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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #310 · 22 фев.

Сегодня будет самый "двоичный" ("двойковый"? "двушный"? "двойственный"?) момент на вашем веку 🤩 Больше двоек в дататайме вы не застанете! Успейте поймать момент! Будете показывать эпичный скриншот своим внукам))) 🥸 Для продуманных (ленивых): код на скрине, который сработает только сегодня и только 1 раз! ⏱ Открывайте окошки с часами и вперёд! #offtop

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Пребарај: #bangladesh

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RT en français

@RTenfrancais · Post #80285 · 28.04.2026 г., 13:31

🇧🇩Le #Bangladesh inaugure sa première centrale nucléaire Le chargement du combustible nucléaire a commencé dans le premier réacteur de la Centrale nucléaire de Rooppur, construite avec la participation de Rosatom. Au total, 163 assemblages combustibles doivent être introduits dans le réacteur avant sa mise en puissance progressive jusqu’au niveau minimal contrôlé. RT en français • Osez questionner !

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Marx21.it

@marx21news · Post #9852 · 02.03.2026 г., 07:44

Bangladesh: il Partito Nazionalista vince le elezioni con 211 seggi. Esclusa la Lega Awami di Hasina (rifugiata in India). Trump già chiede collaborazione "a tutela degli interessi USA". Il nuovo governo dovrà affrontare povertà e crisi salariale. #Bangladesh https://www.marx21.it/internazionale/larga-vittoria-del-partito-nazionalista-del-bangladesh-nelle-elezioni-parlamentari/

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ASIANOMICS

@asianomics · Post #5818 · 30.03.2026 г., 18:22

🇧🇩Bangladesh Orders Power Cuts Amid Energy Crunch Bangladesh's Ministry of Public Administration issued directives on electricity use on March 29, ordering civil servants to limit lighting, restrict air-conditioning to 25 degrees Celsius or warmer, and switch off equipment when leaving offices. The measures follow a deepening energy shortage linked to the ongoing Middle East war. Bangladesh imports 95 percent of its oil and gas needs, making it highly exposed to supply disruptions from the conflict. The government has already capped fuel purchases, halted production at most fertiliser factories, and deployed police to patrol filling stations. To address the broader financing gap, Bangladesh is seeking approximately US$2 billion in loans from multilateral donors. The latest administrative orders extend a pattern of demand-side measures the government has pursued to manage fuel availability. #Bangladesh @asianomics

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ASIANOMICS

@asianomics · Post #5736 · 21.03.2026 г., 13:35

🇧🇩Bangladesh Seeks $2B in Multilateral Energy Loans Bangladesh is pursuing around multilateral energy loans totalling approximately US$2 billion to address fuel supply shortfalls driven by rising global prices linked to the Middle East conflict. The IMF has committed US$1.3 billion and the Asian Development Bank has pledged US$500 million as budget support, with the government seeking early disbursement of both. Bangladesh's prime minister's finance and planning adviser Rashed Al Titumir said the government may also approach the World Bank. Bangladesh imports 95 per cent of its oil and gas needs and has not adjusted domestic electricity or fuel prices despite the global price surge. Most crude fuel comes from Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, with around 35 per cent of gas supply also sourced from the Middle East. A recent attack on Qatar's Ras Laffan LNG hub poses a further risk to gas supply given Bangladesh's reliance on that facility. Authorities have adopted a three-pronged approach to energy security that includes demand-side restrictions alongside the loan strategy. Measures include capping fuel purchases, halting most fertiliser factory output, deploying police at filling stations, and using the navy to escort LNG shipments. The government is also exploring alternative energy sources from North America, South America, and Africa. #Bangladesh @asianomics

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RTDocumentary

@rtdocumentary · Post #652 · 24.04.2022 г., 11:59

#video#Bangladesh Have you ever heard about brickyard slavery in Bangladesh? Nearly a million people work twelve hours a day, six days a week, deprived of fundamental human rights and subject to inhuman torture. Yet, from dusk till dawn, they produce bricks for the booming construction industry without the hope of building a house of their own. Watch our documentary 'Brick Slaves' right now. Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary

RTDocumentary

@rtdocumentary · Post #339 · 07.12.2021 г., 12:20

#video#Bangladesh Myanmar’s ousted leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, has been sentenced to four years in prison for inciting unrest and violating COVID restrictions. Suu Kyi faces 11 charges that could see her imprisoned for life. The politician was once seen as a beacon for human rights. She won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for her struggle against military rule. However, Suu Kyi’s image suffered badly following the Rohingya crisis. In 2017, nearly a million Muslim Rohingya fled to neighbouring Bangladesh, running from an army crackdown. The government denied the violence took place and claimed the troops only targeted insurgents, not civilians. But numerous accounts of Rohingya refugees tell a different story of slaughter and persecution. Hear one of the stories from our documentary, Rohingya Unpeopled, and don’t forget to check out the whole film. Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary

RTDocumentary

@rtdocumentary · Post #324 · 24.11.2021 г., 14:00

Slaves of Bangladesh brickyards #video#Bangladesh Slavery exists in 2021. Workers of Bangladeshi brick factories are living proof. Men, women, and children mix the clay with water, fill wooden forms, and make bricks. Take this brickyard and compare it to one from the 19th century - there will be no difference. Brickyard workers complain about low wages and non-existent regulations. As a result, they breathe in the red dust that causes lung diseases and risk accidents. If someone dies, 'no one cares', they say, and the owners beat them and treat them 'as dogs'. Bricks are in high demand in Bangladesh, with a 160 million population rapidly moving to the cities. People need to live somewhere and need cheap building materials. Brick-making is seasonal, so workers toil away before the rains start. Then they go back to their homes that aren't even made of bricks. Watch the full documentary for more here. Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary

RTDocumentary

@rtdocumentary · Post #243 · 05.10.2021 г., 10:00

Where ships and people die #video#Bangladesh Have you ever wondered where ships go after serving their time (25-30 years)? 🚢 Chittagong, Bangladesh is one of the world’s biggest shipbreaking centres, where over 200 vessels are dismantled every year. Shipbreaking is a lucrative business in Chittagong, where labour is cheap and safety measures are non-existent. Workers take ships apart by hand, so tragedies occur all the time. However, locals hold on to their jobs in shipbreaking yards, because work is scarce. Follow: https://t.me/rtdocumentary

ASIANOMICS

@asianomics · Post #5161 · 04.07.2025 г., 08:39

🇲🇾🇧🇩 Malaysia dismantles Islamic State network involving workers from Bangladesh Malaysian authorities have dismantled a network that used social media to spread ideology and raise funds for the Islamic State militant group among Bangladeshi nationals working in the country, its top police official said. In a televised press conference, Inspector-General of Police Mohd Khalid Ismail said authorities had detained 36 Bangladesh nationals in several operations since April, all of whom had come to Malaysia to work in factories or in sectors like construction and services. The network also raised funds using international fund transfer services and e-wallets to send to the Islamic State group in Syria and Bangladesh, he added, declining to provide further details on the amount raised. #Malaysia#Bangladesh @asianomics

ASIANOMICS

@asianomics · Post #5981 · 24.04.2026 г., 12:22

🇮🇳🇧🇩India reviews Hasina extradition request India's Ministry of External Affairs confirmed on April 17 it is conducting a formal review of Bangladesh's extradition request for former Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina, who fled to India in August 2024 after her government collapsed under mass protests. The announcement marks a shift from New Delhi's previous non-committal position on the matter. The review follows high-level talks in New Delhi on April 8, where Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Khalilur Rahman met Indian External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar. India faces competing pressures: legal obligations under bilateral frameworks, and a strategic interest in stabilising relations with Dhaka's new administration — while Hasina retains value as a long-standing political ally. Acknowledging the request does not signal imminent extradition; New Delhi is widely seen as managing the process to preserve diplomatic leverage on both sides. #India#Bangladesh @asianomics

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