands of Ghazipur. Click Here:

These institutions are created by grabbing forest land belonging to private lands due to personal influence and collusion with unscrupulous forest officials.

Many of these institutions built in reserved forests or near forests do not have permission from the Ministry of Environment.

According to the forest department’s list, 12,321 acres of forest land have been illegally occupied in Sripur, Kaliaker and Sadar upazilas of Ghazipur. Of these institutions, 174 own 500 acres of land.

 

Last April, the forest and district administration

Department had recovered only 8.79 acres of forest land in Sripur and Ghazipur Sadar upazilas.

According to the report, according to the laws and regulations of road transport in Bangladesh,

 

The government also established a fund for this purpose.

According to the news, due to lack of publicity, the victims and relatives of the deceased are not aware of the fund. As a result, orders decline.

In the 15 months since January last year, only 7.29 percent of people injured in road accidents applied for compensation.

In this regard, the BRTA said, there are complaints about the procedural complexities in applying and the length of the process of obtaining compensation.

 

According to the BRTA,

compensation was paid for only 267 of the applications received in 15 months.

The number represents only 23 percent of the total applications.

In 2018, the government added provisions regarding financial assistance to victims of road accidents in the Land Transport Law.

The notification of compensation payment rules was issued on January 13 last yearRegarding the ongoing economic crisis in Bangladesh, the Center for Policy Dialogue (CPD), a non-governmental research organization, and the Civic Platform Dialogue on SDG Implementation,

Yugantar headlined,

“Inflation and credit risks are the main problems in the country.” Economy’.

According to the report, the country is currently going through a very complex social, economic and political context.

They talked about the three-pronged problem from the point of view of economics.

these are: high inflation, credit risks, and slow GDP growth.

 

Moreover, money laundering is increasing from the country.

Everything is negative when it comes to investing. Electricity bills, interest rates, currency exchange rates and labor wages rose.

On the other hand, incentives and market access will decrease. That is, all the problems combined. They also highlighted waste, inefficiency and lack of good governance everywhere.

In this case, the new government will announce the national budget for the fiscal year 2024-2025.

As a result, budget implementation should prevent waste, stop irregularities and corruption, and ensure good governance. Major initiatives should be taken to reform the banking sector.

Ittefaq’s headline in the DB chief’s statement about Milton Samader, founder of the Asylum Center for the Care of Children and the Elderly, is “Milton used to amputate people’s hands and feet and perform the surgery himself: DB.”

 

Detective Muhammad Harunur Rashid,

Additional Commissioner of DMP, provided this information to reporters at the DB office on Sunday. He said Milton did not take patients to any hospital.

Only a few knives and blades were found in Milton’s operating room. Here he was promoting weapons himself. Meanwhile, the court granted four-day remand to Milton Samader in a case filed under the Human Trafficking Act.

The report also stated that Merton buried 900 bodies in Samadar, but in police interrogation he claimed that he buried 100 bodies.

“Taka trades more freely by next month” is the Daily Star’s headline on the opening of the trading chaos.

 

Bangladesh will implement a creeping peg system

Next month to make the exchange rate more flexible and improve foreign exchange reserves, a key prescription of the International Monetary Fund, the report said.

A crawling peg system is a method of exchange rate adjustment where the price of a currency with a fixed exchange rate is allowed to fluctuate slightly.

In general, the system helps control excessive fluctuations in the currency exchange rate, especially when there is a risk of currency depreciation.

The currency peg is fixed to the currencies of developing economies, i.e. the dollar or the euro.

The Bangladesh Bank has already informed the IMF to implement this system in exchange for money.

 

In January last year,

Bangladesh entered into a $4.7 billion loan program from the International Monetary Fund.

The IMF mission has been in Dhaka since April 24 to review the general situation of the country’s economy and whether Bangladesh meets the conditions of the loan before disbursing the third tranche.

They will finalize new or revised terms,  The report also mentioned the revelations of the Bangladesh Securities and Exchange Commission (BSEC), the securities market regulatory body.

According to reports, Farooq has built a mountain of money by putting ordinary investors in the way. The report stated that the Port Said,

 

Economic Cooperation Organization

never took strict action against Farouk and his team despite there being clear evidence of fraud.

In only seven cases, the financial penalty amounting to Rs 2 crore was imposed.

Of course, compared to the size of the financial violations committed by the regulatory body against him

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