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SPACE DEEP — April 5, 2026 – Four astronauts are currently 48 hours away from breaking a 56-year-old record as they prepare to become the furthest humans to ever travel from Earth. While the Artemis II mission is technically a "test flight," for the crew of the Orion spacecraft, it has become a historic journey into the deep-space record books.

Shattering the Apollo 13 Record

By tomorrow, Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, and Mission Specialists Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen will surpass the record set by the legendary Apollo 13 crew in 1970. They are on a trajectory to reach 252,757 miles away from their home planet—a distance equivalent to circling the Earth's equator ten times.

The crew has already begun witnessing what this distance looks like, reporting that the Earth has shrunk to a small, glowing "oasis" in a vast black void.

From "Orbiters" to "Lunar Explorers"

The mission shifted from a simple transit to a true lunar encounter today as the spacecraft reached the Gravity Shift point. For the first time, the Moon's pull has overtaken the Earth's, effectively "capturing" the crew.

This gravity will serve as a high-speed slingshot. On Tuesday at 12:02 AM UK time, Orion will whip around the lunar far side, using the Moon’s mass to fling the astronauts back toward Earth at incredible speeds. This maneuver is the final "green light" needed to prove that NASA can safely send humans to the Moon and—more importantly—bring them back.



Proving the "Lifeboat"

The mission’s success isn't just about the distance; it’s about the survival of the "lifeboat" itself. Despite a minor plumbing crisis involving a frozen waste-water pipe, the Orion capsule has proven its resilience.

NASA’s Recovery Director, Lili Villarreal, is already mobilizing a massive Navy and NASA task force in the Pacific. They aren't just waiting for a capsule; they are waiting for the return of a new era. When the crew slams into the atmosphere at 25,000 mph next Friday, they won't just be returning as astronauts—they will be returning as the pioneers who reopened the door to the solar system.

A Sight for the History Books

The crew has already achieved one "first": the human sighting of the entire Orientale Basin. While millions have seen photos of the Moon, these four are the only living humans to have looked down at the lunar far side with their own eyes, describing the view as "absolutely spectacular."

As Pilot Victor Glover reminded audiences during a live broadcast: "We are the same thing—and we got to get through this together."

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https://thereporter24.com/news/beyond-the-horizon-artemis-ii-crew-witnesses-spectacular-lunar-far-side-as-gravity-tug-of-war-begins

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Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 4/05/2026 08:58:00 PM
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Munshi Firoz Al Mamun

Dhaka, Jan 29, 2026: Residents of Bashundhara Residential Area in the capital faced severe hardship on Wednesday as the supply of natural gas through the Titas Gas pipeline remained completely shut throughout the day, with the situation continuing until the filing of this report at 11:00pm.

Speaking to residents across different blocks of Bashundhara, it was learned that a total gas blackout prevailed in the area, disrupting daily household activities and causing widespread distress among families.

Cooking and Safe Drinking Water Severely Affected

From cooking meals to boiling water for safe drinking, daily life in Bashundhara heavily depends on gas supply. Unlike many parts of the country, Dhaka has no tubewell-based drinking water system. Instead, city residents rely on water supplied by WASA, which sources and treats water from rivers such as the Shitalakhya and others that are heavily affected by industrial pollution and chemical discharge.

As a result, boiling water before consumption remains essential for many households. The prolonged gas outage left residents struggling to ensure safe drinking water, especially for children and elderly family members.

LPG Crisis Adds to Public Suffering

Most families in Bashundhara maintain LPG cylinders as a backup due to the irregular nature of Titas gas supply. However, the crisis has worsened as the supply of LPG cylinders has reportedly declined sharply across Dhaka and other parts of the country.

For nearly a month, households as well as hotels and restaurants nationwide have been affected by the shortage of LPG cylinders. Residents allege that syndication by vested interests has created an artificial crisis, pushing prices higher and holding consumers hostage.

To compound public suffering, state-owned Titas Gas supply to Bashundhara Residential Area remained fully suspended on Wednesday (January 28, 2026), while gas supply in other parts of Dhaka continues to fluctuate unpredictably—coming and going multiple times a day.

Voices from the Affected Residents

Rebeka Begum, a housewife from Bashundhara Residential Area, described her ordeal: “From morning until 11:30 at night, gas did not come even once. I don’t know how I will boil water for drinking for my family, especially for my small children.”

She said gas supply usually stops between 7:00 and 7:30am, forcing families to rely on LPG cylinders. “I bought a cylinder just two or three days before the supply stopped. Then we went to our village during our children’s winter vacation and returned after 15 days. Today, the cylinder ran out exactly when there was no Titas gas at all.”

Calling it a double financial burden, she said families are forced to pay fixed Titas gas bills while also spending heavily on LPG amid soaring prices of essential commodities.

Echoing similar concerns, Md Hasan, a security guard at a house in G-Block of Bashundhara, said he could not cook food at all on Wednesday. “Other days, gas performance is also very poor. Most of the time there is no gas, but we still have to pay a fixed monthly bill,” he said.

Citywide Impact Beyond Bashundhara

The gas crisis is not limited to Bashundhara alone. Md Kabul, a resident of Mirpur-10 near Shah Ali Market, described the erratic gas supply in his area as chaotic. “Gas goes at 7:30 or 8:00am, comes at 3:00 or 4:00pm, goes again at 7:00 or 8:00pm, and sometimes comes back at 11:00pm. It feels like a circus.”

He said managing household work under such uncertainty has become nearly impossible. “Families are busy with business, cooking, and children’s studies. If food cannot be cooked or water boiled on time, how will children eat and go to school?”

Paying Bills Without Service Monir Hossain, a teacher at an English-medium school in Dhaka, pointed out that under regulations enforced in June 2022 and still in effect, non-metered residential gas users must pay fixed monthly bills regardless of service quality.

According to the rules: Double burner: BDT 1,080 per month Single burner: BDT 990 per month “People are paying compulsory bills without receiving proper service, while a section of officials benefits,” he said. He added that LPG producers and suppliers have exploited the situation, leaving consumers trapped between two unreliable systems.

Fear Over Dhaka’s Livability

Md Kibria, a flat owner in Shewrapara under Mirpur-10, described similar struggles. “It has become difficult to provide food for my two school-going daughters. If this situation continues, Dhaka will lose its livability,” he warned.

Growing Public Concern

Residents are increasingly questioning how long urban households can endure rising costs, unreliable utilities, and lack of accountability. With gas supply remaining unstable and LPG shortages persisting, public frustration continues to grow, highlighting the urgent need for transparent management and effective solutions to prevent further hardship.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/29/2026 12:20:00 AM
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Who Are You Beckoning Me from a Distance?

By Munshi Firoz Al Mamun

Hansen had never learned how to leave a newsroom on time.

Officially, his duty hours were from three in the afternoon to ten at night. Unofficially, his life began at nine in the morning and dissolved somewhere between midnight and one. The fluorescent lights of the newsroom knew him better than his own bedroom. The clatter of keyboards, the smell of stale coffee, the restless glow of monitors—these were not accessories of his profession; they were his habitat.

He had arrived in journalism armed with credentials that once meant something: a BA (Honours) and MA in English, followed by an LLB. Words were not merely his tools; they were his discipline. He understood law the way others understood gossip, and he could carve a sentence so clean that editors noticed it before they noticed him.

From the outset of his career, his writing stood out—precise, elegant, unafraid of complexity. His edits rescued careless reports. His headlines carried weight without noise.

But excellence, Hansen would later learn, was never a neutral act.

The Weight of Extra Ink

Beyond reporting, Hansen became the newsroom’s silent problem-solver. Corporate profiles that needed “polish”? Hansen. PowerPoint scripts for board presentations? Hansen. Advertisement copy that had to sound intelligent yet submissive? Hansen again.

Many nights, while the city slept, he remained at his desk shaping language for projects that were never credited to him and never paid separately. Deadlines were imposed, never negotiated. Nights disappeared. Weekends dissolved.

Journalism did not just take his time—it consumed his youth.

At first, the admiration was real. Editors praised him openly. Juniors gathered around his desk, asking how to sharpen a lead, how to structure an argument, how to stay truthful without inviting libel.

Hansen taught generously. He believed knowledge multiplied when shared.

That belief would cost him.

The House of Easy Journalism

Journalism, however, was no longer alone in the building.

Behind glass partitions and closed doors sat Henry, Jacob, Sharlow, and Jesica—journalists in title, survivors by strategy. When assignments were handed out, their keyboards remained eerily silent. No tapping, no muttering, no drafts scrapped in frustration.

Ten minutes later, polished reports appeared in the submission folder—long, confident, and hollow.

ChatGPT had become their ghostwriter.

When editor Denish Farlow assigned a complex story, Hansen could hear the difference. His own screen filled with revisions, citations, and cross-checks. Their desks remained calm, untouched, like shrines to automation.

Authentic reporting had become a disadvantage; speed was currency, and integrity a liability.

Hansen felt pressure—not from management, but from the quiet resentment of colleagues whose shortcuts were exposed by his diligence. His presence was a mirror they refused to face.

Silika and the Price of Excellence

Silika understood that mirror well.

She had returned from London with a postgraduate degree and an unshakable confidence in her craft. Her writing was sharp, her captions thoughtful, her ethics uncompromising. She rose quickly—and paid for it.

The newsroom server, designed for collaboration, became a weapon. Anonymous hands altered her headlines, weakened her leads, and introduced subtle errors—small enough to evade casual notice, damaging enough to raise suspicion.

Whispers followed. Doubt crept in.

Hansen noticed. He confronted. He documented.

But professionalism, he learned, had no defense against coordinated malice.

Praise Before the Fall

One afternoon, during a meeting with the newspaper’s owner and chairman, editor Denish Farlow praised Hansen openly.

“His writing sets the standard,” the editor said. “His edits rescue us.”

Hansen felt something rare that day—validation.

Fifteen days later, both Hansen and Silika were terminated.

No warning. No performance review. No explanation worthy of the word.

In protest against the discrimination and unjust treatment of Hansen and Silika, around 23 top and meritorious journalists took a stand—and were subsequently terminated as well.

The newsroom learned a brutal lesson: dissent would not be tolerated, merit would not be defended.

Merit had lost the race.

The Corporate Shadow

Behind the scenes operated a corporate official assigned by the parent company to oversee media operations—newspapers, television, radio. He had no background in journalism. Worse, he had no working command of English. Yet power clung to him like a second skin. His name was Mankin Devil.

The chairman and managing director of the parent corporate house never visited the newsroom. They relied on reports, hearsay, and carefully curated narratives. Truth was outsourced. Accountability was optional.

This official summoned journalists like suspects. Phones were confiscated at the door. Voices were raised. Humiliation was routine.

He empowered second-tier operatives, undermining chief editors, rewarding obedience over competence. Strategy replaced ethics.

The Meeting Without the Accused

One morning, all section heads were summoned urgently.

No agenda. No hint.

Only after arriving did they learn the meeting concerned a mistake on the business page. The irony was sharp: the journalist responsible had not been called.

When confusion filled the room, the corporate official demanded a clarification—in English.

He ordered Hansen to write it.

Hansen complied. Precision was his habit. He explained the incident, contextualized responsibility, clarified editorial workflow.

The official read it for thirty minutes.

Then asked, quietly, the meaning of a single English word.

The room understood everything at once.

Lines That Should Not Be Crossed

The descent accelerated.

One afternoon, the corporate official instructed chiefs of all online portals under the group to write letters to international agencies—including Interpol—targeting specific individuals. The order was illegal. The deadline, unreasonable.

The chiefs hesitated. They sought refuge in editors’ chambers.

Doors closed.

Fear had replaced leadership.

Later, the official summoned senior journalists one by one, stripping them of devices, dignity, and voice. Abuse followed.

Then came the final test.

Hansen was ordered to write a complaint against the chief editor of the English daily.

He refused.

For that refusal, his salary was cut by one month. Harassment intensified. Isolation followed.

The Trap

When Hansen later took over as online chief for six months, another directive arrived: issue a show-cause notice to a subordinate journalist for repeated mistakes.

The mistakes had occurred three times—before Hansen assumed charge.

Bound by instruction, he issued the notice.

The corporate official then summoned the accused journalist privately and coached him to reply by implicating Hansen—that the mistakes continued because the new section head failed to guide him. In the irony of fact, the subordinate committed such mistakes before Hansen’s tenure.

Meanwhile, Mankin Devil forgot the limit of his power. One midnight, the managing director visited the media complex silently. He asked: "Why are you damaging my organizations?" Initially, Mankin rejected the claim. Later, MD insisted he had evidence. Mankin replied he allowed no mobile phones, leaving no proof.

As MD pressed again, Mankin arrogantly said: "These are my organizations... my decisions."

The MD, enraged, punched him. Mankin, a bulky man of around 150 kg, fell into a nearby canal. The water was cold. He cried, but people rescued him.

The trap had been perfect.

The Quiet Exit

Hansen understood then that journalism, as he had known it, no longer existed in that building.

He did not shout. He did not beg.

He studied.

PHP. Laravel. Website development. Digital marketing. Systems that rewarded logic, not flattery. Fields where output mattered more than allegiance. Nights once spent correcting others’ distortions were now invested in building something real.

The transition was not easy—but it was honest.

Holding the termination letter, Hansen sat alone in a corner at the office exit, tears streaming. From behind, Silika touched his shoulder.

“Who?” he asked.

“I am,” she replied. She consoled him and urged him not to break down. They discussed the conspiracy that had replaced performance in their workplace.

After returning home, Hansen felt the weight of unemployment. He browsed IT institute websites, discovering popular courses in website design and development, PHP, Laravel, digital marketing, and more.

That night, he dreamt of a figure beckoning him toward a career in IT—a world ruled by technology and innovation, where workplace conspiracies had no place.

“Who are you beckoning me from a distance?” he asked aloud. The figure disappeared.

The next day, he enrolled in a website design and development course. Over time, he mastered PHP, Laravel, digital marketing, graphic design, and data entry.

Hansen had become a different person.

A Digital Dawn

Hansen was no longer just a journalist.

He was also a lyricist, composer, and singer. He wrote English songs, composed tunes, codified them with the precision he applied to software, and sang them himself. Many of these songs were letters in melody, meant for Silika—where words and music carried what journalism could no longer hold.

Technology became his new language. Innovation, his new freedom. Each line of code replaced a compromised sentence; each system became an editor that valued truth through function.

Silika—no longer just memory—was inspiration. Her integrity, her courage, her refusal to bend remained his constant companion.

They no longer shared a newsroom, but they walked the same ideals.

The newsroom lights still flickered behind him. Keyboards still hummed. ChatGPT still wrote stories for those who never learned to write.

But ahead lay dawn—a digital dawn.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/09/2026 11:30:00 PM
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MFA Mamun

Dhaka, Jan 8, 2026:
Despite adequate imports and government-fixed prices, the bottled liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) market in Bangladesh has plunged into fresh turmoil, with consumers across major cities paying hundreds of taka more per cylinder amid allegations of market manipulation and supply control by a handful of dominant companies.

In Dhaka, Chattogram, Khulna, Rajshahi, Sylhet, Faridpur, Mymensingh and other places, retailers are selling 12kg LPG cylinders at prices ranging from Tk 1,650 to Tk 2,200, far above the Bangladesh Energy Regulatory Commission’s (BERC) January rate of Tk 1,306. The price surge comes even as official data show stable imports and sufficient national stock.

Md Golam Kibria, a commercial general manager of an RMG company and a resident of Kazipara in Mirpur-10, Dhaka, said he recently purchased a 35kg LPG cylinder of a Petrobangla-linked brand for Tk 4,500, which he described as significantly higher than the actual price.

“The gas seller charged an inflated rate, claiming there was no supply of cylinders and that he managed to arrange one with difficulty,” Kibria said.

The owner of Jolojog Hotel & Restaurant in Magura said they purchased a 35kg LPG cylinder for Tk 3,900, which is Tk 400 higher than the official price. However, he added, there is currently no supply of LPG cylinders due to a strike by traders.

When contacted, Md Jillur Rahman, who is involved in LPG cylinder sales in Magura district, said there has been no supply of Bashundhara LPG cylinders for nearly a month.

He added that the situation is similar for other brands, including Jamuna, Beximco, Omera, TMSS, and Delta, as fresh cylinder supplies have remained unavailable in the market.

Jillur said he currently has around 100 cylinders of United Aygaz LPG, but customers are required to purchase them at Tk 2,400 along with the cylinder, with no option to exchange empty bottles.

Typically, consumers pay for an LPG cylinder only during their first purchase in a locality. For subsequent purchases, the empty cylinder is exchanged for a filled one, and only the gas price is charged.

Attempts were made to contact officials at the Bashundhara LPG distribution point serving Bashundhara Residential Area in Dhaka, but they did not respond to phone calls.

According to traders, the problem lies not in imports but in the distribution chain, which they allege has been monopolised by a few large operators who are charging inflated rates at the wholesale level.

Traders blame upstream manipulation

Saiful Islam, an LPG trader in Dhaka’s Sadarghat area, said selling at the government-fixed rate has become impossible. “We are supposed to buy a cylinder at around Tk 1,150 and sell it at Tk 1,306. But companies are charging us up to Tk 1,340 per cylinder. If we follow the official rate, we incur losses,” he said.

Similar complaints were echoed in Chattogram. Abul Hossain, manager of Rahmat Enterprise in Muradpur, said retailers have little choice but to pass on higher costs to consumers. “We are buying cylinders at inflated prices from distributors. That’s why a 12kg cylinder is now selling for Tk 1,700 to Tk 1,800 here,” he said.

Earlier reports showed that tax challan documents revealed some top importers selling cylinders to distributors above the BERC-approved rate, raising serious questions about compliance and regulatory oversight.

Consumers bear the brunt

The price shock has hit urban households particularly hard, where piped natural gas connections remain limited or unavailable.

In Rampura Area of Dhaka, homemaker Farhana Rahman said her monthly cooking budget has become unmanageable. “Last month I bought a cylinder for Tk 1,400. This week, the same shop asked Tk 2,100. We don’t have gas lines here—what option do we have?” she said.

In Khulna city, restaurant owner Masud Rana said his business costs have surged overnight. “We use at least two cylinders a day. With these prices, small eateries like ours will not survive. Customers won’t accept higher food prices,” he said.

Rajshahi resident Abdul Karim, a private service holder, said he waited three days to get a refill. “Even after paying Tk 1,900, supply was uncertain. Some shops said cylinders were ‘finished’ despite visible stock,” he alleged.

In Chattogram’s Oxygen area, housewife Nusrat Jahan said the crisis feels engineered. “There is gas in the country, but not for us. Someone is benefiting while ordinary people suffer,” she said.

Strike worsens supply fears

The situation deteriorated further after the LP Gas Traders Cooperative Society announced an indefinite nationwide strike, halting LPG marketing and supply from Thursday. The traders say the January price was fixed without their consent and does not reflect real distribution costs.

Association President Selim Khan claimed only a fraction of available cylinders are being refilled. “Out of 5.5 crore cylinders, only 1.25 crore are in circulation. The rest remain idle, creating artificial scarcity. Distributors are being pushed to the brink,” he said.

The traders have demanded higher distribution and retail margins and an end to what they describe as “administrative harassment” through enforcement drives.

Monopoly concerns and regulatory silence

Industry insiders and consumer rights advocates argue that the LPG sector’s rapid expansion—especially in Dhaka and other major cities—has come at the cost of fair competition.

With household and commercial kitchens increasingly dependent on LPG due to the absence of government gas connections, a few large companies now dominate imports, storage and bottling. Critics say this concentration has enabled artificial supply shortages and excessive profiteering.

As winter demand peaks and uncertainty over supply deepens, consumers fear the crisis may worsen unless authorities intervene decisively to restore transparency, ensure compliance with fixed prices, and protect millions who now rely on LPG for daily cooking.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 1/08/2026 09:39:00 AM
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Farmers’ Livelihood at Risk in Dinajpur

Khademul Islam, Dinajpur, Bangladesh, Dec 24, 2025:

Winter vegetable farmers in Dinajpur are facing a deepening crisis as powerful market syndicates control prices while excessive pesticide use threatens both crops and public health, investigations have found.

At the centre of the market-related allegations is NM Bahadur Market, one of northern Bangladesh’s largest raw vegetable trading hubs. Farmers bringing produce to the market reportedly cannot sell directly to buyers and are instead forced to go through a fixed group of intermediaries.

Several farmers alleged that attempts to sell outside this informal system result in intimidation, psychological pressure, and social harassment. According to them, prices are predetermined by syndicate members rather than being set by supply, demand, or produce quality.

Investigations also revealed tactics aimed at manipulating prices through misinformation. Traders linked to the syndicate allegedly spread rumours claiming that farmers have suffered massive losses and vegetables have little value, despite steady production.

Farmers are forced to sell vegetables at extremely low prices, while the same produce later appears in retail markets at significantly higher rates, raising concerns over artificial price inflation.

Alongside market manipulation, farmers are also battling what they describe as an unethical pesticide network operating at field level. With increased winter fog and cold weather, vegetable crops have been affected by pests and diseases.

Multiple farmers complained that when they seek guidance from local agricultural offices, they are frequently directed toward specific pesticide dealers. These dealers, along with agrochemical company representatives, often recommend repeated and excessive pesticide use.

In many cases, diseases are vaguely identified as “viral” without laboratory testing or proper diagnosis, farmers said. As a result, production costs rise sharply while soil quality deteriorates and environmental and health risks increase.

Field investigations show that repeated pesticide application often fails to cure crop diseases. Instead, it damages soil fertility and destroys beneficial insects, further weakening long-term agricultural sustainability.

“In trying to save our crops, we are destroying ourselves,” one farmer said, expressing concern over mounting debts and health hazards.

Responding to the allegations, Abu Zafar Md. Sadeq, Additional Deputy Director of the Department of Agricultural Extension in Dinajpur, said farmers are being encouraged to adopt organic pest management practices and that monitoring at field level is ongoing.

However, he noted that ensuring fair prices in markets falls under the jurisdiction of the local administration and consumer rights authorities.

This season, winter vegetables have been cultivated on nearly 15,000 hectares across Dinajpur’s 13 upazilas, with a production target of around 300,000 metric tons. Despite higher output, farmers say their incomes continue to decline.

From field to marketplace, growers remain trapped between syndicate-controlled pricing and rising production costs.

As vegetables continue to fill the fields but fail to secure fair returns, farmers ask when accountability will be enforced—and when their livelihoods will finally be freed from the grip of syndicates.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 12/24/2025 10:23:00 AM
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By Sarker Shariful Islam, Rajshahi Bureau Chief
RAJSHAHI:
The Western Zone Railway is facing a growing safety crisis as thousands of concrete sleepers, imported from India and installed over the last two decades, have begun to crack and disintegrate.

The widespread degradation has left several sections of the 345-kilometer track vulnerable, forcing railway officials to conduct daily inspections to prevent derailments.

Widespread Damage and Safety Concerns

Since 2003, concrete sleepers were installed to replace traditional wooden ones across 345 kilometers of track. However, despite being a relatively recent installation, these sleepers have shown premature failure.

A field visit revealed that the most severe damage is concentrated on the 48-kilometer stretch between Ishwardi (Pabna) and Ullapara (Sirajganj).

Railway officials confirmed that approximately 2,500 sleepers are broken or severely cracked on this segment alone.

Locally, the situation is even more dire; across the entire Joypurhat-to-Parbatipur stretch, an estimated 50,000 sleepers are reportedly damaged or at risk.

History of Accidents

The deteriorating infrastructure has been linked to a series of recent incidents that have alarmed local residents and commuters:

December 2021: A freight train derailed at Boral Bridge station.

May 2023: A derailment occurred at Ullapara.

June & September 2025: Line cracks were discovered near Bhangura and Dilpasha stations. In one instance, jute sacks were used as a makeshift "fix" to allow a train to pass.

September 29, 2025: The Panchagarh Express derailed near Bhangura, suspending rail traffic for six hours.

"Major accidents can occur at any time," warned Ali Akbar, a resident of Bhangura. "We see sleepers being replaced, only for more to break shortly after. The risk is constant."

Technical Debate: Wood vs. Concrete

While railway experts generally prefer concrete for its longevity, local sentiment is shifting. Monirul Islam, a resident of Ishwardi, noted, "The concrete sleepers don't seem to last even 10 years, whereas the old wooden sleepers lasted 40 to 50 years without issue."

However, Ahmed Hossain Masum, Chief Engineer of Western Railway, maintains that concrete remains the superior material.

He clarified that the current issues stem from specific batches of imported stock. "We no longer import these sleepers; they are now manufactured domestically. Locally made sleepers are far more durable," Masum stated.

Proposed Solutions and Budget

The Railway Ministry is currently considering a Tk 22 crore project aimed at replacing the broken sleepers over the next five years. The proposal is currently awaiting approval from the Executive Committee of the National Economic Council (ECNEC).

While Engineer Masum downplayed the immediate danger—stating that only 2% to 4% of the 550,000 total sleepers are damaged—field officials acknowledge that the lack of budget for bulk replacements has forced them into a cycle of "urgent-only" repairs.

Until the ECNEC approves the new project, the safety of the Western Zone's rail movement relies on the vigilance of daily trolley-car inspections.
Munshi Firoz Al Mamun 12/22/2025 02:26:00 PM
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