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except for the fact that British liberated them (Pakistanis) from the Sikhs, and in 1947 British left after having been exhausted by Germany, Japan, Italy etc. also having become relatively impoverished by the long war, left you savages to your own devices. More of you murdered each other during and after British departure than were killed during the entirety of British rule.
there is no mention of bongles in the name Pakistan.
Pakistan is a Portmanteau of five different provinces: Punjab, Afghan inhabited NW. Frontier, Kashmir, Sindh and Baluchistan.

Perfect statement from a bhakt and straight from the propaganda manual for RSS Noob Padawans.
Now you have anything relevant to share on-topic for this thread?
 
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there is no mention of bongles in the name Pakistan.
Pakistan is a Portmanteau of five different provinces: Punjab, Afghan inhabited NW. Frontier, Kashmir, Sindh and Baluchistan.
Idiot, go through the pages of history including the results of the then Provinces of India in 1946 to know in which Provincial Capitals of now Pakistan the Muslim League won the election and formed a govt. Do not write your own history based on ignorance. Pakistan came first by conjoining two words. One is PAK meaning pure/holy, and STAN for land. 'I' was added later. It meant the land of pure.
 
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12:10 AM, November 15, 2018 / LAST MODIFIED: 10:29 AM, November 15, 2018
Metro rail system to ease Dhaka's traffic gridlock
A construction site of the Dhaka Metro Rail near Rokeya Sharani. Photo: PALASH KHAN
metro1_0.jpg

A construction site of the Dhaka Metro Rail near Rokeya Sharani. Photo: PALASH KHAN

Tawfique Ali

With the physical progress of the country's maiden 20km metro rail service already visible across the capital city, implementation of four more proposed metro lines is simultaneously going ahead as a measure for partially relieving the capital city of its perennial traffic congestion.

The Tk 22,000 crore maiden metro line-6 with 16 stations stretches from north Uttara to Motijheel.

Once implemented, all five metro rail systems, otherwise known as the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT), will partially help resolve the capital city's horrendous traffic problem and provide an urban transport service that is modern, comfortable and time-bound, according to transport experts.

While completion of the entirety of the maiden metro is expected by the end of 2020, the other four metro rail systems are targeted in second and third phases by the year 2035, according to recommendations in the Revised Strategic Transport Plan (RSTP).

Though the original Strategic Transport Plan recommended three metro rail systems and three rapid bus service systems, the RSTP approved in August 2016 recommended five metro rails and two rapid bus service systems to cover Dhaka city and adjoining districts.

The said service systems are being implemented under a project named Dhaka Mass Rapid Transit Development.

The RSTP covers greater Dhaka city, Gazipur, Manikganj, Munshiganj, Narayanganj, and Narshingdi districts.

The government-owned entity Dhaka Mass Transit Company Limited will be implementing all the metro systems—three of which will be with Japan government's loan.

Metro rail is aimed at easing the perennial traffic congestion in the capital and providing an improved, faster, comfortable and environment-friendly means of public transportation, said transport experts.

According to Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), with the metro line-6 in place, 14 trains would operate every three minutes and carry 60,000 passengers every hour in both directions.

The estimated time to travel the 20km distance, from the north end of Uttara to Motijheel, is 35 minutes. The trains would have six cars each, all air-conditioned.

MAN Siddique, managing director of Dhaka Mass Transit Company Limited, said that in view of the latest progress in building the metro line-6, they would be able to open the metro service up to Agargaon by December next year and carry passengers. Rest of the metro service up to Motijheel will be ready by December 2020, he said.

Professor Moazzem Hossain, a professor of civil engineering at Buet and a past director of Dhaka Mass Transit Company, in his evaluation said that one single metro line cannot obviously leave a tangible impact on the city's transport scenario because public movement has multiple destinations and origins. For citywide impact, there is a need for several of them, he said. In greater Seoul of South Korea, there are 22 metro lines.

MRT Line-6
metro2_0.jpg

MRT Line-6
Metro rail is a highly expensive system and has higher capacity of carrying passengers, he said, but metro rails alone are not the complete transport solution for which various transport modes must be instituted in chronology of priority and cost.

In a densely populated city like Dhaka, the idea of designing an elevated metro rail is not commendable either, said Hossain.

Dr SM Salehuddin, former director of erstwhile Dhaka Transport Coordination Board and currently a transport expert on the committee for bus route rationalisation in Dhaka city, said that metro rail is an important component in the urban transport system.

It would be appreciable if all five metro lines could be completed by 2035 bringing some relief to the city's traffic chaos but due importance must be given simultaneously to the bus service system for a permanent transport solution, he said.

MRT-6
As of October this year, the first-phase 12km of the maiden metro rail stretching from north Uttara to Agargaon has made one-fourth progress with 300 metres viaduct visible in Diabari and construction piers all along the route.

With land development of the depot of the maiden metro line completed in January this year, completion of construction work of the depot structures is targeted by June next year with 19 percent progress so far, according to official information provided by the metro company's public relations officer Khan Md Mizanul Islam.

The construction of nearly 12km viaduct and nine stations from north Uttara to Agargaon that started in August last year has made progress with 2,232 of 2,333 pilings, 235 of 766 pile caps, 88 of 448 pier heads and 617 of 4,577 precast segments so far done.

The construction of the 3km viaduct and three stations from Agargaon to Karwan Bazar began in August this year and at the same time the construction of the 5km viaduct and four stations from Karwan Bazar to Motijheel began.

Procurement and installation of the electrical and mechanical system of this metro line that began in July this year have made three percent overall progress.

Procurement and installation of rail coach and depot equipment that began in September last year have made 13 percent physical progress keeping in view that the metro service is going to open by the end of next year.

A construction site of the Dhaka Metro Rail near Rokeya Sharani. Photo: PALASH KHAN
metro3_0.jpg

A construction site of the Dhaka Metro Rail near Rokeya Sharani. Photo: PALASH KHAN
MRT-1
According to official information, the nearly 27km-long metro line-1 stretches from the international airport to Kamlapur and Purbachal.

With expected completion by 2026, the metro line's construction cost has been roughly estimated at Tk 50,000 crore.

With the feasibility study completed, the metro rail authorities in October signed an agreement with a total of seven Japanese and Indian companies and one Bangladeshi company led by Nippon Koei Company Limited of Japan for detailed design in four years starting July this year.

The Tk 513 crore agreement covers engineering services for detailed design and tender assistance for construction work. The Japan government has committed to contribute Tk 404 crore as loans and the Bangladesh government will pay the rest.


metro4_0.jpg



It comprises of two routes: one from the airport to Kamlapur across Khilkhet, Jamuna Future Park, Natun Bazar, Badda, Rampura, Malibagh and Rajarbagh covering a length of about 16.5km—the country's first metro rail line with all 12 stations underground.

The other route named Purbachal stretches from Natun Bazar across Jamuna Future Park, Bashundhara, Mastul to Purbachal depot covering 10km with nine stations, of which seven will be elevated.

Natun Bazar station will have an interchange for transfer of passengers between the two routes of the same metro line.

MRT-5
The 41km-long metro line-5 comprises of two routes. The northern one is expected to be completed by 2027 and the southern by 2030.

The 20km northern route is proposed to stretch from Hemayetpur of Savar to Bhatara through Baliarpur, Amin Bazar, Gabtoli, Dar-Us-Salam, Mirpur, Kachukhet, Banani, Gulshan and Natun Bazar with a total of 14 stations, of which nine will be underground and the rest elevated.

Preparation of a draft project document for the northern route is underway. Meanwhile, a loan agreement for engineering assistance was signed in June this year and the metro rail authorities have given a proposal for hiring engineering service consultants to carry out feasibility studies.

On the other hand, a pre-feasibility study on the 21km southern route started in May this year with loans from a development partner. The southern route stretching from Gabtoli to Bhulta is targeted to be completed by 2030. The exact route alignment, number of stations, location of depot, and underground and elevated sections of this route will be determined through the pre-feasibility study.

The possible stretch of the route will go through Technical intersection, Kalyanpur, Shyamoli, Asad Gate, Russel Square, Panthapath, Sonargaon, Hatirjheel, Rampura, Aftab Nagar, Dasher Kandi, Baralu Bazar and Ganga Nagar, terminating in Bhulta.

MRT-2
The 24km-long metro line-2 is proposed to stretch from Gabtoli to Chattogram road across embankment road, Basila, Mohammadpur, Satmasjid Road, Jhigatola, Science Laboratory, New Market, Azimpur, Palashi, Dhaka Medical College, Golap Shah Mazar, Banga Bhaban, Motijheel, Arambagh, Kamlapur, Mugda, Manda, and Demra.

Following a memorandum of understanding with the government of Japan in June and a follow-up meeting in December last year and another meeting in June this year, the Bangladesh government made a proposal to the Japan government in July this year for technical assistance to carry out the pre-feasibility study of this metro route.

MRT-4
The 16km underground metro line-4 stretches from Kamlapur to Narayanganj and the proposed route stretches along Dhaka-Narayanganj railway track. With the number of stations still unspecified, the government is looking for a prospective development partner to conduct the feasibility study and develop the transport facility.

metro5.jpg
 
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Hope they complete the first two line ASAP. And then start building the other lines without much foreign involvement.
 
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Ban rickshaws from the major roads to start with! I have seen rickshaws going over bridges and flyovers, slowing everyone else down in the process!!!
 
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Ban rickshaws from the major roads to start with! I have seen rickshaws going over bridges and flyovers, slowing everyone else down in the process!!!
People always say of banning Rickshaws, but they also love to ride it. Rickshaws should certainly be banned from the major roads. There are already some bans, but it does not cover probably all the major roads.

You cannot just ban Rickshaws because we have to think of their families, too. They live by the money that a puller earns. Rickshaws will automatically go away when the pullers find better jobs that pay more. So, industrialization is needed to create jobs for them.
 
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People always say of banning Rickshaws, but they also love to ride it. Rickshaws should certainly be banned from the major roads. There are already some bans, but it does not cover probably all the major roads.

You cannot just ban Rickshaws because we have to think of their families, too. They live by the money that a puller earns. Rickshaws will automatically go away when the pullers find better jobs that pay more. So, industrialization is needed to create jobs for them.

Yes I understand that it is how lot of people earn their livelihood and banning them outright would be inhuman without providing alternative opportunities. Ban them from all the major roads and implement the ban with proper policing, they can ply in the by lanes and side roads.
 
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Idiot, go through the pages of history including the results of the then Provinces of India in 1946 to know in which Provincial Capitals of now Pakistan the Muslim League won the election and formed a govt. Do not write your own history based on ignorance. Pakistan came first by conjoining two words. One is PAK meaning pure/holy, and STAN for land. 'I' was added later. It meant the land of pure.
There is NOT now and there was NEVER in past a letter I in the word Pakistan. Short vowels (zer, zabar, pesh) are not written (except when learning/teaching Urdu) as normal letters within the Urdu script; the reader must supply them from prior knowledge, in this instance I represents the sound made by zer (to prevent English speaker from mispronouncing PAKstan پاکستان پاک ستان). Pakistan name was coined on the 28th of January 1933 as Pakstan from initial letters from Punjab, Afghan inhabited KPK, Kashmir and Sindh + tan from BlochSTAN by Choudhary Rahmat Ali, a Pakistan Movement worker, it was published it in his pamphlet entitled ‘Now or Never: Are we to live or perish for ever?.


"Full text of the pamphlet "Now or Never," published by Choudhary Rahmat Ali as "Founder of Pakistan National Movement," in which the word "Pakistan" appears to have been used for the first time in a document (1933)



3, Humberstone Road,
Cambridge, England.
28th January, 1933

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am enclosing herewith an appeal on behalf of the thirty million Muslims of PAKISTAN, who live in the five Northern Units of India--Punjab, North-West Frontier (Afghan) Province, Kashmir, Sind, and Baluchistan. It embodies their demand for the recognition of their national status, as distinct from the other inhabitants of India, by the grant to Pakistan of a separate Federal Constitution on religious, social and historical grounds.

I shall be pleased if you will kindly acquaint me with your valuable opinion on the proposed solution of the great Hindu-Muslim problem. I trust that, vitally interested as you are in a just and permanent solution of that complex problem, the objects outlined in the appeal wiIl meet with your fullest approval and active support.

Yours truly,
Rahmat Ali (Choudhary). (Founder, Pakstan National Movement)
First issued 1933; reissued 1934"

Regarding "land of the pure" there is no concept of that anywhere in Pakistan except among illiterate mullahs, some semi-literate awaam, Wikipedia and those foreigners who want to ridicule Pakistan.

Why do you keep forgetting to explain your (outrageously false) claims about bangalis defeating Sikh Raj to free Punjab/KPK and establishing Bengal Presidency?
 
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Poster of Bangladeshi film , Fagun Haawai, based on 1952 Language Movement.

There are banners which say.. 'We don't accept Urdu, won't accept Urdu'.

The man in police dress in the poster is an Indian actor Yashpal Sharma. He plays Pakistani police in the film. All other actors are Bangladeshi actors.

46488102_175635393390562_197923247029747712_n.jpg
 
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^Bangladesh film going in the right direction. Keep making such films based on true stories, events, history!

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Pakistani girls reacting to Bangladeshi Superstar Shakib Khan’s film songs. (This won’t go too well with some of the Pakistanis on this forum :rofl:). I hope for their safety they don’t ever reveal their address.


 
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^Bangladesh film going in the right direction. Keep making such films based on true stories, events, history!

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Pakistani girls reacting to Bangladeshi Superstar Shakib Khan’s film songs. (This won’t go too well with some of the Pakistanis on this forum :rofl:). I hope for their safety they don’t ever reveal their address.



Pretty good gig this channel has going. All they do is react to Bangladeshi content and get hundreds of thousands of views from Bangladeshis.
 
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From 2010 to 2016, real household income in Bangladesh decreased.

Wonder which of these trends is more important to the overall well-being of a country?

https://opinion.bdnews24.com/2017/12/18/where-did-the-benefits-of-economic-growth-disappear/

according to HIES2016, each person at the household level actually received an income (household income divided by household size) that was 2 percent less than what they had received in 2010 and the real spending for consumption of each decreased by about 1 percent.
 
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From 2010 to 2016, real household income in Bangladesh decreased.

Wonder which of these trends is more important to the overall well-being of a country?

https://opinion.bdnews24.com/2017/12/18/where-did-the-benefits-of-economic-growth-disappear/

according to HIES2016, each person at the household level actually received an income (household income divided by household size) that was 2 percent less than what they had received in 2010 and the real spending for consumption of each decreased by about 1 percent.
If the average household income is going down while the rich class is rising, it shows the elite is ripping off the poor and the disparity is growing.
 
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