16 quotes found
"Dozens of fatwas are issued each year in Bangladesh by the rural clergy at village gatherings after receipt of complaints, usually against women who assert themselves in village family life. They impose flogging and stoning and other humiliating punishments such as shaving of heads, insults and beatings. They are also often involved in their execution.... In October 2000, the UN Special Rapporteur on Religious hitolerance reported that 26 fatwas issued in the previous year were an attempt 'to stifle any efforts to emancipate women'.""
"‘The other South Asian nation, Bangladesh, is not far behind on issues of crime against women. On 1 October 2020, Ain 0 Salish Kendra, Bangladesh-based human rights organization, revealed that from January to September of that year, more than 1,000 women were raped, 43 of whom died. More than 200 women managed to evade their attempted rapist. The Bangladeshi human rights ‘organization, Odhiur, reported that between 2016 and 2019, there were 963 reported rape incidents, which is considered inaccurate and underreported. In six administrative districts of Bangladesh, from 2011 to 2018, the courts only convicted five out of 4,372 rape cases, as reported by Naripoltho, a local women's rights group.""
"In Bangladesh, gang rape has become a major tool of political terror, forcing minorities to flee and has proven more effective than murder."
"Violence against women is a common weapon used to intimidate and harass minority communities across the world. It has similarly been used in Banglades has a means to attack Hindus.For instance, in the period immediately following the 2001 elections, approximately 1,000 Hindu women and girls were raped. ... The systematic kidnapping,rape,and murder of minority women,particularly young Hindu girls,continued in 2010.Rapes and kidnappingsof Hindusare often accompaniedby forced conversion to Islam...Rapes and kidnappings of Hindus are often accompanied by forced conversion to Islam. (225)"
"For instance, in the period immediately following the 2001 elections,approximately 1,000 Hindu women and girls were raped. ... The systematic kidnapping,rape,and murder of minority women,particularly young Hindu girls,continued in 2011."
"One incident that is becoming more and more common was related to me in almost every colony I visited between 2008 and 2010: the random abduction of young Hindu women and girls. With a numbing consistency, their testimonies would tell of a young female walking by the side of the road. In some cases, she was going to draw water; in others she was on her way to school; and in some, she was just walking o her way to see a relative or friend. out of the blue, a gang of Muslims would drive up and snatch the woman and then take her to a vacant building or field and rape her repeatedly. (85)"
"Every Hindu with whom we spoke said the women of the house could not go to market or anywhere else without harassment and threats of sexual assault. Their children could not attend school because of the threats."
"One story men and women both told me repeatedly involved abductions of young Hindu women in Bangladesh. They might be walking by the road or on their way to school when groups of Muslims would force them into vehicles, carry them off, and then rape them. ....Five Muslim men broke into Koli's family [Koli Goswami] at 12:45 am on June 13, 2009. ... they carried her away. Her family has not seen her since. To many Westerners, stories like this strain credulity. It simply is not within the realm of their experience."
"The barbaric assault on Hindu women is the greatest cause of migration of Hindus from Pakistan."
"I interviewed numerous Hindus in Dhaka and Mymensingh who told me stories of how their lives were continually in danger. Controversial as it may be, they also told me that their daughters are often kidnapped, "forcibly converted and married to Muslim boys". They explained that, once converted, even by force", there is nothing they can do, because if the girls want to come home" and return to their ancestral religion they are then "accused of apostasy and run the risk of being murdered by the decree of a fatwa. Because of these pressures, the Hindu population of Bangladesh continues to shrink annually."
"BANGLADESH is one of the poorest countries in the world. Poverty, low social status, and lack of opportunities for education and alternative employment have meant that Bangladesh has a large number of sex workers. There are as many as 150,000 to 200,000 female sex workers in Bangladesh, and most of these are adolescents or young women, with the majority ages 15 to 18. Many girls enter prostitution in Bangladesh before the age of 12 (ECPAT 2006) and in most cases will have retired by age 30 (Alam 2010). Traditionally, the social status of sex workers in Bangladesh was extremely low, and regardless of their religion, sex workers were even denied basic funeral righ For example, when sex workers died in Daulatdia, Bangladesh's largest brothel, their bodies were just thrown into the nearby river (Mondal and Islam 2006). The social status of sex workers, however, has gradually improved over time. A major turning point was a decision of the Bangladeshi High Court in 2000 that sex work is legal if the brothel or red-light area is properly licensed. This makes Bangladesh one of the few Islamic countries that permit prostitution. Concerned with the potential spread of HIV/AIDS among sex workers as a high-risk group, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have been active in promoting self-empowerment and safe-sex awareness among this population since the mid-1990s. This said, sex workers in Bangladesh remain marginalized from mainstream society. While sex workers earn many times more than others of comparable skills, in many cases much of this income is extorted by corrupt local officials and police who take advantage of the stigmatized position of sex workers. For most part, the living standards of sex workers are low, and few are able to save for their retirement, which puts them in a very vulnerable position."
"Despite the level of achievement already attained, debate over the constitutionality of generating funds for the sovereign wealth fund undermine investor confidence in the country’s political commitment towards building a buffer for a potential collapse in the price of oil."
"The recent probe on the fuel subsidy has raised significant concerns about Nigeria’s effectiveness to curb leakages and prevent extra-budgetary spending. In addition to this is the delayed passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill, which is holding back substantial investments in the sector and risks further undermining production levels."
"The key stumbling blocks have been related to the bankability of individual projects, and there are a number of factors feeding into this. The first one is cost recovery: the power sector is one example where many investment projects exist but the returns are affected by electricity tariffs that are well below market levels"
"I do not think that the deficient lending to small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) has anything to do with the willingness of banks to lend."
"There is little guarantee that interests rates would result in a significant boost in bank lending. The reasons for the current lack of lending are more structural. To get to the point where interest rate cuts would affect lending would be hugely destabilising to the country’s macroeconomic health. So, for the time being, there is no clear-cut argument for monetary easing."