Opinion / The consensus to keep women out
13 August 2025, 03:09 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
Did we have to pay such a heavy price for this verdict?
21 July 2024, 18:00 PM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
Death is built into our cityscapes
5 March 2024, 02:00 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
The violence of silencing a rape survivor
3 February 2024, 02:00 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
The price we pay with each deleted word
6 January 2024, 02:00 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
Opinion / Govt's priority is to access, not protect, our personal data
24 November 2023, 02:00 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
You can’t quell workers’ hunger by opening fire on them
9 November 2023, 10:38 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY
Why the delay in declaring minimum wage for RMG workers?
21 October 2023, 03:00 AM THE SOUND AND THE FURY

Men to the rescue: A modest proposal for women’s political relief

In a generous act of national service, men across the political spectrum have stepped forward to rescue women from the exhausting burden of political participation.
26 January 2026, 00:50 AM

Violence in Bangladesh’s RMG sector: Disposable lives, dispensable labour

Can we imagine and construct a political system that refuses to subordinate human dignity to the demands of global accumulation?
6 September 2025, 03:00 AM

The consensus to keep women out

The project of egalitarianism cannot be subcontracted to the very custodians of inequality.
13 August 2025, 03:09 AM

Did we have to pay such a heavy price for this verdict?

The verdict is in. The Appellate Division through its observations has recommended that quotas be restricted to seven percent: five percent for freedom fighters’ descendants, one percent for ethnic minorities, and one percent for people with disabilities.
21 July 2024, 18:00 PM

Death is built into our cityscapes

Why do authorities gamble with our lives?
5 March 2024, 02:00 AM

The violence of silencing a rape survivor

That justice for rape survivors is a mirage in this country is no news, with a miserable conviction rate of three percent in rape cases.
3 February 2024, 02:00 AM

The price we pay with each deleted word

With each new term of the ruling regime, and each new provision or law, we have learnt a bit more of self-censorship.
6 January 2024, 02:00 AM

Govt's priority is to access, not protect, our personal data

The government has heavily invested in purchasing surveillance equipment and enhancing the capacities of various agencies to use them over the years, but it hasn't shown an iota of the same interest in what should have been its priority—protection of citizens’ data
24 November 2023, 02:00 AM

You can’t quell workers’ hunger by opening fire on them

Rather than assuage the workers by announcing a respectable wage, the wage board has essentially fuelled workers’ outrage and made a mockery of the wage negotiation process
9 November 2023, 10:38 AM

Why the delay in declaring minimum wage for RMG workers?

Will the wage board and our policymakers truly hear the stories of backbreaking work and heartbreaking debt of the garment workers, who have kept the economy going even at its worst phases?
21 October 2023, 03:00 AM

Why I feel suffocated by Dhanmondi

Dhanmondi these days is a cacophony of people, traffic, events, vendors, schools, hospitals, restaurants, and construction sites.
18 May 2023, 13:00 PM

An energy sector on steroids

Why should we pay for the government’s questionable policies?
10 January 2023, 13:20 PM

If only irony could pay bills…

There are two kinds of numbers that I find difficult to digest these days. The more I try to swallow the one, the more unpalatable the other becomes. 
27 October 2022, 01:12 AM

When sentiments reign over reason

Some of us may breathe a sigh of relief that Hriday Mondal, imprisoned for 19 days and denied bail twice, for trying to explain the difference between science and religion to his students, has been granted bail.
20 April 2022, 18:00 PM

An ordinary person’s guide to dangerous online regulations

Two dangerous policy drafts regulating our online presence have been prepared right in front of our noses, and except for a few usual suspects crying wolf, there has been little public outrage over it.
2 April 2022, 18:00 PM

When the state wants to make criminals out of journalists

Anyone who has seen the video of Chattogram-based journalist Golam Sarwar—taken shortly after he was found unconscious on the banks of a canal following a disappearance of three days—is unlikely to forget the helplessness and fear coursing through his bruised being, as he kept on uttering the words, “Please, brother, I won’t write anymore.”
1 November 2021, 18:00 PM

This is not how Hindu devotees wanted to bid farewell to Durga

The scenes are at once familiar and unfamiliar.
19 October 2021, 18:00 PM

The coal conundrum: Are we really moving away from dirty energy?

After a decade of ruthlessly pursuing the world’s dirtiest fuel, the Ministry of Power, Energy and Mineral Resources (MoPEMR) is contemplating closing down 13 of the 18 previously approved coal-based power projects around the country and apparently switching to “cleaner” alternatives.
30 November 2020, 18:00 PM

The bloody view from the resort in the hills

The announcement that a five-star “Marriott Hotel and Amusement Park” is being built in Bandarban no doubt comes as welcome news to Bengali elites and the nouveau riche looking for novel and Instagrammable ways of spending their weekends and disposable incomes in the luscious hills of the CHT.
12 November 2020, 18:00 PM

Why are former Tazreen workers still on the streets?

For the last 45 days, at least 40 (former) workers of Tazreen Fashions Limited have been staging a protest on the sidewalks outside the Press Club, unnoticed, for the most part, by the media.
1 November 2020, 18:00 PM