Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Six men rewarded death sentence over the brutal killing 2 children

A Bangladesh court has handed four men the death sentence over the brutal killing of a 13-year-old boy that provoked national outrage after video footage of the attack went viral.

Another two men were ordered to hang for the separate torture and murder of another 13-year-old that occurred less than a month later. 

In the first case, 10 people were found guilty in the north-eastern city of Sylhet of lynching Samiul Alam Rajon, a verdict that sparked cheers from hundreds of people gathered outside the courtroom.
"We're happy with the judgement. Samiul's parents are satisfied," Shahidul Islam, a lawyer representing his family, said after the Metropolitan Sessions Court's decision.

"I am sure the verdict will send a powerful message to all those child beaters and molesters," Mr Islam said.

Samiul, accused of stealing a bicycle, was tied to a pole on July 8 and then subjected to a brutal assault in which he pleaded for his life. An autopsy found 64 separate injuries had been inflicted on the teenager.

A 28-minute video of the lynching, which was widely circulated after being posted on social media, prompted street protests to demand the perpetrators be hanged.

The lawyer said that the main accused, Kamrul Islam, was sentenced to death. Three of his friends were given the same sentence, one of them in absentia after going on the run.

Another six accused were given jail sentences ranging from life through to one year, he said.

Kamrul Islam also fled, to Saudi Arabia, a day after the attack, but he was later arrested and extradited after outraged members of the country's large Bangladeshi expatriate community tipped off police.

In the video, the terrified youngster can be heard screaming in pain and repeating: "Please don't beat me like this, I will die."

At one stage he is told to walk away. But as he tries to get to his feet, one of the attackers shouts: "His bones are OK. Beat him some more."

Kamrul Islam's lawyer said he would appeal.

"He did not deserve death as he did not have any intention to kill the boy," the lawyer, who did not give his name, said. 

In the second case in the south-western city of Khulna, a mechanic and his assistant were sentenced to death on Sunday for torturing a 13-year-old former employee to death with an air compressor used for inflating tyres.

Police said the employer, Mohammad Sharif, became enraged after the boy left his workshop for another job, and during the attack he inserted the compressor tube into his rectum and switched on the machine.

"The Metropolitan Sessions Court sentenced Sharif and his assistant Mohammad Mintu to death for the murder of Rakib," prosecutor Sultana Rahman said.

Another boy has been tortured and killed in Bangladesh

Yet another boy has been tortured and killed in Bangladesh, police said.

Mohammad Raja, 17, is the fourth boy between ages 10 and 17 to be beaten to death in just over five weeks. Public protests have erupted across the nation and 13 people were charged in a highly publicized killing that was recorded and posted on social media. 
 
Raja was found badly injured Monday in front of his house in the Hazaribagh area of Dhaka, the capital. He was taken to Dhaka Medical College Hospital and died soon after admission.
 
"We've received a complaint over the lynching of a boy," said Kazi Moinul Islam of the Hazaribagh police station. "We've already arrested three people who are being interrogated," 
 
Family members said Raja, a steel shop employee, was picked up by a neighbor who claimed that the boy had stolen a mobile phone set.
 
Police said they believe Raja was tortured because his body had bruises and scars.
 
Suspected thieves are often attacked by mobs in Bangladesh, according to reports, but the killing of the boys has outraged many.
 
Public protests broke out after the July 8 killing of Samiul Alam Rajon, 13, was recorded and posted on social media. 
 
The clip shows Rajon, tied to a post and beaten with a metal rod while his attackers laugh and jeer during the attack in Kumargaon, on the outskirts of Sylhet. The victim's pleas for mercy, or just a glass of water, were ignored by his attackers. 
 
Rajon, a vegetable vendor, was accused of stealing a rickshaw van used for carrying goods.
Footage of the killing, recorded by one of the attackers, was widely viewed on social networks, prompting hundreds of angry protesters to take to the streets, demanding the killers be punished. Protesters claimed Rajon's death was not isolated, but rather exposed shortcomings in the country's criminal justice system.
 
Police said that 13 people have been charged in that crime.
 
Mohammad Rakib, 12, died August 3 in Khulna. Authorities said he was tortured by his former employer who was angry because Rakib took a job at another car repair shop.
 
On August 4, Robiul Awal, 10, died in Borguna. He was beaten and his eyes were gouged out after he'd allegedly stolen fish.
 
It's not known whether anybody was arrested in Rakib's or Awal's deaths.
 
Statistics of child rights group Bangladesh Shishu Adhikar Forum show that 191 children were slain in the first seven months of the current year, up from 146 during the same period of 2014 and 128 in the corresponding period of 2013. 
 
A local rights organization, Odhikar, said in a recent report that at least 903 were lynched across the country since January 2009 and at least 60 people were lynched in the past six months.
 
 
Source: August 19, 2015

13-year-old boy accused of theft and beaten to death

The grisly lynching of a 13-year-old boy accused of theft has triggered angry protests in Bangladesh, after footage of the killing went viral on social media.

The clip shows the victim, Samiul Alam Rajon, tied to a post and beaten with a metal rod, while his attackers laugh and jeer during the attack in Kumargaon, on the outskirts of Sylhet.
 
Footage of the lynching, recorded by one of the attackers, was widely viewed on social networks, prompting hundreds of angry protesters to take to the streets, demanding the killers be punished.
 
The victim's pleas for mercy, or just a glass of water, were ignored by his attackers during the ordeal Sunday. A vegetable vendor, he had been accused by the men of theft.
 
An autopsy at Sylhet Medical College Hospital revealed he died from severe head injuries, while his body bore scores of marks.
 
Sylhet Metropolitan City Additional Police Commissioner SM Rokon Uddin told CNN Thursday that they had arrested eight people so far and were also seeking two further suspects, who had hidden the body after the murder.
 
"The way the boy was murdered was really unfortunate... over a dozen of bystanders saw the brutality, but no body even informed the police," he said. The detective branch of the city's police were investigating further. 
 
The man who filmed the deadly assault was arrested Wednesday, and the device upon which it was filmed has been recovered. 
 
The protesters claimed Rajon's incident was not isolated, but rather exposed shortcomings in the country's criminal justice system.
 
Local rights organization Odhikar said in a recent report that at least 903 people were lynched in Bangladesh since January 2009, and at least 60 people were lynched in the past six months.
 
He said Rajon, the eldest of his two sons, had begun working as a street vendor to support the family. Rahman, who suffers from heart disease, said he could not earn enough on his own.
 
"I've sent him for work as I couldn't support his schooling because of poverty," Rahman said.
 
Rahman said Rajon had struggled with schooling, and had had difficulties speaking in the past. 
 
The State Minister for Home Affairs, Asaduzzaman Khan, described the case as "really unfortunate," and said police had been instructed to go tough against the killers. "No one will be spared," he said.
 
Rahman, however, was not convinced. He said the entire family was traumatized and feared further reprisal by the killers. 
 
"They (the killers) are powerful but I'm not... they can do anything... Now I'm scared (for) my life," he said.
 
 
Source: July 16, 2015
 

Monday, January 30, 2017

Brad Pitt reported verbally, physically abusing his kids

Brad, 52, is under investigation by USA authorities after being accused of physically and verbally abusing his children during an angry outburst, TMZ reported on Thursday.


According to the entertainment news site , the Los Angeles Police Department began probing Brad based on an anonymous tip received by the LA County Department of Children and Family Services, as is systematic following any report of child abuse.


The source reportedly told authorities that Brad began screaming and "getting physical" with his children on a private jet, possibly under the influence, and then continued ranting after the plane landed.


Just days ago, Angelina, 41, filed for divorce from her husband of two years citing irreconcilable differences and seeking custody of their six children together.


Reports have suggested that Angelina disapproves of Brad's hard-partying and hard-drinking lifestyle.


Brad told People magazine : "I am very saddened by this but what matters most now is the well-being of our kids. I kindly ask the press to give them the space they deserve during this challenging time."


Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt met on the sets of Mr & Mrs Smith in 2004. She had just split from second husband Billy Bob Thornton, he was married to F.R.I.E.N.D.S star Jennifer Aniston whom he divorced the next year.


Together they have six children who use the last name Jolie-Pitt. The eldest three - Maddox, Pax and Zahara - are adopted. Shiloh and twins Vivienne and Knox are biologically theirs.


Angelina Jolie is currently working on a film on the Cambodian genocide. Brad Pitt has World War Z 2 lined up.

Trump's executive order : Protests took place at Battery Park in lower Manhattan

Tens of thousands of people rallied in U.S. cities and at airports on Sunday to voice outrage over President Donald Trump's executive order restricting entry into the country for travelers from seven Muslim-majority nations.


In New York, Washington and Boston, a second wave of demonstrations followed spontaneous rallies that broke out at U.S. airports on Saturday as U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents began enforcing Trump's directive.


The protests spread westward as the day progressed, reports Reuters.


The order, which bars admission of Syrian refugees and suspends travel to the United States from Syria, Iraq, Iran and four other countries on national security grounds, has led to the detention or deportation of hundreds of people arriving at U.S. airports.


One of the largest of Sunday's protests took place at Battery Park in lower Manhattan, within sight of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor, long a symbol of welcome to U.S. shores.


Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York told the crowd that Trump's order was un-American and ran counter to the country's core values.


"What we are talking about here is life and death for so many people," the Senate Democratic leader said. "I will not rest until these horrible orders are repealed."


The march, estimated to have grown to about 10,000 people, later began heading to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection office in lower Manhattan.


In Washington, thousands rallied at Lafayette Square across from the White House, chanting: "No hate, no fear, refugees are welcome here."


It was the second straight weekend that Washington was the scene of protests. Last Saturday, hundreds of thousands of women participated in an anti-Trump rally and march, one of dozens staged across the country.

15,000 Rohingya Muslims flee into China

Up to 15,000 people may have fled across Myanmar's border into China in the past month, a United Nations agency has said, as fighting between Myanmar's army and ethnic armed groups intensifies.


Aid access to people affected by conflict in the northern states of Kachin and Shan "is getting worse, not better", Pierre Peron, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Myanmar, said by email, reports Reuters.


The OCHA said in an update on Monday that, as well as the estimated 15,000 new refugees, another 2,400 people had been displaced internally in the northern part of Shan state since Nov. 20, when a coalition of four rebel armies attacked military and police outposts.


The attacks disrupted trade across the border and China has expressed concern over stray shells and bullets landing in its territory.


In Beijing, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said she did not immediately have any details about refugee numbers, but repeated a call for talks to resolve the fighting and ensure peace and stability on the border.


Weeks of clashes and the new displacements have damaged Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi's hopes of securing peace in the long-running conflicts in the mountainous border areas, a goal she has made her administration's top priority.


Observers fear Suu Kyi's fledgling civilian administration is unable to rein in the army, which retains political power and is free from civilian oversight.


"Humanitarian access to conflict areas in Kachin and Shan states is currently worse than at any point in the past few years," Peron said.


"This has seriously affected the ability of humanitarian organizations to provide life-saving aid to tens of thousands of (internally displaced) and other conflict-affected people."


Work by international aid agencies has also been restricted in Myanmar's northwest for more than two months. Government forces launched "clearance operations" there after armed men, believed to be from the oppressed Rohingya Muslim group, attacked border police.


The army said it would step up operations in Shan state following the November attacks.


A Myanmar police official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters, told Reuters that government forces had clashed with armed groups in northern Shan at least 170 times in the past month.

International human rights groups accused the military of mass murder, looting and rape in Myanmar

The actions of Myanmar's military may constitute crimes against humanity, human rights group Amnesty International has warned, based on accounts of violence against the country's Muslim Rohingya minority.


Myanmar has come under heavy criticism for its army's forceful treatment of the Rohingya, and international human rights groups such as Amnesty have accused the military of mass murder, looting and rape, according to AP, UNB.


"The Myanmar military has targeted Rohingya civilians in a callous and systematic campaign of violence," said Rafendi Djamin, Southeast Asia director for Amnesty International. "The deplorable actions of the military could be part of a widespread and systematic attack on a civilian population and may amount to crimes against humanity."


Amnesty released a report Monday outlining its accusations. The report comes as Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi is set to meet fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asians Nations at a Monday meeting in Yangon.


The military sweeps were sparked by an Oct. 9 attack on police outposts in Rakhine state that killed nine officers.


Rakhine, located in Myanmar's west, has long been home to simmering tensions between the Rohingya and the country's Buddhist majority population. The last major outbreak of violence in 2012 left hundreds dead and drove 140,000 people into internal displacement camps.


Amnesty cautioned that the scale and extent of the violence is unclear, as the military has closed Rakhine to outside observers, including aid workers. But eyewitness accounts detail specific cases of murder, looting and rape.


In one incident on Nov. 12, following an alleged skirmish between the army and villagers armed mostly with swords and other simple weapons, helicopter gunships descended on a village and sprayed bullets indiscriminately, killing civilians fleeing in a panic, Amnesty said. This was corroborated to an extent by Myanmar army officials, who said helicopters opening fire that day and killed six people, who officials said were insurgents.


Refugees told Amnesty that the military is torching villages. Satellite images Amnesty obtained show 1,200 burned structures, which they say is in line with images released by Human Rights Watch in November that showed 1,500 burned homes.


Amnesty's report follows concerns voiced in an International Crisis Group report released last week that repressive government policies are radicalizing the Rohingya, and sharp criticism from the U.N.'s High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein.


"Myanmar's handling of northern Rakhine is a lesson in how to make a bad situation worse," al-Hussein said in Geneva on Friday. "The results have been catastrophic, with mass displacement, the nurturing of violent extremism, and everybody ultimately losing."


The border attacks were coordinated by a new insurgent group calling itself Harakah al-Yaqin, or the Faith Movement, according to the Belgium-based International Crisis Group. Organized by a network of Rohingya in Saudi Arabia and bankrolled by wealthy donors, the militant group is being called a "game changer" for drawing Muslims disillusioned and desperate from years of disenfranchisement by the Myanmar government.


Amnesty is urging the government to immediately cease hostilities, open Rakhine for humanitarian aid groups, and allow independent investigations.

Myanmar to probe Rohingya beating video

Burmese authorities have said they will investigate a video which appears to show police beating members of the Rohingya minority.


The government said the incident, filmed by a police officer, happened in restive Rakhine state in November, according to BBC report.


There have been repeated allegations of abuses against the Muslim minority in Rakhine, with some saying the state's actions amount to ethnic cleansing.


Officials have previously said security forces are following the rule of law.


Rakhine state is closed to journalists and investigators, making it difficult to independently verify the allegations.

Dear Donald Trump


A letter from a Syrian refugee

My name is Abdulazez Dukhan. I am 18 years old. I am one of the four million people who have fled Syria. We left behind our hearts and the people that we lost - both buried somewhere along the road.


I am sending you this message to congratulate you on the presidency. But also to remind you how much your words matter in deciding our future.


We started the revolution holding roses and hoping for support from the international community.


Years passed; the roses turned into guns but the hope for support continues. Still, neither roses nor hope helped.


Could your predecessor have done anything to change our fate? I don't know. But we will continue to have faith. Your words matter to us. You might be able to change our future.


I left Syria with my family four years after the revolution started. Nobody wanted to leave. But what can we do against the tanks? What can we do when death is falling from the sky?


Like many others, we went to Turkey and from there to Greece. We travelled, looking back at our cities, streets and houses being destroyed.


We are weak. We wanted the international community's support and we know that it will come. Faith is what moved us and faith is what is keeping us going.


Now I am a refugee. The hardest thing about living in a refugee camp is the isolation. People build walls around us and countries build walls around those walls.


Dear future president, borders kill dreams. I've seen dreams die before their body - it leaves that person with no soul. For those of us who still have faith, please don't build walls in front of us.


Maybe today is my last day as a refugee and tomorrow I will be safe somewhere in the world. Maybe I will go back to my beloved Syria and start rebuilding. Maybe I can still dream for one more day.


Dear future president, we hope that someone can hear our words. We hope that you do.


Source: Aljazeera

Star Plus, Star Jalsha and Zee Bangla to continue broadcusting in Bangladesh

The High Court has rejected a writ petition seeking directives upon the government to stop broadcasting Indian TV channels Star Plus, Star Jalsha and Zee Bangla.


The HC bench comprising Justice Mainul Islam Chowdhury and Justice JBM Hassan handed down the order on Sunday.


Following the order, there is no legal bar to continue broadcasting these three foreign television channels in Bangladesh, said the defense lawyers.


On August 7, 2014, Supreme Court lawyer Syeda Shahin Ara Laily filed the writ seeking a ban on operation of the three Indian TV channels.


The programmes which are broadcasted by the channels leave adverse impact on social and cultural life of Bangladeshi people, she mentioned in the petition.


Earlier on October 19, 2014, the HC asked the government to explain in four weeks as to why it should not be directed to stop telecast of the three Indian television channels in the country. 

Sexually abused by coaches as children


Sex abuse claims: 2 more ex-Footballers speak out

 
Four ex-footballers have appeared together to tell the BBC's Victoria Derbyshire programme they were abused as children by a coach.


Andy Woodward, who was the first to go public, wept as Chris Unsworth and Jason Dunford spoke for the first time of being abused by former Crewe Alexandra coach Barry Bennell.


Mr Unsworth said he "never told a soul" that he was raped up to 100 times.


Barry Bennell, 62, has served three jail sentences for child sex offences.


Bennell, who also worked as a youth football scout, was jailed in 1998 for nine years and also served a four-year sentence in the United States.


In 2015, he was given a two-year term for sexually abusing a boy at a training camp in Macclesfield, but is now out of prison.


Several ex-players have spoken out, making allegations about being sexually abused by coaches as children.


A dedicated NSPCC hotline was set up after the abuse claims came to light and received more than 50 calls within its first two hours.

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina visits village on rickshaw van

The residents of Tungipara saw a rare as well as unprecedented scenario in the late morning of the day when Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on a local rickshaw van along with her family members had a round-about visit at her ancestral village to see for herself the condition of the villagers side by side enjoying the natural beauty.


"It was really a great surprise for the villagers, who saw their beloved Prime Minister breaking her security barriers and busy schedule let herself out quite openly among the people in the village, the ancestral home of herself and also Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman," PM's Press Secretary Ihsanul Karim said, reports BSS.


He said Sheikh Hasina, elder daughter of Bangabandhu, went out of her Tungipara village home at about 11 am and had a 15-minute ride on the van, plying nearly one kilometer road from the mausoleum of Bangabandhu. As a matter of fact, it was a sweet reminiscence of her early age, when she used to spend her days in utter childhood merriment.


Sheikh Rehana's son Radwan Mujib Siddiq Bobby, his wife Peppi Siddiq and their daughter Lila Tuli Siddiq and son Kaius Mujib Siddiq accompanied Sheikh Hasina when she visited the village riding on the van.


Taking Kaius Mujib Siddiq on the lap, the prime minister had her cordial exchange of mind with the villagers and enquired about their well being after stopping the van at different places of the road. Later she returned home by walking about one kilolmeter road, yet another surprise for the villagers.


While talking with the premier, the local people raised various problems before Sheikh Hasina, who instantly directed the officials concerned to solve the problems, the press secretary said.


Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina went to Gopalganj on Thursday on a two-day visit to open the 11th National Rover Moot, the biggest gathering of the Rover Scouts, there. After opening the moot, Sheikh Hasina paid a visit to Tungipara to place wreaths at the mazar of Bangabandhu, offer fateha and join a special munajat there.


Earlier, the prime minister visited Bangabandhu's ancestral home at Bank Para in Gopalgonj town, now being used as the district unit office of Awami League. Sheikh Hasina stayed overnight at her village home in Tungipara and left Tungipara for Dhaka this afternoon.

Govt won't allow any terrorist acts in name of religion: Prime Minister of Bangladesh

Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina today vowed to clamp down on militancy and terrorism with an iron fist also in future, saying that her government won't allow any terrorist acts in the name of religion, BSS reports. "Our government has always taken stern action against terrorism and militancy and would continue to curb the twin demons with an iron hand ... there would be no place of terrorism and militancy on the soil of Bangladesh," she said. "Islam is a religion of peace and there is no room for terrorism and militancy in it ... we won't tolerate any terrorist acts in the name of religion," she added The Prime Minister was addressing the Hindu devotees while visiting the Durga Puja Mandops at Dhakeswari National Temple in the city this afternoon. Dhaka South City Corporation Mayor Mohammad Sayeed Khokan, General Secretary of Bangladesh Puja Udjapon Parishad Advocate Taposh Kumar Paul, President of Mohanagar Sarbojonin Puja Committee DM Chatterjee and General Secretary Advocate Shyamal Kumar Paul spoke on the occasion. PM's Political Affairs Advisor HT Imam, local parliament member Haji Mohammad Selim, President of Bangladesh Puja Udjapon Parishad Jayanta Sen Dipu were present on the dais. Sheikh Hasina also said Islam is a religion of peace, harmony and brotherhood and there is no room for terrorism and militancy in it. "Those who commit such crimes are in fact working against the religion," she said. The premier said her government wants to create such an atmosphere where the people of all faiths would perform their religious rites freely. "The religion is an affair of individuals, while festivals are for all ... Sokaler tore sakole amra, amra manober tore (We're for each other, we're for humanity). We always maintain and perform it," she said. She said her government does not want conflicts, rather it wants peace, prosperity and development. "We want development in such a way that all people irrespective of caste, creed and religion will get the benefit," she said. Talking about the essence of all religions, she said that welfare of the human beings is the main theme of all religions. "All will perform their religious activities with honour and everyone will show respect to others," she said. The Prime Minister urged all to work together for the development of the country and mentioned that Bangladesh believes in peaceful coexistence of all people. "And all religions speak of harmony and tolerance." During the Liberation War, Sheikh Hasina said, people from all religions had made their supreme sacrifice. "We want people to live in peace, we want the triumph of humanity ... that's our desire," she said. The premier said the people of all faiths fought for independence of the country under the leadership of Bangabandhu. "The people irrespective of caste, creed and religions joined the Liberation War by responding to the call of Bangabandhu and they shed their blood to achieve independence," she said. Sheikh Hasina said Bangabandhu dreamt of establishing a poverty and hunger-free Sonar Bangla. "We are striving to achieve the goal and the country advanced much in this regard," she said. Later, the prime minister visited Ramkrishna Mission Temple and Math at Ramkrishna Mission Road and exchanged greetings with the devotees there. Principal of Ramkrishna Math and Mission Swami Dhrubeshananda delivered the welcome address at the function held at Dhaka Ramkrishna Mission. Earlier, leaders of Bangladesh Puja Udjapon Parishad and Mohanagar Sarbojonin Puja Committee greeted the Prime Minister by presenting her with flower bouquets at Dhakeswari National Temple. The office-bearers of Dhaka Ramkrishna Mission also welcomed Sheikh Hasina with bouquets at the outset of the function there.

Bangladeshi Students Shine Spotlight on Nation’s URGENT Human Rights Issues

In Bangladesh, a country the size of the state of Idaho, nearly 83 percent of the population lives on less than $2 a day. The world’s second-largest exporter of clothing, Bangladesh pays garment workers as little as $68 a month for 10-hour days under sweatshop conditions. Some 85 percent of these workers are women—who are left with the choice of putting up with deplorable conditions or no job.

Unwilling to tolerate these abuses, a law student at the University of Chittagong in southeastern Bangladesh looked for the answer to how to rally the people of his country to demand a change. It was in 2009 while he was studying as an exchange student in Washington, D.C., that the young man, Saimum Reza Talukdar, discovered a tool to raise awareness of human rights—the Youth for Human Rights International (YHRI) education curriculum. The rest is history.

On his return to Bangladesh, he formed a youth leadership organization, training the members with the YHRI materials he ordered online. He began delivering human rights lectures to junior law school students.

“The wonderful thing that I found with this material is that the stories in the films are so simple and so understandable to people, even an 8- or 10-year-old child can understand them easily,” says Talukdar. He realized that with these materials, he could help anyone in Bangladesh understand their rights.

On completing his law degree, Talukdar became a lecturer in law at Dhaka’s Eastern University. He began an educational campaign across the entire campus, forming a YHRI club in every school of the university. His message to them: Students are in a privileged position and need to take responsibility for the future of Bangladesh by teaching rights to others.

The university club took this on, conducting their own lectures, petition drives, workshops and marches. In just one month, they activated more than 2,100 students to spread the message of human rights.

Next, he established a National Bangladesh Youth for Human Rights chapter. His team took human rights directly to the garment industry—right down to the factory floor—with the slogan, “Empowering the people will finally empower the nation.”

Through petition drives, human rights walks, lectures and media, in their first three months, Youth for Human Rights Bangladesh reached more than 390,000 people. These activities are now expanding across Bangladesh, now with the official support of the Bangladesh National Human Rights Commission.

Source : http://www.humanrights.com

Mount Everest trek route suffered minimal quake damage

The vast majority of guesthouses and trails on the popular Mount Everest trekking route emerged unscathed from Nepal’s devastating earthquake, said an assessment report released Friday.

Tourism-dependent Nepal had called in international experts to examine trekking routes in the Everest and Annapurna region following April’s disaster to certify that they were safe for hikers.
A team of structural and geotechnical engineers led by US-based firm Miyamoto International surveyed the Everest trail on foot and on a helicopter to check for quake-triggered destruction and hazards.

“About 83 percent of accommodations are undamaged on the main trekking route and others are repairable,” said the firm’s president Kit Miyamoto.

Miyamoto identified five damaged areas along the route with rockfall and landslide hazards and suggested diverting the trails to safer alternatives.

“A post-monsoon assessment has to be done in the region,” Miyamoto said, adding that the short window of time ahead of the monsoon made it difficult for a comprehensive study.
Tulsi Gautam, chief of Nepal’s tourism department, said that the government is committed to follow up on the recommendations.

“We have already allocated budget for this purpose and will begin work as soon as the monsoon ends,” Gautam said.

Miyamoto International had also studied the Annapurna route and, in a report released last month, said that the route was largely unaffected, with only six of 250 guesthouses assessed showing repairable damage.

Following the quake, international trekking operators expressed concerns about safety, while insurance companies have been reluctant to cover trekkers visiting Nepal.
“This report will help assure our visitors of safety,” said Ram Sapkota of a trekking company, Mountain Delights.

“But after monsoon the government as well as private tour operators need to reexamine the dangers pointed in the report and make sure that the route is not risky,” Sapkota added.

The 7.8-magnitude quake that struck on April 25 killed more than 8,800 people across the Himalayan nation and triggered a deadly avalanche on Mount Everest that killed 18 people including foreign climbers.

It also wreaked a trail of death and destruction in Langtang, another popular trekking trail.
Nepal’s snow-capped peaks make it a trekker’s destination, with around 150,000 of them visiting the Annapurna circuit and Everest region every year.



Bangladesh court handed four men sentence to death

Bangladesh court Sunday handed four men the death sentence over the brutal killing of a 13-year-old boy that provoked national outrage after video footage of the attack went viral, a lawyer said.

Another two men were ordered to hang for the separate torture and murder of another 13-year-old that occurred less than a month later, the prosecutor said.

In the first case, ten people were found guilty in the northeastern city of Sylhet of lynching Samiul Alam Rajon, a verdict that sparked cheers from hundreds of people gathered outside the courtroom.
“We’re happy with the judgement. Samiul’s parents are satisfied,” Shahidul Islam, a lawyer representing his family, said after the Metropolitan Sessions Court’s decision.

“I am sure the verdict will send a powerful message to all those child beaters and molesters,” said Islam.

Samiul, accused of stealing a bicycle, was tied to a pole on July 8 and then subjected to a brutal assault in which he pleaded for his life. An autopsy found 64 separate injuries had been inflicted on the teenager.

A 28-minute video of the lynching, which was widely circulated after being posted on social media, prompted deep soul-searching among Bangladeshis as well as street protests to demand the perpetrators be hanged.

The lawyer told AFP that the main accused, Kamrul Islam, was sentenced to death. Three of his friends were given the same sentence, one of them in absentia after going on the run.
Another six accused were given jail sentences ranging from life through to one year, he said.
Kamrul Islam also fled, to Saudi Arabia, a day after the attack, but he was later arrested and extradited after outraged members of the country’s large Bangladeshi expatriate community tipped off police.

In the video, the terrified youngster can be heard screaming in pain and repeating: “Please don’t beat me like this, I will die.”

At one stage he is told to walk away. But as he tries to get to his feet, one of the attackers shouts: “His bones are okay. Beat him some more.”

Kamrul Islam’s lawyer said he would appeal.

“He did not deserve death as he did not have any intention to kill the boy,” the lawyer, who did not give his name, said.

In the second case in the southwestern city of Khulna, a mechanic and his assistant were sentenced to death on Sunday for torturing a 13-year-old former employee to death with an air compressor used for inflating tyres.

Police said the employer, Mohammad Sharif, became enraged after Rakib left his workshop for another job, and during the attack he inserted the compressor tube into his rectum and switched on the machine.

“The Metropolitan Sessions Court sentenced Sharif and his assistant Mohammad Mintu to death for the murder of Rakib,” prosecutor Sultana Rahman told AFP.




Sentenced two students to death on Thursday for the murder of a secular blogger

A Bangladesh court sentenced two students to death on Thursday for the 2013 murder of a secular blogger, delivering the first convictions over a series of brutal killings that have rocked the Muslim-majority nation.

Ahmed Rajib Haider, 35, was hacked to death by machete-wielding attackers in February 2013, in the first of a string of attacks targeting secular writers.

The judge in the fast-track court on Thursday found both students and one other man, Maksudul Hasan, guilty of murder and convicted another five people on lesser charges related to Haider’s death.
Hasan, 23, was given a life sentence.

One of the two students, who attended one of the country’s top universities, is on the run and was sentenced in absentia.

“Two students of North South University, Faisal bin Nayem and Rezwanul Azad Rana, were sentenced to death. Rana has been a fugitive since the trial began,” prosecutor Mahbubur Rahman told AFP.

Rahman said the two students had been “inspired” by the sermons of firebrand cleric Jashim Uddin Rahmani, 45, who was given five years in prison for abetting the murder.

“I am not satisfied. The judge said it was a pre-planned murder. They should have been given harsher punishments,” he added.

Five more secular bloggers and a publisher have been brutally killed this year, triggering protests and claims that the government is not doing enough to protect dissident writers and activists.
Police say the banned Islamist group Ansarullah Bangla Team (ABT) was behind the attacks.

Haider, an architect, became a target of the group after he helped launch a massive protest against the leaders of the largest Islamist party, several of whom are accused of war crimes during Bangladesh’s 1971 independence struggle against Pakistan.

Police said Haider had angered the students by writing against Islam and mocking the Prophet Mohammed on blog sites.

They said Rahmani, an ABT leader, had ordered the murders of other secular bloggers from jail while he was being tried for Haider’s murder.

These include Avijit Roy, a US citizen of Bangladeshi origin who moderated an anti-religion website. He was killed in February.

Rahmani had preached that it was legal to kill atheist bloggers who campaigned against Islam, police said.

Haider’s father said the sentences against some of those convicted were too lenient.

“I am not happy. These people are self-declared killers of my son. Yet not all of them got a death sentence,”


However, a lawyer for the defendants said they would appeal the verdict.
“In his verdict, the judge admitted there was no eye-witness to the murder. There was no way the two should get death penalty,” Faruque Ahmed told AFP.

Secular groups have called nationwide protests and rallies to demand more protection for publishers, bloggers and writers, some of whom have fled the country or gone into hiding.
Several foreigners have also been murdered in recent months in Bangladesh, which has also suffered attacks on minority Sufi and Shiites Muslims.

A long-running political crisis in the majority Sunni Muslim but officially secular country has radicalised opponents of the government and analysts say Islamist extremists pose a growing danger.
Haider was the first secular blogger to be murdered in Bangladesh. After his death, the country’s Islamist parties began to protest against other campaigning bloggers, accusing them of blasphemy and calling for their execution.

The secular government of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina reacted by arresting four bloggers including one who was allegedly attacked by the same group of students accused of Haider’s murder.
The government also blocked about a dozen websites and blogs to stem the furore, as well as stepping up security for the bloggers.



Wednesday, January 25, 2017


Dowry case filed against Arafat Sunny : Where 95 % Dowry cases are false in the country

A dowry case has been filed against Bangladesh National Team cricketer Arafat Sunny accusing that the cricketer demanded Tk 20 lakh dowry.


The case was filed this afternoon by the same woman who claimed to be his wife recently and Sunny allegedly refused to marry her.




Plaintiff's lawyer, Rafiqul, said, after hearing the complaint, Dhaka Metropolitan Magistrate Raihan Ahmed summoned the cricketer to appear before it on April 5 for hearing in the case.


Earlier on Sunday the Bangladesh National Team cricketer Arafat Sunny has been placed on one-day remand in a case filed over posting offensive photos through a facebook account.


The court of Metropolitan Magistrate Pranab Kumar, has passed the order after conducting a hearing in this regard on the day.


Sub-Inspector Yahiya, the investigating officer of the case of Mohammadpur police station has produced him before the court and sought five days in custody.


Police arrested Sunny yesterday under the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Act after the woman filed a case accusing him of posting offensive photographs using a fake facebook account.


According to police sources, Arafat Sunny has recently married the woman who filed the case against him without informing family members but he refused to take her with the family

Friday, January 20, 2017

āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĻāĻŽāύ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽেāϰ Men repression act demanded Haji Selim


āύাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻĻ্āĻŦাāϰা āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻŦāύ্āϧে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĻāĻŽāύ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ āϏ্āĻŦāϤāύ্āϤ্āϰ āϏাংāϏāĻĻ āĻšাāϜি āĻŽো. āϏেāϞিāĻŽ। āφāϜ āĻŽāĻ™্āĻ—āϞāĻŦাāϰ āϏংāϏāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒāϝ়েāύ্āϟ āĻ…āĻŦ āĻ…āϰ্āĻĄাāϰে āĻĻাঁāĻĄ়িāϝ়ে āĻ…āύিāϰ্āϧাāϰিāϤ āφāϞোāϚāύাāϝ় āϤিāύি āĻ āĻĻাāĻŦি āϜাāύাāύ। āĻ āϏāĻŽāϝ় āϏ্āĻĒিāĻ•াāϰ āĻļিāϰীāύ āĻļাāϰāĻŽিāύ āϚৌāϧুāϰী āĻ…āϧিāĻŦেāĻļāύেāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤিāϤ্āĻŦ āĻ•āϰāĻ›িāϞেāύ।

āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻĒ্āϰিāϝ় āϏāĻšāĻ•āϰ্āĻŽী āĻ­াāχ āĻ“ āĻŦোāύেāϰা, āĻšāϝ়āϤো āφāĻŽি āĻĻু-āĻāĻ• āĻĻিāύ āϏংāϏāĻĻে āφāĻ›ি। āϏংāϏāĻĻ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒāĻĻāϤ্āϝাāĻ— āĻ•āϰে āφāĻŽি āϏিāϟি āĻ•āϰāĻĒোāϰেāĻļāύ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻ•āϰāĻŦ। āϤাāϰ āφāĻ—ে āύাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻšাāϤ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒুāϰুāώāĻĻেāϰ āϰāĻ•্āώাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻāχ āφāχāύāϟি āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻĻাāĻŦি āϜাāύাāϚ্āĻ›ি। āφāĻŽি āϚাāχ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻŦিāώāϝ়ে āĻāĻ•āϟা āφāχāύ āĻšোāĻ•।’

āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāĻ•āĻŦি āϰāĻŦীāύ্āĻĻ্āϰāύাāĻĨ āϞিāĻ–েāĻ›েāύ, “āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦে āϝা āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻŽāĻšাāύ āϏৃāώ্āϟি, āϚিāϰ āĻ•āϞ্āϝাāĻŖāĻ•āϰ...āĻ…āϰ্āϧেāĻ• āϤাāϰ āĻ•āϰিāϝ়াāĻ›ে āύাāϰী, āĻ…āϰ্āϧেāĻ• āϤাāϰ āύāϰ” (āĻŦাāϏ্āϤāĻŦে āĻāϟি āĻ•াāϜী āύāϜāϰুāϞ āχāϏāϞাāĻŽেāϰ āĻ•āĻŦিāϤা, āĻ•āĻŦিāϤাāϰ āύাāĻŽ ‘āύাāϰী’)। āύাāϰী-āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻāĻ–āύ āĻĢিāĻĢāϟি āĻĢিāĻĢāϟি āĻŽিāϞিāϝ়ে āĻāĻ• āĻļ। āϤাāχ āύ্āϝাāϝ়āĻŦিāϚাāϰেāϰ āϏ্āĻŦাāϰ্āĻĨে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύāĻŦিāϰোāϧী āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰা āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ।’

āϏāĻŽাāϜে āĻŦāĻšু āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤিāϤ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰে āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻŦāϰ্āϤāĻŽাāύে āĻĻেāĻļে āĻļুāϧু āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻŦিāϰুāĻĻ্āϧে āφāχāύ āφāĻ›ে। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻ•োāύো āĻ•োāύো āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āύাāϰীāĻ“ āĻ­āϝ়ংāĻ•āϰ āĻšāϝ়। āϤাāϰা āĻ“āχ āφāχāύেāϰ āĻ…āĻĒāĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰে āĻĒুāϰুāώāĻĻেāϰ āĻšāϝ়āϰাāύি āĻ•āϰে।
āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āύাāϰী, āĻŦিāϰোāϧীāĻĻāϞীāϝ় āύেāϤা āύাāϰী, āϏ্āĻĒিāĻ•াāϰ āύাāϰী, āφāĻ•াāĻļে āύাāϰী, āĻšিāĻŽাāϞāϝ়েāĻ“ āύাāϰী। āϤাāχ āφāĻŽি āϚাāχ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻŦিāώāϝ়ে āĻāĻ•āϟা āφāχāύ āĻšোāĻ•। āωāύ্āύāϝ়āύে āύাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻĨেāĻ•েāĻ›ে। āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļেāĻ“ āϝেāύ āύাāϰীāϰা āĻĨাāĻ•ে।’ āĻ āϏāĻŽāϝ় āϏংāϏāĻĻ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝāĻĻেāϰ āĻ•āϝ়েāĻ•āϜāύ āĻ•āϝ়েāĻ•āϜāύ āϟেāĻŦিāϞ āϚাāĻĒāĻĄ়ে āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽেāϰ āĻŦāĻ•্āϤāĻŦ্āϝāĻ•ে āϏāĻŽāϰ্āĻĨāύ āϜাāύাāύ। āϤāĻŦে āĻŦেāĻļিāϰ āĻ­াāĻ— āύাāϰী āϏংāϏāĻĻ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āĻšāχāϚāχ āĻ•āϰে āϤাঁāϰ āĻŦāĻ•্āϤāĻŦ্āϝেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦাāĻĻ āϜাāύাāύ।

āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āϰাāώ্āϟ্āϰāĻĒāϤিāϰ āĻ­াāώāĻŖেāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āφāύা āϧāύ্āϝāĻŦাāĻĻ āĻĒ্āϰāϏ্āϤাāĻŦ āύিāϝ়ে āφāϞোāϚāύা āĻšāϝ়। āϏāĻŦāĻļেāώে āϏংāϏāĻĻেāϰ āĻ…āϧিāĻŦেāĻļāύ ⧍⧝ āĻŽাāϰ্āϚ āĻŦিāĻ•েāϞ āĻĒাঁāϚāϟা āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻŽুāϞāϤāĻŦি āĻ•āϰা āĻšāϝ়।


 āϏূāϤ্āϰ : āĻĻৈāύিāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāĻĨāĻŽ āφāϞো,

Male rape Sentenced to death in China āϚীāύে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϧāϰ্āώāĻŖেāϰ āϏাāϜা āĻŽৃāϤ্āϝুāĻĻāĻŖ্āĻĄ



āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϧāϰ্āώāĻŖāĻ“ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧ। āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒ্āϰāϤি āϚীāύে āĻāχ āϏংāĻ•্āϰাāύ্āϤ āĻāĻ•āϟি āφāχāύ āĻ•াāϰ্āϝāĻ•āϰ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে। āύāϤুāύ āĻ āφāχāύ āĻ…āύুāϝা⧟ী āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āϝৌāύ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻ“ āϧāϰ্āώāĻŖ āĻļাāϏ্āϤিāϝোāĻ—্āϝ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧ। āφāϰ āĻāĻŽāύ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧেāϰ āϏāϰ্āĻŦোāϚ্āϚ āĻļাāύ্āϤি āĻŽৃāϤ্āϝুāĻĻāĻŖ্āĻĄ।
 
āϚীāύেāϰ āϏংāĻŦাāĻĻ āϏংāϏ্āĻĨা āϏিāύāĻšু⧟া āϜাāύি⧟েāĻ›ে, āύāϤুāύ āφāχāύে āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āωāϭ⧟েāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰেāχ āϧāϰ্āώāĻŖেāϰ āĻ…āĻ­িāϝোāĻ—ে āϏāϰ্āĻŦāύিāĻŽ্āύ āĻļাāϏ্āϤি āĻĒাঁāϚ āĻŦāĻ›āϰেāϰ āĻ•াāϰাāĻĻāĻŖ্āĻĄ। āφāĻ—েāϰ āφāχāύে ‘āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻĒুāϰুāώ’-āĻāϰ āϜা⧟āĻ—া⧟ āĻ›িāϞ ‘āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻ…āύ্āϝাāύ্āϝ’। āϚāϞāϤি āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āφāĻ—āϏ্āϟে āϚীāύে āύāϤুāύ āφāχāύ āĻĒাāϏ āĻšāϞেāĻ“ āĻ“āχ āφāχāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāĻ—েāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ— āĻ›িāϞ āύা। āϤাāχ āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ āϝৌāύ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻ“ āϧāϰ্āώāĻŖেāϰ āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧে āĻ•োāύো āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻ•āϰা āϝেāϤ āύা। āϤāĻŦে āĻāĻ–āύ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āϚীāύে āĻāĻŽāύ āϘāϟāύা⧟ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻ•āϰা āϝাāĻŦে।
 
āĻ āĻ›া⧜া āĻ…āĻĒ্āϰাāĻĒ্āϤāĻŦ⧟āϏ্āĻ• āϝৌāύāĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•েāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰেāĻ“ āϚীāύেāϰ āφāχāύ āĻ•āĻ োāϰ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে। āĻĻেāĻļāϟিāϰ āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŦেāϰ āφāχāύ āĻ…āύুāϝা⧟ী ā§§ā§Ē āĻŦāĻ›āϰেāϰ āĻ•āĻŽ āĻŦ⧟āϏী āϝৌāύāĻ•āϰ্āĻŽীāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•েāϰ āϏāϰ্āĻŦোāϚ্āϚ āĻļাāϏ্āϤি āĻ›িāϞ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āĻ•াāϰাāĻĻāĻŖ্āĻĄ। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āύāϤুāύ āφāχāύ āĻ…āύুāϝা⧟ী āĻāϰ āϏāϰ্āĻŦোāϚ্āϚ āĻļাāϏ্āϤি āĻŽৃāϤ্āϝুāĻĻāĻŖ্āĻĄ।
 
 
āϏূāϤ্āϰ: āĻĻৈāύিāĻ• āχāϤ্āϤেāĻĢাāĻ•, āĻļুāĻ•্āϰāĻŦাāϰ, ⧍ā§Ļ āϜাāύুāϝ়াāϰি ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§­

āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻ•াāϰ āĻ“ āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āφāχāύেāϰ āϏংāĻļোāϧāύ āĻĻাāĻŦি Male oppression remedy and Violence against women is demanding reform


āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻ•াāϰ āĻāĻŦং āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āφāχāύেāϰ āϏংāĻļোāϧāύ āĻĻাāĻŦি āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে ‘āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāύ্āĻĻোāϞāύ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ’ āύাāĻŽে āĻāĻ•āϟি āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύ। āĻ—āϤāĻ•াāϞ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦ āĻŽাāύāĻŦাāϧিāĻ•াāϰ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āĻĒাāϞāύ āωāĻĒāϞāĻ•্āώে āϜাāϤী⧟ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏāĻ•্āϞাāĻŦেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āĻ†ā§ŸোāϜিāϤ āĻŽাāύāĻŦāĻŦāύ্āϧāύ āĻ“ āϰ্āϝাāϞিāϤে āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύেāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻ āĻĻাāĻŦি āϜাāύাāύো āĻšā§Ÿ। āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύেāϰ āφāĻšāĻŦা⧟āĻ• āĻļেāĻ– āĻ–া⧟āϰুāϞ āφāϞāĻŽ āĻŽাāύāĻŦāĻŦāύ্āϧāύে āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤিāϤ্āĻŦ āĻ•āϰেāύ। āĻŽাāύāĻŦāĻŦāύ্āϧāύে āĻŦāϞা āĻšā§Ÿ, āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āϰোāϧে āφāχāύ āφāĻ›ে। āĻ•েāω āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻļিāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϞে āφāχāύেāϰ āφāĻļ্āϰ⧟āĻ“ āύিāϤে āĻĒাāϰেāύ। āϏুāώ্āĻ ু āϏাāĻŽাāϜিāĻ• āĻ…āĻŦāĻ•াāĻ াāĻŽোāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϏেāϟা āĻ…āĻĒāϰিāĻšাāϰ্āϝ। āϤāĻŦে āĻ—āĻŖāĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽে āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļাāĻĒাāĻļি āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻ•িāĻ›ু āϘāϟāύাāĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļিāϤ āĻšā§Ÿ। āϤাāϤে āĻŽিāĻĨ্āϝা āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা⧟ āĻ•াāϰাāĻ­োāĻ— āĻāĻŦং āϞāϘু āĻ…āĻĒāϰাāϧে āĻ—ুāϰু āĻļাāϏ্āϤি āĻ­োāĻ—েāϰ āĻĻৃāώ্āϟাāύ্āϤāĻ“ āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে। āϤাāχ āĻŦিāώ⧟āϟি āĻŦিāĻŦেāϚāύাāϰ āĻĻাāĻŦি āϰাāĻ–ে। āĻāĻ•āχ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϏংāĻ—āĻ āύেāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻ•াāϰে ⧍⧧ āĻĻāĻĢা āĻĻাāĻŦি āϜাāύাāύো āĻšā§Ÿ।

āĻĻৈāύিāĻ• āχāϤ্āϤেāĻĢাāĻ•, āϰāĻŦিāĻŦাāϰ, ā§§ā§§ āĻĄিāϏেāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Ŧ

āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻ“ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻŦিāώ⧟āĻ• āφāχāύ Divorce and laws of divorce


āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻāĻ•āĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āφāχāύāĻ—āϤ āĻĒāĻĻ্āϧāϤি āϝাāϰ āĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽে āĻŦিāĻŦাāĻš āĻŦিāϚ্āĻ›েāĻĻ āĻšā§Ÿ। āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖāϤ āĻāĻ•āϟি āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻ…āύেāĻ•āĻ—ুāϞো āĻŦিāώ⧟েāϰ āϜāύ্āĻŽ āĻĻে⧟। āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻŦিāĻŦৃāϤি āĻŦা āĻĒāĻĻ্āϧāϤি-āĻāĻ•ে āĻ…āĻĒāϰেāϰ āĻ•াāĻ› āĻĨেāĻ•ে āφāϞাāĻĻা āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ। āϝা āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽী āĻŦা āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āĻĻুāχ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻĨেāĻ•েāχ āφāϏāϤে āĻĒাāϰে।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•িāϤ āφāχāύ āĻ“ āύি⧟āĻŽ āĻŽুāϏāϞিāĻŽ āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āĻ…āϧ্āϝাāĻĻেāĻļ ⧧⧝ā§Ŧā§§-āĻ āĻĒাāĻ“ā§Ÿা āϝাāĻŦে। āϝা āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻŽুāϏāϞিāĻŽāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ•াāϰ্āϝāĻ•āϰ āϞিāĻ–িāϤ āφāχāύ। āĻ…āύ্āϝ āϧāϰ্āĻŽাāύুāϏাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ-āϝেāĻŽāύ āĻ–্āϰিāϏ্āϟাāύ āĻ“ āĻŦৌāĻĻ্āϧāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āφāϞাāĻĻা āϞিāĻ–িāϤ āφāχāύ āφāĻ›ে। āϤāĻŦে āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻāĻ–āύো āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻšিāύ্āĻĻুāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āĻ•োāύো āϞিāĻ–িāϤ āφāχāύ āύেāχ।

āĻŦিāĻŦাāĻš āĻāĻŦং āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϏংāϏāĻĻে āφāχāύ āĻĒাāϏেāϰ āĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽে, āĻŽুāϏāϞিāĻŽ āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āφāχāύ āĻŦা āĻļāϰি⧟া āφāχāύ āĻĻাāϰা āύি⧟āύ্āϤ্āϰিāϤ āĻšā§Ÿ। āĻĒāĻļ্āϚিāĻŽা āĻĻেāĻļāĻ—ুāϞোāϤে āϤাāϞাāĻ•-āĻāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻĨাāĻ•া āϜāϰুāϰি, āϤাāϰা āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻ›া⧜া āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻāϰ āĻ•োāύো āωāĻĻ্āϝোāĻ— āύে⧟ āύা āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āĻāĻ–āύ āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻĨাāĻ•া āϏāĻŦāϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āϜāϰুāϰি āĻŽāύে āĻ•āϰা āĻšā§Ÿ āύা āĻŦা āϏāĻŦ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦীāĻ•ে āĻĄাāĻ•াāϰ āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāϜāύ āĻ“ āĻŽāύে āĻ•āϰা āĻšā§Ÿ āύা।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āϏাāĻŽাāϜিāĻ• āĻāĻŦং āĻ…āϰ্āĻĨāύৈāϤিāĻ• āĻ…āĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻŦিāĻŦেāϚāύা āĻ•āϰāϞে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟ āϝে āĻāĻ–াāύে āϏāĻŽāĻোāϤাāϰ āĻ­িāϤ্āϤিāϤে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻĻে⧟াāϰ āϏংāĻ–্āϝা āĻŦেāĻļি।  āφāχāύেāĻ“ āϏāĻŽāĻোāϤাāϰ āĻ­িāϤ্āϤিāϤে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻĻে⧟াāϰ āĻŦিāϧাāύ āϰাāĻ–া āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে।

āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖāϤ āϝāĻ–āύ āĻāĻ• āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āϏে āύাāϰী, āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϝাāχ āĻšোāĻ• āύা āĻ•েāύ āϤাāϞাāĻ•-āĻāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϝāĻ–āύ āĻ•োāύো āωāĻĻ্āϝোāĻ— āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āϰে āϤāĻ–āύ āĻ…āĻĒāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻāϟাāĻ•ে āĻ–ু্āĻŦāχ āĻ–াāϰাāĻĒāĻ­াāĻŦে āύি⧟ে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻ•াāϰ্āϝāĻ•āϰ āĻ•িāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻŦāύ্āϧ āĻ•āϰা āϝাāχ āϏেāϟা āύি⧟ে āϚিāύ্āϤা āĻ•āϰে āĻāĻŦং āωāĻĻ্āϝোāĻ— āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āϰে। āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻļুāϧু āϤাāϞাāĻ•-āĻāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϏ্āĻĒেāĻļাāϞ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āύে⧟ āĻŦা āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāϜāύ āĻŽāύে āĻ•āϰে āύা āϝāϤāĻ•্āώāĻŖ āύা āĻ…āĻĒāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻ•োāύো āĻĢৌāϜāĻĻাāϰী āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে। āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽীāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻĻে⧟া āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āφāχāύāĻ—āϤ āĻ…āϧিāĻ•াāϰ āϝা āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļি āφāχāύ āĻāχ āĻŦāϞে āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›ে।

āϝেāϏāĻŦ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āĻŦিāώ⧟ āύি⧟ে āĻŦিāĻļেāώ āĻ•āϰে āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āφāĻĻাāϞāϤ āĻ…āϧ্āϝাāĻĻেāĻļ ā§§ā§¯ā§Žā§Ģ-āĻāϰ āφāĻ“āϤা⧟ āϝাāϰা āĻĒ্āϰাāĻ•āϟিāϏ āĻ•āϰে āϤাāϰাāχ āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖāϤ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻĒāϰিāϚিāϤ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āĻļুāϧুāĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āύি⧟ে āĻĒ্āϰ্āϝাāĻ•āϟিāϏ āĻ•āϰে āĻāĻŽāύ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦীāϰ āϏংāĻ–্āϝা āĻāĻ•āĻĻāĻŽ āύেāχ āĻŦāϞāϞেāχ āϚāϞে। āĻĸাāĻ•া āĻļāĻšāϰে āĻ–ুāĻŦি āĻ•āĻŽ āϚেāĻŽ্āĻŦাāϰ āĻŦা āϞ-āĻĢাāϰ্āĻŽ āφāĻ›ে āϝাāϰা āĻļুāϧুāĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āĻŦিāώ⧟ āύি⧟ে āĻĒ্āϰ্āϝাāĻ•āϟিāϏ āĻ•āϰে।

āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĻেāĻļে āĻŦেāĻļিāϰāĻ­াāĻ— āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āϏাāĻĨে āĻ­āϰāĻŖāĻĒোāώāĻŖ, āĻĻেāύāĻŽোāĻšāϰ āĻ“ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻĢৌāϜāĻĻাāϰী āĻŦিāώ⧟ āϜ⧜িāϤ āĻĨাāĻ•ে।

āφāĻŽāϰা āϝāĻ–āύ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āύি⧟ে āφāϞোāϚāύা āĻ•āϰি āϤāĻ–āύ āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āϏাāĻŽāύে āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĻāĻŽāύ āφāχāύ āĻ“ āϝৌāϤুāĻ• āύিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ āϏাāĻŽāύে āϚāϞে āφāϏে।

āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĻেāĻļে ⧝ā§Ļ% āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāĻ›ে āϝে āϝāĻ–āύ āĻ•োāύো āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻ•োāύো āύাāϰীāĻ•ে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āύোāϟিāĻļ āĻĒাāĻ া⧟ āϤāĻ–āύ āĻāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤে āϏেāχ āύাāϰী āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻāϰ āĻŦিāϰুāĻĻ্āϧে āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻĢোāϜāĻĻাāϰী āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻĻা⧟েāϰ āĻ•āϰে। āĻŦেāĻļীāϰ āĻ­াāĻ— āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāĻ›ে āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖāϤ āĻŽ্āϝাāϜিāϏ্āϟ্āϰেāϟ āφāĻĻাāϞāϤে āĻ•āϰে āĻĨাāĻ•ে। āĻŽ্āϝাāϜিāϏ্āϟ্āϰেāϟ āϤāĻ–āύ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞাāϰ āĻ—ুāϰুāϤ্āĻŦāĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖ āĻ…ংāĻļ āϏংāĻļ্āϞিāώ্āϟ āĻĨাāύাāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻĒাāĻ া⧟ āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāϜāύী⧟ āφāχāύি āĻĒāĻĻāĻ•্āώেāĻĒ āύে⧟াāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ…āĻĨāĻŦা āĻŽাāĻŽāϞাāϟিāĻāĻ• FIR āĻšিāϏাāĻŦে āύāĻĨিāĻ­ুāĻ•্āϤ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ।

āĻ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞাāĻ—ুāϞোāϰ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āϏাāϧাāϰāĻŖ āϧাāϰা āφāĻ›ে āϝেāĻŽāύ āϧাāϰা āϝৌāϤুāĻ• āφāχāύেāϰ ā§Š/ā§Ē āϧাāϰা, āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āφāχāύেāϰ ā§§ā§§ āϧাāϰা āχāϤ্āϝাāĻĻি।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļে āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āĻĒāĻĻ্āϧāϤি āϤিāύāϟি। āĻāĻ—ুāϞো āĻ…āύুāϏāϰāĻŖ āĻ•āϰা āĻŦাāϧ্āϝāϤাāĻŽূāϞāĻ•।

ā§§। āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āύোāϟিāĻļ āĻĒ্āϰāĻĻাāύ
⧍। āϏাāϞিāϏ āĻāϰ āωāĻĻ্āϝোāĻ—āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ
ā§Š। ⧝ā§Ļ āĻĻিāύ āĻ…āϤিāĻŦাāĻšিāϤ āĻšāĻŦাāϰ āĻĒāϰে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻāϰ āϏাāϰ্āϟিāĻĢিāĻ•েāϟ āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ (āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āϰেāϜিāϏ্āϟাāϰāĻĄ āύিāĻ•াāĻš āϰেāϜিāϏ্āϟাāϰ)।

āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻāϰ āύোāϟিāĻļ āĻĻে⧟াāϰ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻāϟা āϧāϰেāχ āύে⧟া āĻšāĻŦে āϝে āϝিāύি āύোāϟিāĻļ āĻĒ্āϰāĻĻাāύ āĻ•āϰেāĻŦāύ āϤিāύি āĻ…āĻŦāĻļ্āϝāχ āĻĒুāϰো āĻĻেāύāĻŽāĻšāϰ āϟাāĻ•া āĻĒāϰিāĻļোāϧ āĻ•āϰāĻŦেāύ। āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āĻŦাāϏ্āϤāĻŦāϤা āĻ…āύ্āϝāϰāĻ•āĻŽ, āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟ āϝে āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āĻĒুāϰো āϟাāĻ•া āĻĒāϰিāĻļোāϧ āĻ•āϰা āĻšā§Ÿ āύা āĻ…āĻĨāĻŦা āĻ…ংāĻļ āĻŦিāĻļেāώ āĻĒāϰিāĻļোāϧ āĻ•āϰা āφāĻ›ে।

āϏে āĻ•াāϰāĻŖে āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦীāϰ āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĒুāϰো āĻĻেāύāĻŽোāĻšāϰেāϰ āϟাāĻ•া āφāĻĻা⧟ āĻ…āĻĨāĻŦা āĻĒāϰিāĻļোāϧ āĻ•āϰে āĻĻে⧟া। āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āφāϰ āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻŦিāώ⧟ āĻ–ুāĻŦāχ āĻ—ুāϰুāϤ্āĻŦāĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖ āφāϰ āϤা āĻšāϞ āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āύোāϟিāĻļ āĻĻে⧟াāϰ āĻĒāϰে āϤিāύ āĻŽাāϏ (āχāĻĻ্āĻĻāϤāĻ•াāϞিāύ) āĻ­āϰāĻŖāĻĒোāώāĻŖ āĻ“ āĻ…āύ্āϝাāύ্āϝ āĻ­āϰāĻŖāĻĒোāώāĻŖ āϝেāĻŽāύ āĻŦাāϚ্āϚা āĻĨাāĻ•āϞে āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āĻ­āϰāĻŖāĻĒোāώāĻŖ āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽী āĻ•āϰ্āϤৃāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāĻĻাāύ āĻ•āϰা।

āφāϰ āĻāĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āφāχāύি āϜāϟিāϞāϤা āĻĒāϰিāĻšাāϰ āĻ•āϰāϤে āϚাāχāϞে āĻĻুāχ āĻĒāĻ•্āώ āĻŦāϏে āĻāĻ•āϟা āϏāĻŽāĻোāϤা āĻ•āϰা āϝেāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āϏ্āϤ্āϰীāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āϤাāϞাāĻ•েāϰ āωāĻĒāϰিāωāĻ•্āϤ āϤিāύāϟি āĻĒāĻĻ্āϧāϤি āĻŽেāύে āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻĻিāϤে āĻšāĻŦে। āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āĻĻেāύāĻŽোāĻšāϰ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻ•োāύোāĻ­াāĻŦেāχ āĻŦāĻž্āϚিāϤ āĻšāĻŦে āύা।

āϏāĻŦ āĻļেāώে āĻŦāϞা āϝা⧟, āϤাāϞাāĻ• āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒূāϰ্āĻŖāϰূāĻĒে āĻĒাāϰিāĻŦাāϰিāĻ• āφāχāύ ⧧⧝ā§Ŧā§§ āĻ…āύুāϝা⧟ী āĻĒāϰিāϚাāϞিāϤ āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻŦিāϧাāύ। āϤāĻŦে āϜāϟিāϞāϤাāĻŽুāĻ•্āϤ āϤাāϞাāĻ• āĻ•াāϰ্āϝāĻ•āϰ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āφāχāύāϜীāĻŦী āĻ…āĻĨāĻŦা āĻ…āύ্āϤāϤ āĻ­াāϞো āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āĻ•াāϜিāϰ āϏাāĻšāϝ্āϝ āύে⧟া āϝেāϤে āĻĒাāϰে।

āϞেāĻ–āĻ• āĻ…্āϝাāĻĄāĻ­োāĻ•েāϟ āĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰোāĻ—্āϰাāĻŽ āĻ•ো-āĻ…āϰ্āĻĄিāύেāϟāϰ-āϞিāĻ—্āϝাāϞ āĻāχāĻĄ āĻ•āĻŽিāωāύিāϟি āϞিāĻ—্āϝাāϞ āϏাāϰ্āĻ­িāϏ‍, āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āϞিāĻ—্āϝাāϞ āĻāχāĻĄ āĻ…্āϝাāύ্āĻĄ āϏাāϰ্āĻ­িāϏেāϏ āϟ্āϰাāϏ্āϟ (āĻŦ্āϞাāϏ্āϟ)।

āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻŽাংāϏে āϝৌāύāϤা āĻŦৃāĻĻ্āϧি āĻ­িāϤ্āϤিāĻšীāύ Sexuality does not increase sparrow meat


āĻāĻ•āϟি āĻ­্āϰাāύ্āϤ āϧাāϰāĻŖাāϰ āĻĢāϞেāχ āĻŽāϰāϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĒাāĻ–িāĻĻেāϰ। āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĒাāĻ–িāϰ āĻŽাংāϏ āĻ–েāϞে āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰ āϝৌāύāĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤাāϰ āĻŦৃāĻĻ্āϧি āϘāϟে– āĻ āĻ­ুāϞ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦাāϏেāϰ āĻĢāϞে āĻā§ŸাāϰāĻ—াāύāϏāĻš āύাāύা āϧāϰāύেāϰ āĻŦāύ্āĻĻুāĻ•েāϰ āĻ—ুāϞিāϰ āφāϘাāϤে āĻļāĻšāϰে-āĻ—্āϰাāĻŽে āĻŽৃāϤ্āϝুāϰ āĻ•োāϞে āĻĸāϞে āĻĒ⧜āϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āύিāϰীāĻš āϚ⧜ুāχāĻĻেāϰ।

āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻŽাāύুāώ āĻāχ āĻ­ুāϞ āϤāĻĨ্āϝāϟি āĻ…āύ্āϝāĻĻেāϰ āĻ•াāĻ› āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻļুāύে āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦাāϏ āĻ•āϰে āĻŦāϏেāύ। āϏুāϝোāĻ— āĻĒেāϞেāχ āϤাāϰা āĻ–ুঁāϜāϤে āĻĨাāĻ•েāύ āϚ⧜ুāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āĻŽাংāϏ। āĻāĻŽāύ āĻ­ুāϞ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦাāϏāύিāϰ্āĻ­āϰ āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻŽাāύুāώেāϰা āϏংāĻ—āĻ িāϤ āĻšā§Ÿে āύাāĻŽেāύ āϚ⧜ুāχ āύিāϧāύে।

āĻāĻĻিāĻ•ে āϰোāĻŦāĻŦাāϰ (⧍ā§Ļ āĻŽাāϰ্āϚ) āωāĻĻāϝাāĻĒিāϤ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ। 

āĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āĻĒāύেāϰ āϏেāύ্āϟিāĻŽিāϟাāϰ āĻĻৈāϰ্āϘ্āϝেāϰ  āĻ āĻĒাāĻ–িāϰ āύাāĻŽ ‘āĻĒাāϤি-āϚ⧜ুāχ’ āĻŦা ‘āϘāϰ-āϚ⧜ুāχ’। āχংāϰেāϜিāϤে House Sparrow āĻŦāϞে। āϤāĻŦে ‘āϚ⧜ুāχ’ āύাāĻŽেāχ āĻāϰ āĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒāĻ• āĻĒāϰিāϚিāϤি āϰ⧟েāĻ›ে। ‘āϚিāϰāĻ•-āϚিāϰāĻ•-āϚিāϰāĻ•...’ āĻļāĻŦ্āĻĻে āϏে āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻŦাāϏা-āĻŦা⧜ি āϚাāϰāĻĻিāĻ•ে āĻŽুāĻ–āϰিāϤ āĻ•āϰে āϰাāĻ–ে। āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϚ⧜ুāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āĻĻেāĻš āĻ–ā§Ÿেāϰি āĻāĻŦং āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āϚ⧜ুāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āĻĻেāĻš āϧূāϏāϰ।  

āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύāĻŦিāϰোāϧী āφāχāύāĻ“ āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ Men need laws Torture



āϰংāĻĒুāϰ āϏিāϟি āĻ•āϰ্āĻĒোāϰেāĻļāύেāϰ āĻŽে⧟āϰ āĻļāϰāĻĢুāĻĻ্āĻĻিāύ āφāĻšāĻŽেāĻĻ āĻāύ্āϟু āĻŦāϞেāĻ›েāύ, āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύāĻŦিāϰোāϧী āφāχāύেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļাāĻĒাāĻļি āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧেāĻ“ āφāχāύ āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ। āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻĻিāύ āύাāϰীāϰ āĻĒাāĻļাāĻĒাāĻļি āĻĒুāϰুāώāϰাāĻ“ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻļিāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›েāύ।

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻĒুāϰুāώāϰা āϏ্āϤ্āϰীāϰ āĻšাāϤে āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻļিāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϞে āĻ•াāωāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞāϤে āĻĒাāϰে āύা। āφāϰ āύাāϰীāϰা āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻļিāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϞে āϏāĻ•āϞেāχ āϜাāύāϤে āĻĒাāϰে।

āĻļāύিāĻŦাāϰ (ā§Ž āύāĻ­েāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ) āĻĻুāĻĒুāϰে āϰংāĻĒুāϰ āĻĒাāĻŦāϞিāĻ• āϞাāχāĻŦ্āϰেāϰি āĻŽাāĻ ে ⧍ āĻĻিāύāĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒী āϜেāύ্āĻĄাāϰ āĻŽেāϞাāϰ āĻŦিāĻ­িāύ্āύ āϏ্āϟāϞ āĻĒāϰিāĻĻāϰ্āĻļāύ āĻļেāώে āϏাংāĻŦাāĻĻিāĻ•āĻĻেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύেāϰ āϜāĻŦাāĻŦে āĻāĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞেāύ āĻŽে⧟āϰ āĻļāϰāĻĢুāĻĻ্āĻĻিāύ āφāĻšāĻŽেāĻĻ āĻāύ্āϟু।

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āĻŽে⧟েāϰা āĻāĻ–āύ āϏাāĻŦāϞāĻŽ্āĻŦী āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āϤাāϰা āĻāĻ–āύ āύিāϜেāĻĻেāϰ āωāĻĒাāϰ্āϜāύে āϏংāϏাāϰেāϰ āĻšাāϞ āϧāϰেāĻ›ে। āϤাāχ āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻĒাāĻļাāĻĒাāĻļি āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāύি⧟āϤ āϤাāϰা āĻāĻ—ি⧟ে āϚāϞāĻ›ে।

āϜেāϞা āύাāϰী āωāύ্āύ⧟āύ āĻĢোāϰাāĻŽেāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤি āĻŽুāύāĻ›েāĻĢা āĻ–াāϤুāύেāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤিāϤ্āĻŦে āϰংāĻĒুāϰ āĻĒাāĻŦāϞিāĻ• āϞাāχāĻŦ্āϰেāϰি āĻŽাāĻ ে āĻļāύি āĻ“ āϰāĻŦিāĻŦাāϰ ⧍ āĻĻিāύāĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒী āĻŽেāϞাāϰ āωāĻĻ্āĻŦোāϧāύ āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύ āĻ…āϤিāĻĨি āĻ›িāϞেāύ āĻŽে⧟āϰ āĻļāϰāĻĢুāĻĻ্āĻĻিāύ āφāĻšāĻŽেāĻĻ āĻāύ্āϟু।

āĻāϤে āĻ…āύ্āϝাāύ্āϝেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āφāϰো āĻŦāĻ•্āϤāĻŦ্āϝ āϰাāĻ–েāύ āĻ—āĻŖāĻ•āϞ্āϝাāύ āϏংāϏ্āĻĨাāϰ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāĻšী āĻĒāϰিāϚাāϞāĻ• āĻ—োāϞাāĻŽ āĻŽেāĻšেāĻĻী, āϰংāĻĒুāϰ āωāχāĻŽেāύ āϚেāĻŽ্āĻŦাāϰেāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤি āφāύো⧟াāϰা āĻĢেāϰāĻĻৌāϏ āĻĒāϞি, āωāύ্āύāϤ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦাāϰ āĻ—āĻ āύ āĻŽāĻšিāϞা āϏংāϏ্āĻĨাāϰ āϏāĻ­াāύেāϤ্āϰী āĻŽাāϰāĻšাāĻŽাāϤুāύ āύেāϏা।

āĻŽেāϞা⧟ āĻŦিāĻ­িāύ্āύ āϏংāϏ্āĻĨাāϰ ⧍ā§Ļāϟি āϏ্āϟāϞ āĻŦāϏেāĻ›ে। āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻĻিāύ āĻŦিāĻ•েāϞ ā§Šāϟা āĻĨেāĻ•ে āϰাāϤ ⧝āϟা āĻĒāϰ্āϝāύ্āϤ āĻ āĻŽেāϞা āϚāϞāĻŦে āĻŦāϞে āĻ†ā§ŸোāϜāĻ•āϰা āϜাāύাāύ।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ: ā§§ā§Ģā§Ļā§Ž āϘāĻŖ্āϟা, āύāĻ­েāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ ā§Ļā§Ž, ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Ē

If the Committee on the Rights of the male formed be support āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻ…āϧিāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āĻŽিāϟি āĻšāϞে āϏāĻŽāϰ্āĻĨāύ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে!


āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা āĻŦāϞেāĻ›েāύ, āϏেāĻĻিāύ āφāϰ āĻŦেāĻļি āĻĻূāϰে āύ⧟, āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻŦāϞāĻŦে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻ…āϧিāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āĻŽিāϟি āĻ—āĻ āύ āĻ•āϰা āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āϤāĻŦে āϏেāχ āĻ•āĻŽিāϟি āĻ—āĻ āύেāĻ“ āφāĻŽাāϰ āϏāĻŽāϰ্āĻĨāύ āĻĨাāĻ•āĻŦে āĻŦāϞে āĻšাāϏ্āϝāϰāϏিāĻ•āϤা āĻ•āϰেāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা।

āĻŦুāϧāĻŦাāϰ (⧍⧍ āϜুāύ) āϏāĻ•াāϞে āϜাāϤী⧟ āϏংāϏāĻĻে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰীāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āύিāϰ্āϧাāϰিāϤ āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύোāϤ্āϤāϰ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āϜাāϤী⧟ āĻĒাāϰ্āϟিāϰ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏিāĻĄি⧟াāĻŽ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āĻ•াāϜী āĻĢিāϰোāϜ āϰāĻļিāĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻ• āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒূāϰāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύেāϰ āϜāĻŦাāĻŦে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻ āĻšাāϏ্āϝāϰāϏ āĻ•āϰেāύ।
āĻāϰāφāĻ—ে āϏāĻ•াāϞ ā§§ā§Ļāϟা ā§Šā§Ģ āĻŽিāύিāϟে āϏ্āĻĒিāĻ•াāϰ āĻĄ. āĻļিāϰীāύ āĻļাāϰāĻŽিāύ āϚৌāϧুāϰীāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤিāϤ্āĻŦে āĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻ•াāϰ্āϝāϏূāϚি āĻļুāϰু āĻšā§Ÿ।

āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύāĻ•āϰ্āϤা āχāωāĻĒি āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύে āύাāϰীāϰা āĻ…ংāĻļāĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āϰে āĻŦৈāώāĻŽ্āϝেāϰ āϏ্āĻŦীāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻŦāϞে āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύ āĻ•āϰেāύ। āĻŦৈāώāĻŽ্āϝেāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা āωāϞ্āϞেāĻ– āĻ•āϰে āĻŦāϞেāύ, āϝাāϰা āϏংāϰāĻ•্āώিāϤ āφāϏāύে āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚিāϤ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›েāύ, āϤাāϰা āϤিāύāϟি āφāϏāύ āύি⧟ে āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻ•āϰāĻ›ে, āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āϏেāχ āϏুāϝোāĻ— āϏুāĻŦিāϧা āϤাāϰা āĻĒাāϚ্āĻ›ে āύা।

āĻāϰ āϜāĻŦাāĻŦে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻŦāϞেāύ, āχāωāύি⧟āύ āĻĒāϰিāώāĻĻ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āϏāĻŦাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āωāύ্āĻŽুāĻ•্āϤ, āĻļুāϧুāĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āĻĒুāϰুāώāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻŦāϞে āĻ•āĻĨা āύেāχ। āϤāĻŦে āφāĻŽāϰা ⧧⧝⧝ā§Ŧ āϏাāϞে āĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤা⧟ āφāϏাāϰ āĻĒāϰ āϤৃāĻŖāĻŽূāϞ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āύাāϰী āύেāϤৃāϤ্āĻŦāĻ•ে āωāĻ ি⧟ে āφāύাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āϏংāϰāĻ•্āώিāϤ āύাāϰী āφāϏāύে āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύেāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāĻŦāϏ্āĻĨা āĻ•āϰি। āĻāĻ–াāύে āĻ•োāύো āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ— āύেāχ। āϤৃāĻŖāĻŽূāϞ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āύাāϰী āύেāϤৃāϤ্āĻŦ āωāĻ ে āφāϏাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻāϟা āĻāĻ•āϟা āĻŽাāχāϞāĻĢāϞāĻ•।

āĻāĻ›া⧜া āĻĒ্āϰāϤ্āϝেāĻ•āϟি āφāϏāύে āύাāϰীāϰা āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϝোāĻ—িāϤা āĻ•āϰāϤে āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ…āϤিāϰিāĻ•্āϤ āϏুāϝোāĻ— āĻ•āϰে āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে āϏংāϰāĻ•্āώিāϤ āφāϏāύে। āϝāĻ–āύ āĻāϟা āĻ•āϰি āϤāĻ–āύ āύাāύাāĻĻিāĻ• āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŦাāϧা āĻāϏেāĻ›িāϞ। āĻĒ্āϰাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻšāϤে āĻĻেāĻŦে āύা, āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻĻেāĻŦে āύা, āύাāύা āĻ•āĻĨা। āĻĒāϰে āĻĻেāĻ–া āĻ—েāϞ ⧧⧍ āĻšাāϜাāϰ āϏংāϰāĻ•্āώিāϤ āĻĒāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ ā§Ēā§Ģ āĻšাāϜাāϰ āύাāϰী āĻĒ্āϰাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে। āϝাāϰা āĻŦাāϧা āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›িāϞ āϤাāϰাāχ āĻĒāϰে āϏেāχ āύাāϰী āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝেāϰ āĻĒāĻ•্āώে āĻ­োāϟ āϚে⧟েāĻ›িāϞ।

āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻšাāϏ্āϝāϰāϏ āĻ•āϰে āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻŽাāύāύী⧟ āϏ্āĻĒিāĻ•াāϰ āφāĻŽি āĻ­েāĻŦেāĻ›িāϞাāĻŽ āύাāϰীāĻĻেāϰ āĻāϤো āĻ•্āώāĻŽāϤা āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ি, āĻĒুāϰুāώāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ•ি āĻ•āϰāϞাāĻŽ। āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āφāϞাāĻĻা āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻ•āϰāĻŦো āĻ•ি āύা āϏেāχ āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύ āĻ•āϰāĻŦেāύ, āĻ•িāύ্āϤু āωāύি āϏেāϟা āĻ•āϰেāύ āύাāχ। āϏেāĻĻিāύ āĻŦেāĻļি āĻĻূāϰে āύ⧟, āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻŦāϞāĻŦে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻ…āϧিāĻ•াāϰ āĻ•āĻŽিāϟি āĻ•āϰা āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে, āĻ•āϰāϞে āφāĻŽাāϰ āϏāĻŽāϰ্āĻĨāύ āĻĒাāĻŦে।
 
āϞāĻ•্āώ্āĻŽীāĻĒুāϰ-ā§Š āφāϏāύেāϰ āϏংāϏāĻĻ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āĻ āĻ•ে āĻāĻŽ āĻļাāĻšāϜাāĻšাāύ āĻ•াāĻŽাāϞেāϰ āĻ…āĻĒāϰ āĻāĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύেāϰ āϜāĻŦাāĻŦে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻŦিāĻĻেāĻļি āĻŦিāύি⧟োāĻ— āϝাāϤে āφāϏে āϏেāϜāύ্āϝ āĻŦিāĻ­িāύ্āύ āϰāĻ•āĻŽ āϏুāĻŦিāϧা āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে। āĻāϰāϜāύ্āϝ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āωāĻĻাāϰāύীāϤি āĻ—্āϰāĻšāĻŖ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে। āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āωāĻĻাāϰ āϏুāϝোāĻ— āĻĻিāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻāϟা āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦ āϏ্āĻŦীāĻ•ৃāϤ।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ: ā§§ā§Šā§Šā§§ āϘāĻŖ্āϟা, āϜুāύ ⧍⧍, ⧍ā§Ļā§§‌ā§Ŧ

Dwayne Johnson is now the most sexually appealing men āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āϝৌāύ āφāĻŦেāĻĻāύāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻāĻ–āύ āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ āϜāύāϏāύ

āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ ‘āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ•’ āϜāύāϏāύ āĻāĻ–āύ āϝা-āχ āĻ•āϰেāύ āϏāĻŦāχ āϝেāύ āĻ—āϰāĻŽ āĻ–āĻŦāϰ! āĻāĻŦাāϰ āĻĒিāĻĒāϞ āĻŽ্āϝাāĻ—াāϜিāύেāϰ āĻĻৃāώ্āϟিāϤে āϜীāĻŦিāϤāĻĻেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϚāϞāϤি āĻŦāĻ›āϰেāϰ āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āϝৌāύ āφāĻŦেāĻĻāύāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻ–েāϤাāĻŦ āĻĒেāϞেāύ āϤিāύি।

āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ ‘āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ•’ āϜāύāϏāύ āĻāĻ–āύ āϝা-āχ āĻ•āϰেāύ āϏāĻŦāχ āϝেāύ āĻ—āϰāĻŽ āĻ–āĻŦāϰ! āĻāĻŦাāϰ āĻĒিāĻĒāϞ āĻŽ্āϝাāĻ—াāϜিāύেāϰ āĻĻৃāώ্āϟিāϤে āϜীāĻŦিāϤāĻĻেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āϚāϞāϤি āĻŦāĻ›āϰেāϰ āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āϝৌāύ āφāĻŦেāĻĻāύāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻĒুāϰুāώেāϰ āĻ–েāϤাāĻŦ āĻĒেāϞেāύ āϤিāύি। āĻĒেāĻļাāĻĻাāϰ āϰেāϏāϞাāϰ āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻ…āĻ­িāύেāϤা āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ•āĻ•ে āϏ্āĻŦীāĻ•ৃāϤিāϟি āĻĻেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻ–āĻŦāϰ āĻŦেāϰি⧟েāĻ›ে āĻŽāĻ™্āĻ—āϞāĻŦাāϰ (ā§§ā§Ģ āύāĻ­েāĻŽ্āĻŦāϰ)।

āϰেāϏāϞিং āϰিং⧟ে āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ•েāϰ āĻŦিāĻ–্āϝাāϤ āĻŦুāϞি āĻ›িāϞো- ‘āĻ•্āϝাāύ āχāω āϏ্āĻŽেāϞ āĻšো⧟াāϟ āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ• āχāϜ āĻ•ুāĻ•িং?’ āϤিāύি āϜাāύাāύ, āύāϤুāύ āωāĻĒাāϧিāϟি āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•ে āĻļেāĻ–াāϟা āϤাāĻ•ে āĻĢাঁāĻĒāϰে āϰেāĻ–েāĻ›ে! ā§Ēā§Ē āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āĻŦ⧟āϏী āĻāχ āϤাāϰāĻ•া āĻĒিāĻĒāϞāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞেāĻ›েāύ, ‘āĻŽāύে āĻŽāύে āĻ­াāĻŦāĻ›ি āĻ•āϤোāϟা āĻĻাāϰুāĻŖ āφāϰ āωāϚ্āĻ›্āĻŦāϏিāϤ āĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒাāϰ āĻāϟা। āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āĻŽāύে āĻšāϞো, āĻŦাāĻš, āϚূāĻĄ়াāϰ āĻĒ্āϰাāϝ় āĻ•াāĻ›াāĻ•াāĻ›ি āĻĒৌঁāĻ›ে āĻ—েāĻ›ি। āϜাāύি āύা āĻ•āϤোāĻĻূāϰ āϝেāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦো।’

āύāĻŦ্āĻŦāχ āĻĻāĻļāĻ•েāϰ āĻŽাāĻাāĻŽাāĻি āĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ্āϞ্āĻĄ āϰেāϏāϞিং āĻāύ্āϟাāϰāϟেāχāύāĻŽেāύ্āϟেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϝোāĻ—ী āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻŽূāϞāϧাāϰাāϰ āĻ–্āϝাāϤি āĻ…āϰ্āϜāύ āĻ•āϰেāύ āϜāύāϏāύ। āĻāϰāĻĒāϰ āĻšāϞিāωāĻĄে āĻ…āĻ­িāύেāϤা āĻ“ āĻĒ্āϰāϝোāϜāĻ• āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻļāĻ•্āϤ āĻ…āĻŦāϏ্āĻĨাāύ āĻ—ā§œেāĻ›েāύ āϤিāύি। āĻšāϞিāωāĻĄে āĻāĻ–āύ āϏāĻŦāϚে⧟ে āωāĻĒাāϰ্āϜāύāĻ•াāϰী āϤাāϰāĻ•াāĻ“ āϤিāύিāχ।

ā§Ŧ āĻĢুāϟ ā§Ģ āχāĻž্āϚি āωāϚ্āϚāϤাāϰ āĻĄো⧟াāχāύেāϰ āĻ“āϜāύ ā§§ā§§ā§§ āĻ•িāϞো। āĻĒāϰ্āĻĻা⧟ āĻ—্āϰীāĻ• āĻŦীāϰ āĻšাāϰāĻ•িāωāϞিāϏেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻŦāϞāĻŦাāύ āĻĻেāĻ–া⧟ āϤাāĻ•ে। āĻ•াāĻ•āϤাāϞী⧟ āĻšāϞো ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Ē āϏাāϞে ‘āĻšাāϰāĻ•িāωāϞিāϏ’ āĻ›āĻŦিāϤে āύাāĻŽ āĻ­ূāĻŽিāĻ•া⧟ āĻ…āĻ­িāύ⧟ āĻ•āϰেāύ āϤিāύি।

āϏাāĻŽāύে āĻŽুāĻ•্āϤি āĻĒাāĻŦে āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ āϜāύāϏāύ āĻ…āĻ­িāύীāϤ āĻĄিāϜāύিāϰ āĻ…্āϝাāύিāĻŽেāϟেāĻĄ āĻ›āĻŦি ‘āĻŽো⧟াāύা’। āĻāϤে āĻŦিāĻļাāϞ āφāĻ•ৃāϤিāϰ āϚāϰিāϤ্āϰ āĻŽাāĻ‰ā§Ÿিāϰ āĻ­ূāĻŽিāĻ•া⧟ āĻ•āĻŖ্āĻ  āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›েāύ āϤিāύি। āϤাāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা⧟, ‘āĻ—āϤ āĻ•ā§ŸেāĻ• āĻŦāĻ›āϰে āĻ•্āϝাāϰি⧟াāϰে āĻŦāĻĄ়āϏ⧜ āϏুāĻĻূāϰāĻĒ্āϰāϏাāϰী āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤāύ āĻāύেāĻ›ি, āĻāχ āĻĒ্āϰāϚেāώ্āϟা āφāĻŽাāĻ•ে āχāϤিāĻŦাāϚāĻ• āĻĢāϞ āĻāύে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ে।’

āϝোāĻ— āĻ•āϰে āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ• āφāϰāĻ“ āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āφāĻŽাāϰ āĻŦ্āϝāĻ•্āϤিāϜীāĻŦāύে āϝেāϏāĻŦ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤāύ āϘāϟেāĻ›ে, āĻŦিāĻļেāώ āĻ•āϰে āĻŦাāĻŦা āĻ“ āĻ…āύ্āϝেāϰ āϜীāĻŦāύāϏāĻ™্āĻ—ী āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽে āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ•েāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āĻāĻŦং āύিāϜেāϰ āφāϚāϰāĻŖāĻ—āϤ āϝা āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻŦāĻĻāϞেāĻ›ে, āĻāϏāĻŦ āϏāϤ্āϝিāĻ•াāϰ āĻ…āϰ্āĻĨেāχ āφāĻŽাāĻ•ে āφāϏ্āĻĨা āĻāύে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ে।’

āϜāύāϏāύ āĻ“ āϤাāϰ āĻĻীāϰ্āϘāĻĻিāύেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰেāĻŽিāĻ•া āϞāϰেāύ āĻšাāĻļি⧟াāύেāϰ ā§§ā§§ āĻŽাāϏ āĻŦ⧟āϏী āĻ•āύ্āϝাāϏāύ্āϤাāύ āφāĻ›ে, āϤাāϰ āύাāĻŽ āϜেāϏāĻŽিāύ। āĻ āĻ›া⧜া āĻĒ্āϰāϝোāϜāĻ• āĻĄেāύি āĻ—াāϰ্āϏি⧟াāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϏংāϏাāϰেāϰ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻāĻ• āĻ•āύ্āϝাāϏāύ্āϤাāύেāϰ āĻŦাāĻŦা āĻšāύ āϤিāύি। āϤাāϰ āĻŦ⧟āϏ ā§§ā§Ģ āĻŦāĻ›āϰ।
āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒ্āϰāϤি āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ āϜāύāϏāύ āϜাāύাāύ, āϜীāĻŦāύে āφāϰেāĻ•āϟি āĻŦāĻĄ় āϧāϰāύেāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤāύ āφāύাāϰ āĻĒāϰিāĻ•āϞ্āĻĒāύা āφāĻ›ে āϤাāϰ। āϏেāϟা āĻšāϞো āĻŦিāύোāĻĻāύ āĻĻুāύি⧟া āĻĨেāĻ•ে āϰাāϜāύীāϤিāϰ āĻŽā§ŸāĻĻাāύে āύাāĻŽা। ‘āĻĻ্āϝ āĻĢাāϏ্āϟ āĻ…্āϝাāύ্āĻĄ āĻĻ্āϝ āĻĢি āωāϰি⧟াāϏ’ āĻĢ্āϰাāĻž্āϚাāχāϜিāϰ āĻāχ āϤাāϰāĻ•া āϰ⧟āϟাāϰ্āϏেāϰ āĻ•াāĻ›ে āĻ—āϤ āϏāĻĒ্āϤাāĻšে āφāĻŽেāϰিāĻ•াāϰ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏিāĻĄেāύ্āϟ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āύি⧟ে āωāϚ্āĻ›্āĻŦাāϏ āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļ āĻ•āϰেāύ। āϤাāϰ āĻŽāύে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে, āĻāχ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύ āĻĒ্āϰāĻŽাāĻŖ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›ে āϝে āĻ•োāύো āĻ•িāĻ›ু āĻšāϤে āĻĒাāϰে।

āĻĒিāĻĒāϞāĻ•ে āĻĄো⧟াāχāύ āĻŦāϞেāĻ›েāύ, ‘āĻŽāϜা āĻ•āϰে āϏāĻŦāϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻŦāϞāϤাāĻŽ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏিāĻĄেāύ্āϟ āĻĒāĻĻে āĻĻাঁ⧜াāĻŦো। āϤāĻŦে āĻāϟাāχ āĻāĻ–āύ āφāĻŽাāϰ āϏāϤ্āϝিāĻ•াāϰেāϰ āφāĻ—্āϰāĻš। āχāϤিāĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻ­াāĻŦāϤে āĻļুāϰু āĻ•āϰে āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›ি āφāĻŽি āĻ•োāύো āĻĒāϰিāĻŦāϰ্āϤāύ āφāύāϤে āĻĒাāϰāĻŦো āĻ•ি-āύা। āϏিāĻĻ্āϧাāύ্āϤ āύেāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āĻŽেāϧাāĻŦী āĻŽাāύুāώāϜāύāĻ•ে āφāĻŽাāϰ āϚাāϰāĻĒাāĻļে āĻĒাāĻŦো āϤো? āĻĻেāĻļāϟাāĻ•ে āύি⧟ে āĻ•ি āφāĻŽি āĻ­াāĻŦি? āϏāĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύেāϰ āωāϤ্āϤāϰ ‘āĻš্āϝাঁ’ āĻšāĻ“ā§Ÿা⧟ āĻŽāύে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻ­াāϞো āϏুāϝোāĻ— āφāĻ›ে āϏাāĻŽāύে। āĻāĻ•āĻĻিāύ āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻĒ্āϰেāϏিāĻĄেāύ্āϟ āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āϏাāĻ•্āώাā§ŽāĻ•াāϰ āĻĻেāĻŦো।’

⧍ā§Ļ⧍ā§Ļ āϏাāϞে āϝুāĻ•্āϤāϰাāώ্āϟ্āϰেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰেāϏিāĻĄেāύ্āϟ āύিāϰ্āĻŦাāϚāύে āĻĄো⧟াāχāύāĻ•ে āĻĒ্āϰাāϰ্āĻĨী āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āωāĻĻāĻ—্āϰীāĻŦ āĻšā§Ÿে āφāĻ›ে āϤাāϰ āĻ­āĻ•্āϤāϰা। āĻāϰāχ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āύিāĻŦāύ্āϧিāϤ āϰিāĻĒাāĻŦāϞিāĻ•াāύ āĻšিāϏেāĻŦে āĻ•āύāĻ­েāύāĻļāύেāĻ“ āϝোāĻ— āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›েāύ āϤিāύি। ⧍ā§Ļā§Ļā§Ļ āϏাāϞে āĻĻāϞāϟিāϰ āϜাāϤী⧟ āĻ•āύāĻ­েāύāĻļāύে āĻŦāĻ•্āϤāĻŦ্āϝāĻ“ āĻĻেāύ āĻĻ্āϝ āϰāĻ•। āϤাāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা⧟, ‘āĻŦিāĻļেāώāĻ­াāĻŦে āĻāĻ–āύ, āύেāϤৃāϤ্āĻŦ āĻ–ুāĻŦ āϜāϰুāϰি। āϝোāĻ—্āϝ āύেāϤৃāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĒ্āϰ⧟োāϜāύ, āϏāĻŽ্āĻŽাāύিāϤ āύেāϤৃāϤ্āĻŦāĻ“ āĻĻāϰāĻ•াāϰ।’

May need to Male Violence Prevention Act āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧেāĻ“ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰা āϞাāĻ—āϤে āĻĒাāϰে


āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύāĻ“ āĻ•āϰা āϞাāĻ—āϤে āĻĒাāϰে āĻŦāϞে āĻŽāύ্āϤāĻŦ্āϝ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা। āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻšā§ŸāϤো āϏেāĻĻিāύ āφāϏāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāĻŦে āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻ“āϰāĻ•āĻŽ āφāχāύāĻ“ (āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ) āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে’।
āĻĸাāĻ•া: āύাāϰী āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύেāϰ āĻŽāϤো āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύāĻ“ āĻ•āϰা āϞাāĻ—āϤে āĻĒাāϰে āĻŦāϞে āĻŽāύ্āϤāĻŦ্āϝ āĻ•āϰেāĻ›েāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা।

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻšā§ŸāϤো āϏেāĻĻিāύ āφāϏāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāĻŦে āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻ“āϰāĻ•āĻŽ āφāχāύāĻ“ (āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ) āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে’।

āĻŽāĻ™্āĻ—āϞāĻŦাāϰ (ā§Ļā§Ž āĻŽাāϰ্āϚ) āϏāĻ•াāϞে āϰাāϜāϧাāύীāϰ āφāĻ—াāϰāĻ—াঁāĻ“ā§Ÿে āĻŦāĻ™্āĻ—āĻŦāύ্āϧু āφāύ্āϤāϰ্āϜাāϤিāĻ• āϏāĻŽ্āĻŽেāϞāύ āĻ•েāύ্āĻĻ্āϰে āφāύ্āϤāϰ্āϜাāϤিāĻ• āύাāϰী āĻĻিāĻŦāϏ āωāĻĒāϞāĻ•্āώে āĻ†ā§ŸোāϜিāϤ āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻ āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞেāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী।

āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা, āĻāĻ•āϟা āĻŽāϜাāϰ āĻ•āĻĨা āĻŦāϞি, āĻĒাāϰ্āϞাāĻŽেāύ্āϟে āφāĻŽি āĻĒ্āϰāĻļ্āύোāϤ্āϤāϰ āĻĒāϰ্āĻŦে āωāϤ্āϤāϰ āĻĻি⧟ে āĻĨাāĻ•ি। āϏেāĻ–াāύে āĻāĻ•āϜāύ āϏংāϏāĻĻ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āφāĻŽাāĻ•ে āϜিāϜ্āĻžেāϏ āĻ•āϰāϞেāύ āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰা āĻšāĻŦে āĻ•িāύা?’

āϤিāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āφāĻŽি āφāϰ āĻ•ি āĻŦāϞāĻŦো āĻ“āύাāĻ•ে āĻŦāϞāϞাāĻŽ āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āϝে āĻāϤ āĻ•āώ্āϟ āϤা āϤো āϜাāύāϤাāĻŽ āύা। āφāĻĒāύি āĻŦāϞেāύ, āφāĻŽāϰা āĻĻেāĻ–āĻŦো, āĻ•িāĻ­াāĻŦে āφāĻĒāύাāϰ āϏāĻŽāϏ্āϝা āϏāĻŽাāϧাāύ āĻ•āϰা āϝা⧟’।

‘āϝাāχ āĻšোāĻ• āĻ­āĻŦিāώ্āϝāϤে āĻšā§ŸāϤো āϏেāĻĻিāύ āφāϏāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝাāĻŦে āφāĻŽাāĻĻেāϰ āĻšā§ŸāϤো āĻ“āϰāĻ•āĻŽ āφāχāύāĻ“ (āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ) āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻšāϚ্āĻ›ে।’

āĻļেāĻ– āĻšাāϏিāύা āĻŦāϞেāύ, āĻŽে⧟েāϰাāϤো āĻ–ুāĻŦ āĻŦেāĻļি āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻ•āϰে āύা, āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤিāϤ āĻšā§Ÿ।

āϏংāϏাāϰāĻ•ে āϏুāĻ–ী āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻŽে⧟েāĻĻেāϰ āωāĻĻ্āĻĻেāĻļ্āϝে āĻĒ্āϰāϧাāύāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻŦāϞেāύ, ‘āĻŦোāύāĻĻেāϰ āĻŦāϞāĻŦো, āϏংāϏাāϰ āϏুāĻ–েāϰ āĻšā§Ÿ āϰāĻŽāύীāϰ āĻ—ুāĻŖে। āĻāχ āĻ•āĻĨাāϟা āĻŽāύে āϰাāĻ–āϤে āĻšāĻŦে।’

‘āĻāĻ•āϟা āϏংāϏাāϰāĻ•ে āϏুāύ্āĻĻāϰ āĻ•āϰে āϰাāĻ–āϤে āĻŽে⧟েāĻĻেāϰ āĻ…āύেāĻ• āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āĻĨাāĻ•ে, āϏে āĻĻা⧟িāϤ্āĻŦ āϤাāϰা āύিāĻļ্āϚ⧟āχ āĻĒাāϞāύ āĻ•āϰāĻŦে। āĻ•āĻĨা⧟ āϤো āφāĻ›ে, āϝে āϰাঁāϧে āϏে āϚুāϞāĻ“ āĻŦাঁāϧে।’

āĻ—āϤ āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āϜাāϤী⧟ āϏংāϏāĻĻেāϰ āĻāĻ• āĻ…āϧিāĻŦেāĻļāύে āĻ…āύিāϰ্āϧাāϰিāϤ āφāϞোāϚāύা⧟ āĻ…ংāĻļ āύি⧟ে āϏ্āĻŦāϤāύ্āϤ্āϰ āϏংāϏāĻĻ āϏāĻĻāϏ্āϝ āĻšাāϜি āĻŽোāĻšাāĻŽ্āĻŽāĻĻ āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧ āφāχāύ āĻ•āϰাāϰ āĻĻাāĻŦি āϜাāύাāύ।

āĻšাāϜি āϏেāϞিāĻŽ āĻŦāϞেāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āĻŦāϰ্āϤāĻŽাāύে āĻĻেāĻļে āĻļুāϧু āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāϰোāϧে āφāχāύ āĻĨাāĻ•āϞেāĻ“ āϏāĻŽাāϜে āĻŦāĻšু āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻļিāĻ•াāϰ āĻšāϚ্āĻ›েāύ। āĻ•োāύো āĻ•োāύো āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āύাāϰীāĻ“ āĻšā§Ÿ āϭ⧟ংāĻ•āϰ। āφāĻŽি āϚাāχ-āĻĒুāϰুāώ āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύেāϰ āĻŦিāώ⧟ে āĻāĻ•āϟা āφāχāύ āĻšোāĻ•।

āϤিāύি āφāϰো āĻŦāϞেāĻ›িāϞেāύ, āφāĻŽি āĻŦāĻšু āφāĻ—ে āĻĨেāĻ•ে āĻŦিāϚাāϰ-āϏাāϞিāĻļ āĻ•āϰি। āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽী-āϏ্āϤ্āϰীāϰ āĻŦিāϚাāϰ āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻ•āϰāϤে āφāĻŽি āĻĻেāĻ–েāĻ›ি- ⧍ā§Ļāϟা āĻŦিāϚাāϰ āĻāϞে āĻāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে ā§§ā§Ģāϟি āύাāϰীāϰ। ...āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽীāĻ•ে āωāϚিāϤ āĻļিāĻ•্āώা āĻĻিāϤে āĻ—ি⧟ে āϤাāϰা āĻĨাāύা⧟ āϝা⧟; āϤা āĻ•āϰāϤে āĻ—ি⧟ে āĻļ্āĻŦāĻļুāϰ-āĻļাāĻļু⧜ি, āĻĻেāĻŦāϰ, āύāύāĻĻ, āĻ­াāϏুāϰ āϏāĻŦাāχāĻ•ে āύাāϰী āύিāϰ্āϝাāϤāύ āĻŽাāĻŽāϞা āĻĻে⧟। āφāϰ āĻĒুāϞিāĻļ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻšাāύা āĻĻে⧟; āϏāĻŦাāχ āĻŦা⧜ি āĻ›া⧜ে। āĻ“āχ āĻŦা⧜ি āϤāĻ›āύāĻ› āĻšā§Ÿে āϝা⧟।

āĻŽāĻšিāϞা āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āĻŦিāώ⧟āĻ• āĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰāĻŖাāϞ⧟ āĻ†ā§ŸোāϜিāϤ āφāϰ্āύ্āϤāϜাāϤিāĻ• āύাāϰী āĻĻিāĻŦāϏেāϰ āĻ…āύুāώ্āĻ াāύে āĻŽāĻšিāϞা ‍āĻ“ āĻļিāĻļু āĻŦিāώ⧟āĻ• āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŽāύ্āϤ্āϰী āĻŽেāĻšেāϰ āφāĻĢāϰোāϜ āϚুāĻŽāĻ•িāϰ āϏāĻ­াāĻĒāϤিāϤ্āĻŦে āĻ…āύ্āϝāĻĻেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻŦāĻ•্āϤāĻŦ্āϝ āϰাāĻ–েāύ, āϏāϚিāĻŦ āύাāĻ›িāĻŽা āĻŦেāĻ—āĻŽ, āχāωāĻāύ āωāχāĻŽেāύ āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļেāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāύিāϧি āĻ•্āϰিāϏ্āϟিāύ āĻšাāύ্āϟাāϰ।

āĻŦাংāϞাāĻĻেāĻļ āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ: ā§§ā§Ģā§Ēā§Ē āϘāĻŖ্āϟা, āĻŽাāϰ্āϚ ā§Ļā§Ž, ⧍ā§Ļā§§ā§Ŧ

Thursday, January 19, 2017

āϏāĻ™্āĻ—িāύীāϰ āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦাāϏāĻ­āĻ™্āĻ—েāϰ āĻļোāϧ āύে⧟ āϚ⧜ুāχ!



āϏূāϤ্āϰ : āϟেāϞিāĻ—্āϰাāĻĢ | āφāĻĒāĻĄেāϟ: | āĻĒ্āϰিāύ্āϟ āϏংāϏ্āĻ•āϰāĻŖ

 

āϜীāĻŦāύāϏāĻ™্āĻ—ী āĻ…āύ্āϝ āĻ•াāϰāĻ“ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āϘāύিāώ্āĻ āϤা⧟ āϜ⧜ি⧟েāĻ›েāύ—āĻāĻŽāύ āĻĒāϰিāϏ্āĻĨিāϤিāϤে āϏ্āĻŦাāĻŽী āĻŦা āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āĻ•ী āĻ•āϰāĻŦেāύ, āĻ­েāĻŦে āĻĒাāύ āύা। āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦাāϏāĻ­āĻ™্āĻ—েāϰ āĻāĻŽāύ āĻĒāϰিāϏ্āĻĨিāϤি āĻĒাāĻ–িāϰাāĻ“ āĻŽোāĻ•াāĻŦিāϞা āĻ•āϰে। āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĒুāϰুāώ āĻ āĻ•্āώেāϤ্āϰে āĻŦেāĻļ āύিāώ্āĻ ুāϰāϤা āĻĻেāĻ–া⧟ āĻāĻŦং āĻ…āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāϏ্āϤ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—িāύীāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ–াāĻŦাāϰ āϏāϰāĻŦāϰাāĻš āĻ•āĻŽি⧟ে āĻĻে⧟।


āϝুāĻ•্āϤāϰাāϜ্āϝেāϰ āχāĻŽ্āĻĒেāϰি⧟াāϞ āĻ•āϞেāϜ āϞāύ্āĻĄāύেāϰ āĻāĻ•āĻĻāϞ āĻ—āĻŦেāώāĻ• āĻāχ āϤāĻĨ্āϝ āĻĻি⧟েāĻ›েāύ। āϤাঁāϰা āĻŦāϞāĻ›েāύ, āĻ…āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāϏ্āϤ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—িāύীāϰ āĻĒ্āϰāϤি āĻ•্āώোāĻ­েāϰ āĻ•াāϰāĻŖেāχ āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĒাāĻ–ি āχāϚ্āĻ›ে āĻ•āϰে āĻ•āĻŽ āĻ–াāĻŦাāϰ āĻŦাāϏা⧟ āύি⧟ে āϝা⧟। āφāĻŽেāϰিāĻ•াāύ āύ্āϝাāϚাāϰাāϞিāϏ্āϟ āϏাāĻŽā§ŸিāĻ•ীāϤে āĻ āĻ—āĻŦেāώāĻŖা āĻĒ্āϰāϤিāĻŦেāĻĻāύ āĻĒ্āϰāĻ•াāĻļিāϤ āĻšā§ŸেāĻ›ে।
āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĒাāĻ–িāϰা āĻāĻ•āϟিāĻŽাāϤ্āϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ী āύি⧟ে āϜীāĻŦāύ āĻ•াāϟা⧟ āĻŦāϞেāχ āϧাāϰāĻŖা āĻ•āϰা āĻšā§Ÿ। āϤাāϰāĻĒāϰāĻ“ āĻŽাāĻেāĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻāĻĻেāϰ āĻŽāϧ্āϝে āĻŦāĻšুāĻ—াāĻŽী āĻĒ্āϰāĻŦāĻŖāϤা āĻĻেāĻ–া āϝা⧟। āĻļেāĻ•্āϏāĻĒি⧟াāϰ āĻ“ āϚāϏাāϰেāϰ āĻ•াāĻŦ্āϝে āĻŦিāώ⧟āϟিāϰ āωāϞ্āϞেāĻ– āĻĒাāĻ“ā§Ÿা āϝা⧟। āĻāĻŽāύāĻ•ি āĻĒ্āϰাāϚীāύ āĻ—্āϰিāĻ•āϰাāĻ“ āϚ⧜ুāĻ‡ā§Ÿেāϰ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ে āĻĒ্āϰেāĻŽেāϰ āĻĻেāĻŦী āφāĻĢ্āϰোāĻĻিāϤিāϰ āϏāĻŽ্āĻĒāϰ্āĻ• āĻĻেāĻ–ি⧟েāĻ›িāϞ।
āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻŦāĻšুāĻ—াāĻŽী āĻšā§Ÿ āĻŦেāĻļি āĻŦেāĻļি āϏāύ্āϤাāύ āĻĒাāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āφāĻļা⧟; āφāϰ āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āϚ⧜ুāχ āϘāϰ āĻ›া⧜ে āύāϤুāύ āϏāĻ™্āĻ—ীāϰ āĻŽাāϧ্āϝāĻŽে āφāϰāĻ“ āϏুāϏ্āĻĨ-āϏāĻŦāϞ āϏāύ্āϤাāύ āĻĒাāĻ“ā§Ÿাāϰ āφāĻļা⧟। āϝুāĻ•্āϤāϰাāϜ্āϝেāϰ āĻ“āχ āĻ—āĻŦেāώāĻ•েāϰা āĻŦিāώ⧟āϟি āύি⧟ে āϞাāύ্āĻĄি āφāχāϞ্āϝাāύ্āĻĄ āĻāϞাāĻ•া⧟ āϚ⧜ুāχāĻĻেāϰ āĻ“āĻĒāϰ ⧧⧍ āĻŦāĻ›āϰ āϧāϰে āĻ—āĻŦেāώāĻŖা āϚাāϞাāύ। āϤাঁāϰা āϜাāύāϤে āĻĒাāϰেāύ, āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻĻāĻŽ্āĻĒāϤিāϰ āĻŦাāϏাāϰ āϏāĻŦ āĻ›াāύা āϤাāĻĻেāϰ āύিāϜāϏ্āĻŦ āύ⧟। āĻ āĻŦ্āϝাāĻĒাāϰে āύিāĻļ্āϚিāϤ āĻšāϤে āϤাঁāϰা āύāϜāϰ āϰাāĻ–েāύ, āϏ্āϤ্āϰী āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻŦাāϏাāϰ āĻŦাāχāϰে āĻ িāĻ• āĻ•āϤāϟা āϏāĻŽā§Ÿ āĻ•াāϟা⧟, āϤা āϜাāύাāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ। āϤাঁāϰা āĻĻেāĻ–āϤে āĻĒাāύ, āϏāĻ™্āĻ—িāύীāϰ āĻ…āĻŦিāĻļ্āĻŦāϏ্āϤāϤা āĻĒুāϰুāώ āϚ⧜ুāχ āĻāĻ•āϟা āĻĒāϰ্āϝা⧟ে āϜাāύāϤে āĻĒাāϰে। āφāϰ āϏে āϜāύ্āϝāχ āϤাāϰা āĻŦাāϏা⧟ āϏ্āϤ্āϰী-āϏāύ্āϤাāύেāϰ āϜāύ্āϝ āĻ•āĻŽ āĻ–াāĻŦাāϰ āύি⧟ে āϝা⧟।