Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Those People are Taking Drug
Ever since the first case of HIV was reported back in 1989, AIDS has been a quietly growing but deadly problem in Bangladesh - and in particular in Dhaka. Although the country as a whole is deemed by the UN to be "low-risk", the disease is spreading at a worrying rate among one section of society: intravenous drug addicts who reuse dirty needles in the urban slums of the capital. According to UNA IDS statistics, the number of HIV-positive drug users more than doubled between 2001 and 2005. Health experts warn that the risk of an epidemic is increased by that fact that many of the addicts also admit paying for sex - and only 10 percent say they always use a condom. Our Observer in Bangladesh has been documenting the plight of these people for the past three years. Here is what he found: a "deadly game" on the streets of Dhaka.
Situation After Takaing Drug
Drug Addiction
Drug addiction is a growing problem in Bangladesh. Many people are taking a drug called yabba, which comes from Thailand and is similar to speed. It’s an expensive drug so it’s the well-off young people who are doing it. A lot of those I met while researching the book didn’t realise they were going to get hooked. None of them knew how harmful it is. I grew up in Canada and Saudi Arabia, and had learnt about drugs from an early age, but in Bangladesh, talking about drugs is taboo. Young people have no access to knowledge here.As I was speaking to people, common threads started emerging. Many addicts had previously attempted to detox, they had trouble with the police, parental relationships that had completely broken down, and had been being kicked out of home at least once. So I wanted to string these threads together in my book.My masters thesis, which was on happiness, was also related to my book. I interviewed really, really poor women in slums about how they defined happiness. That research became the voice of the character Falani, a single mother who sells drugs from her slum.
Addiction grips women more and more
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Bangladeshi garment workers Struggle
“Bangladeshi garment workers blocked roads and attacked factories on Monday as protests over the level of a new minimum wage spilled into a fourth day.Around 10,000 workers in Fatullah, south of the capital Dhaka, pelted police with rocks as they demanded a minimum monthly wage of 5,000 taka (73 dollars), rejecting a 3,000 taka deal offered by the government last week.They attacked factories, set up barricades in the road–we had to use tear gas and batons to disperse the workers,’ district police chief Biswas Afzal Hossain told AFP.The government said last Tuesday that the minimum monthly wage for garment workers would rise to 3,000 taka from 1,662 taka, but the new wage will not be implemented until November.Some major unions have accepted the 80-percent hike, but a string of smaller unions have rejected the deal, and violence erupted in Dhaka on Friday with workers blocking roads, vandalising factories and shops and looting goods.”
Street Boys are Taking Food
The worst form of discrimination can be seen against street children, who are forced to wander the urban streets of Bangladesh due to various reasons. An ongoing insurgency in the country as well as the growing migration rate is forcing children to live on the streets.About 5,000 children work and live on the streets.To make ends meet, children beg, shine shoes and steal, among other activities, Kathmandu estimates about 800-900 street children live in the city. Street children are mostly found in areas like around cinemas, city centers, bus stops and airports.
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Changing lLife Style of Slums Children
The Woman is Looking for Food
Without a doubt, this experience is depressing. Still, I know that World Concern is doing something to change this situation. A few minutes after we drove away from the slum, we visited a woman now able to provide for her family because of a small business loan. After that, I met another woman who has a growing screen-printing business because of World Concern.We can’t take care of all of the problems in this slum, but we are doing what we can to change the picture of poverty here, one person at a time.
The Boy is looking for food
The boys wandered through the piles, looking for something to eat. My van stopped nearby, and I popped open the door, holding my breath, which only works for so long. I watched one boy, maybe five years old, as he held a piece of scrap metal and poked at the garbage. He would head in one direction, then change routes, scanning the ground.At one point, the tan, black-haired boy picked up what looked like half of a rotten melon. He brought it to his face, took a whiff, dropped it, then silently kept on moving. He eventually disappeared from view behind a shack, near where a woman (his mother?) was prodding at another pile of trash. It was almost as if they were thinking, “surely, this is not all there is for me.”
Urban Population Living in Slum, %
When visitors see a Bangladesh, they observe overwhelming desperation: rickety shelters, absence of sanitation, filthy water and air. However, there are many benefits of rural to urban migration for migrants' lives, including reduction in abject poverty, empowerment of women, increased access to healthcare and education and other services. Historically, cities have been driving forces in economic and social development. As centers of industry and commerce, cities have long been centers of wealth and power. They also account for a disproportionate share of national income. The World Bank estimates that in the developing world, as much as 80 percent of future economic growth will occur in towns and cities. Nor are the benefits of urbanization solely economic. Urbanization is associated with higher incomes, improved health, higher literacy, and improved quality of life. Other benefits of urban life are less tangible but no less real: access to information, diversity, creativity, and innovation.
Uncertain future
As the government is planning to destroy the unmanaged houses in the slum to restructure the town, the people here are going to lose their home. Though their uncertain future haunts them, they have no other options left. The government has said that it will relocate the slums. But the question always remains that will relocation lead to any improvement in the standards of their living and health?
Child Working at Circus Shows
Child is Working in Different Construction Activities
Child Exploitation
Child is Working in Small Tea Stall
Deprive from Fundamental Rights
Now a days,child beggars are doing different kind of crime.In some area street beggers are proved cheaters.Some able bodies are found pretending lame,dump or blind.Some,of these children do crime in a day or night.They stealing different things or hijecking to the people.Some are addicted in drugs like heroine,ciggarte,gaja etc.In the picture,one child is inhaling from the plastic bag.it is one kind of drugs.They doing crime only for their proverty.
Street Dwellers' Health in Bangladesh
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Soft Tissue Infection
Street Childreen in Bangladesh
No Specific Place for Washing and Cleaning Dishes
Absence of Gender Discrimination.
People like us love to maintain particular time table for having our breakfast, lunch or dinner. But people living in Slum’s donot have any time table for having breakfast, lunch or dinner. Slum people only have their meal when ever they are able to cook that and cooking of meal depends on generating income or on earning money. So unless they are able to earn money they can not hope for having meal. So after knowing some facts like this I feel very lucky and very sad at the same time. I feel lucky because i donot have to waite to earn to have my meal and I feel sorry and sad after knowing childrens who are younger than me have to earn first every day to ensure meal every day.
Environment Polluted by Slums People
Unhygienic Latrines of Slum’s.
The poor of Bangladesh spend over $70 million annually on health care costs for the treatment of diarrhea Slum’s situating in six metropolitan cities of Bangladesh doesn’t have any permanent sanitation system. Most Slum’s have unhygienic sanitation system which is bad for health of the Slum people. The development of children’s health is affected greatly because of using this kind of unhygienic sanitation system. It is shocking and painful to know that over 325,000 children die each year in Bangladesh.