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Sunday, October 16, 2011

Right Share Form of United Airways BD Limited.




United Airways is an airline with its head office in the Uttara Tower in Uttara Thana, Dhaka, Bangladesh. It was founded in 2005 and began flights on 10 July 2007 with its first aircraft, a Dash 8-100, purchased from Island Air. The airline's first jet aircraft was a McDonnell Douglas MD-83. The airline received its first wide-body aircraft, an Airbus A310, in late 2010.


Recently United Airways offer Right share for its existing shareholders. And the last date of submission has been extend to 18th October, 2011. 

PLEASE CLICK BELOW LINK FOR THE FORM

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0BxZQqHZJdbIYYTk0YjI1NmQtNDA5Yi00Njk5LThhZTktMjhjNzEzZjk1NDg3&hl=en_GB

Thursday, September 15, 2011

RPO FORM OF BANGLADESH SHIPPING CORPORATION.

The Bangladesh Shipping Corporation (BSC), a state owned and managed public sector Corporation, is the largest ship owner in Bangladesh was established on 5th February 1972 under President’s Order No. 10 of 1972 with the objectives of providing efficient, safe, reliable and economic shipping services to the local exporters, importers and business houses, to develop sustainable shipping and ancillary infrastructures in a sovereign nation which just became independent on 16th December 1971 after a nine month long liberation war and thereby reducing dependence on foreign flag vessels to stop drainage of hard earned foreign exchange from the national exchequer.

Recently Bangladesh Shipping Corporation offer Repeat Public Offering (RPO) approved by SEC.

Please click the below link for Resident Bangladeshi RPO Form:

Please Click the below link for Non-Resident Bangladeshi RPO Form:

Bangladesh Bank’s Approval to more banks may horrify the monetary situation.


The proponents of the new banks argue that the new operators will infuse more competition into the banking industry and thus bring benefits to the clients. "The (Bangladesh Bank) Board has finalized a set of guidelines including new conditions with the older regulations," said A F M Asaduzzaman, a deputy general manager in the governor's office. "The old regulations have been amended substantially.

Later, a senior official who did not want to be named said the new banks would require a minimum paid-up capital of Tk 400 crore from its sponsors. "And in three years, they have to go public," said the official, who attended the Board meeting, "and raise an amount equal to the paid-up capital." The official said the new guidelines took a tough line against "loan and tax defaulters" and would not allow anyone even with a family member having such a record.

Those criticizing the move say the already overcrowded market does not need new ones and that the initiative is designed to dole out favors to political friends. Two former governors have locked horns over the issue, with Mohammed Farashuddin backing it while Salehuddin Ahmed denouncing it.

The finance minister, A M A Muhith, has already responded to the debate saying that it is a "political decision" to create new banks. Asked, whether any politician would be benefited from the initiatives, he told a reporter on July 24: "Maybe, I don't know." Muhith did not say how many new banks will be allowed. The minister had earlier announced in parliament that the government would issue new banking licenses despite strong insistence from the central bank that no more banks were necessary.

There are 47 banks operating in Bangladesh, alongside hundreds of other financial services companies. The last time new banks were created was during the 1996–2001 Awami League rule. Since then, the central bank has received 82 applications for licenses. Of them, 20 have been filed since the Awami League returned power in Jan 2009. The Sheikh Hasina government has recently established a new bank for the welfare of expatriates. The prime minister has announced setting up of another with expatriates' capitals.After the independence, the number of banks in the country had been six. The country had gotten first private banks after privatisation of Pubali and Uttara banks during military strongman Hussein Muhammad Ershad's regime. Ershad took the number of private banks to nine. BNP, between 1991 and 1996, gave permission to another eight.

The 1996-2001 Awami League set up as many as 13 more.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

INDIAN OPPOSITION WINS INTERMS OF TEESTA

Manmohan Singh arrived in Dhaka on Tuesday on a two-day trip, accompanied by the minister for external affairs and four chief ministers of the bordering states. He is reciprocating the visit of prime minister Sheikh Hasina to India in January last year.

Indian water resources minister Pawan Kumar Bansal and West-Bengal chief minister, who were in the list of the entourage of the Indian prime minister, did not come as Mamata was apparently testy over the proposed modalities of the Teesta water sharing.

The prime ministers had one-on-one meeting before and after the official talks on the Day-1 of his tour. After the meeting, both the prime ministers signed framework agreement on cooperation for development, and witnessed signing of one protocol, addendum of one protocol and eight memoranda of understanding.

However, following strong opposition from West-Bengal chief minister Mamata Banerjee, Bangladesh and India could not sign the agreements on Teesta and Feni water sharing. Manmohan in his speech said, "Our common rivers need not be sources of discord, instead can become the harbingers of prosperity to both the countries. "We have decided to continue discussions to reach a mutually acceptable, fair and amicable arrangement for the sharing of the waters of Teesta and Feni rivers."

International affairs adviser to the prime minister Gowher Rizvi, one of the key coordinators of the Indian premier's visit, said some consultations were needed in India before the agreement was signed. "We have agreed in principle on the modalities of the agreement and are hopeful of signing the deal within couple of months," he said. When asked if Bangladesh sought any explanation from India, he said, "There is no need to seek explanation. We understand the reality." "We had landmark success in the visit and now it is time to celebrate," he said.

Indian foreign secretary Ranjan Mathai in Delhi on Monday said any agreement between New Delhi and Dhaka on sharing of the Teesta water would have to be acceptable to the West Bengal government as well as to Bangladesh. He, however, said the proposed deal on sharing of the water of Feni between Bangladesh and India was on track. But he was non-committal on the deal on Teesta. "Water is a very sensitive issue. Nothing is done or will be done without the consent of the state government," Mathai told journalists, in response to a query whether the deal on Teesta would be signed during prime minister Manmohan Singh's visit to Dhaka.

The government signed a protocol to implement the land boundary agreement signed in 1974. Manmohan said, "We have signed a Protocol to the Land Boundary Agreement (LBA) of 1974. With this, both the countries have now demarcated the entire land boundary as well as resolved the issue of status of the enclaves and adversely possessed areas." He continued, "As the prime minister Sheikh Hasina just announced, we have worked out 24-hour access to the enclaves of Dahagram-Angarpota through the Tin Bigha Corridor."

Hasina earlier in her speech said "I would like to announce that from now on, our people in Dahagram and Angorpota will have 24-hour unfettered movement through the Tin Bigha Corridor." The land boundary problems have persisted since 1947, and to resolve the issue, a joint headcount was conducted recently that found about 51,000 people live in these enclaves – 34,000 in Bangladesh and 17,000 in India. Bangladesh has 111 Indian enclaves and India houses 51 Bangladeshi enclaves.

Dhaka and Delhi did not exchange any 'letter' on transit to pave the way for smooth movement of goods through Bangladesh. Asked if Bangladesh did not agree on transit as India did not sign water agreement, Gowher Rizvi said, "Our relationship is based on trust. We don't believe in such relationship where if you don't get anything you will reciprocate by not giving other things."

Friday, September 2, 2011

NO FROM INDIAN OPPOSITION FOR THE TEESTA TREATY.



The AGP president Chandra Mohan Patowary said that people of Assam would "oppose tooth and nail" any move by India's central government in New Delhi to give away even "an inch of land" of Bangladesh, even if such an initiative was endorsed by the State Government headed by Gogoi.

The AGP – a regional party – staged a protest demonstration in Guwahati on Monday, denouncing the purported move by New Delhi to strike a swap-deal with Dhaka to resolve the issues related land boundary. Patowary said that any such a move on the part of the governments in the centre and the state could lead to serious turmoil in Assam.

Even the BJP – the principal opposition party in Indian parliament – strongly opposed New Delhi's purported plan to strike an exchange agreement with Dhaka to settle the issues related to enclaves and adversely possessed land between Bangladesh and India. Pradyut Bora, the general secretary of the BJP's state unit in Assam, said that the party would oppose the government's plan both legally and politically.

With purported illegal migration from Bangladesh to India and alleged encroachment of Indian territories by people of Bangladesh along the Bangladesh-India border being a major political issue in Assam, both the AGP and BJP are likely to step up their offensives against the Congress governments in the state and centre, protesting their moves to settle the issues between New Delhi and Dhaka by a give-and-take formula.

There are 111 Indian enclaves in Bangladesh with 17,160 acres of land and a population of about 37000 people. India on the other hand has 51 Bangladeshi enclaves with 7110 acres of land and a population of about 14000 people.

Altogether 1880.81 acres of Indian land are in adverse possession of Bangladesh. India adversely possesses 1165.49 acres of land of Bangladesh.


During prime minister Sheikh Hasina's visit to New Delhi in Jan 2010, Bangladesh and India agreed to comprehensively address all outstanding land boundary issues, keeping in view the spirit of the 1974 Land Boundary Agreement. The Bangladesh-India Joint Boundary Working Group has since been trying to work out a swap deal to resolve the border dispute once and for all.

Teesta flows through Sikkim and northern part of West Bengal before entering Bangladesh.

As West Bengal is also largely dependent on Teesta for irrigation and hydropower generation, India's central government has been factoring in the views of the state government while negotiating the interim treaty with Bangladesh for sharing of the water of the river.

Monday, August 29, 2011

IPO FORM OF ZAHINTEX INDUSTRIES LTD.

Zahintex Industries Ltd is a 100% export oriented readynade garment company in Bangladesh. Zahintex wants to increase its capital by 500 million Tk. Therefore it issue IPO to the General Public.

Please click the below link for the Resident Bangladeshis IPO form:

Please click the below link for the Non-Resident Bangladeshis IPO form:

Sunday, August 14, 2011

DHAKA - MYMENSINGH Highway is Most NEGLECTED Highway.


The BUS owners stopped bus operations on 12 routes along the Dhaka-Mymensingh highway demanding repair of the road to make it fit for running the vehicles. A strike by the bus operators spelled indescribable woes for Dhaka-bound commuters from Gazipur and Mymensingh districts on Thursday. Osman Ali, a leader of Mohakhali Bus Terminal Transport Owners' Association, told bdnews24.com that they would keep their vehicles off the road until it is repaired.

Around 300 buses run on the highway to carry about 25,000 passengers daily On Thursday, many passengers had to walk from Boardbazar in Gazipur to Chandona Chourasta as some inter-district buses were running from there. Many students from Gazipur did not attend classes because of the transport problem. Mohakhali Bus Terminal Transport Owners' Association secretary Mohammad Abul Kalam told bdnews24.com that the highway from Gazipur to Mymensingh is unfit for driving. "Recently 15-16 of our buses developed engines problems due to water-logged road. We had to spend Tk 70-75 thousand to repair each of them," he said.


"That's why we stopped operating buses bound for Mymensingh, Jamalpur, Kishoreganj, Netrokona and some northern districts," Kalam said. General secretary of Bangladesh Road Transport Association (Gazipur branch) Kamrul Ahsan Russell said they had submitted a memorandum to the communications minister seeking solutions to the problem, but no steps have been taken yet. Executive engineer of Gazipur Roads and Highways Department Mohammad Fazle Rabbi blamed unplanned establishment of industries and lack of drainage system along the highway for its rundown condition. "Some of the dyeing and washing factories are discharging waste through drains towards the roadside creating water-logging," he said.

The grater Mymensingh region is always treated as ignored area to the Government. No Government take proper step to develop this region. The result is the FOUR day strike running by the BUS Owners of grater Mymensingh locality due to demand for repairing the highway.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

IPO FORM OF RANGPUR DAIRY & FOOD PRODUCTS LTD.


Milk Producers


Change in life styles of rural families in terms of:
• Regular high income through co-operative efforts
• Women participation in income generation
• Remunerative prices for milk
• Increase of milk productivity through input and extension activities

Customers

• Timely Supply of Quality & Healthy Products
• Supply high quality milk and milk products at affordable prices
• Focused on Nutritional Foods
• More than 7 lakh happy customers
• High customer satisfaction

Employees

• Enhancing the Technical and Managerial skills of Employees through continuous training and development
• Best appraisal systems to motivate employees
• Incentive, bonus and reward systems to encourage employees

Please click the below link for the IPO form for Resident Bangladeshi:

 
Please click the below link for the IPO form for Non-Resident Bangladeshi:
 
https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0BxZQqHZJdbIYMGIzOGVjYzktZDRiNy00YTAyLWFiZjAtYTk2NGViMTJiMjk2&hl=en_US

Monday, July 25, 2011

Bombardier Aerospace CASE STUDY.

The background of the case started with the strategic alliance between Bombardier Aerospace and NATO. After the agreement, NATO Flight Training in Canada (NFTC) started its operation at summer 2002 as Ground Based Flight Training School in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan and Cold lake, Alberta.

NFTC students were instructed in a series of modules commencing with ground-based training followed by in-air instruction. Students typically graduated following instruction on a series of aircrafts. This instruction began on a turbo prop Harvard T-6 aircraft built by Raytheon Aircraft Company out of Wichita, Kansas, followed by the single engine British Aerospace Hawk aircraft and then ultimately onto powerful fighter aircraft such as the McDonnell Douglas CF-18. The program’s duration of 18 months typically required the students to live in shared rooms on the military base.















Please click the below link for details.

https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&pid=explorer&chrome=true&srcid=0BxZQqHZJdbIYMDk5NjkxMzYtMzM3Ny00M2IwLTk0YzctMjRlZGQ2NDBjZWI3&hl=en_US

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

RAB declared the Hasina GOB as TERRORIST.


On May 19, prime minister's defence advisor Tarique Ahmed Siddique said Limon and father had close ties with gangster Morshed Jamaddar. Two days later, home minister Shahara Khatun said the adviser's remarks about Limon was indeed the Government's statement. Bozlul Haq Harun, a Government MP, elected from Jhalakati-1 helped Limon and his family (Prothom-Alo 25/05/2011). If this is the consequence than Government has a close relation with Terrorism Groups.

The home ministry's inquiry committee looking into the RAB shooting of college student Limon Hossain of Jhalakati has taken statements of Limon and his father. The one-man committee of additional divisional commissioner of Barisal Mohammad Shawkat Akbar on Tuesday spoke to Limon and his father Tofazzal Hossain at the National Institute of Traumatology, Orthopaedics and Rehabilitation (Pangu hospital) in Dhaka from 11:30am to 1:30pm. The father and son signed their statements, he said. Physician Gazi Mohammad Enamul Haque was present during the recording of the statements.


A RAB team shot Limon, who used to work in a brick kiln, in the leg after reportedly taking him to a place adjacent to his house at Jamaddarhat in Rajapur upazila of Jhalakati on Mar 23. The paramilitary force denies the charges. The incident took place less than a fortnight before his Higher Secondary Certificate examinations were set to begin.

RAB filed two cases against the teenager — one under the arms act and the other for making attempts to murder and injure RAB personnel. Limon's mother Henuara Begum on Apr 10 filed an attempt-to-murder case against six RAB men. "I WENT TO BRING HOME MY COW" After giving his statement, Limon told reporters that a RAB member had shot him in the left leg when he had gone near the Old Jamaddarhat Bridge to bring home his cow. "The RAB member wore a name tag that read 'Lutfar'," he said.

Friday, May 20, 2011

GOVERNMENT WILL PROVIDE FIRMING LOAN TRHOUGH MICROCREDIT PROCESS.

 
A planning is under process to disburse small loans to small entrepreneurs in the fisheries and livestock sector by the government. "The ministry is preparing a proposal in this regard," fisheries and livestock minister Abdul Latif Biswas told on Thursday. Loans ranging from Tk 10,000 to 30,000 would be given to unemployed but trained youths and farm entrepreneurs, he said.

"If the entrepreneurs want to raise livestock, poultry or farm fish, half of their loans will be provided in cash, while the livestock with the rest," Biswas said. The fund will, however, be a revolving one. It will begin work by coordinating all the running microcredit programmes under the ministry.

"The programme, if approved, could start operating in as early as July," Biswas said. The programme will emphasise raising goats and sheep, as entrepreneurs are seen to show more interest in such livestock. Officials said the ministry had been disbursing financial aid and loans to the sector, but there was no coordination. The target of this microcredit project was to create employments for youths not involved in farming.


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