Wednesday 9 June 2010

Speeding stupidity of Bangladeshi courts and government

I read an article about the government planning to install speed monitoring devices to vehicles in Bangladesh. This is space age stuff for a bronze age country.

I can't simply understand the stupidity of this idea that they will monitor the speed of vehicles from a control center(s). LOL. Just imagine if these guys had some brain cells shared amongst them. They could have gone to Mars now. Screw NASA. These guy's are it! I mean really - is it really practical, feasible for a country like BD? In fact has such a thing been done anywhere in the world? I think not.



What is it trying to solve? The speeding problem and the killing of pedestrians. Right so fitting a remotely supervised monitor will solve this. Dream on. Instead of solving the utter lawlessness of the roads in Bangladesh again we are attacking the symptom instead of the cause. Bit like us fitting grills to all the windows in BD.

Another screwed up aspect is that the High Court ordered that the government have speed limiters fitted to all vehicles in the first place. Why have a parliament? Well I know the BD parliament is ineffective but seriously why don't we have judges just create laws in response lawsuits filed at the civil servants.

How stupid can it get? This is Bangladesh. It can only get worse.....

Bangladeshi buildings - deaths traps (fires and sudden collapses)



As you know by now the unfortunate incident of building blazes in Nimtoli, Dhaka.

We in Bangladesh are very lucky that such incidences are relatively rare considering the sheer unplanned nature of the whole country.

We have so many things going against us.
1. Road widths and the ever encroachment of the roads. The roads in Nimtoli, if you've ever been here, are in some parts so ridiculously narrow that rickshaws could have trouble. How are fire engines supposed to get to them?

2. Grills hinder any form of escape. In Bangladesh the fear of criminals makes all building owners turn their property into a modern prison with iron grills on all windows. This blocks any form of exit. Why do we need them above say 3 stories? Why do we need them at all? Instead of solving the crime problem we instead live with it and decide to solve the threat.

3. Overhead electricity. If as it is suggested that it was due to a transformer blowing up - then again there is no planning as to the location of theses transformers. Just place them on stilts - sometimes within arms reach of a building facade.

4. Zoning of commercial, industrial, residential properties. Apparently chemicals and other commerical substances in some buildings helped intensify the fire. This is my main bugbear. You can hear the media and the bangla masses blame the government - they should do something about the causes of fire. Well simple planning rules were demanded and enforced by civilized people of civilized nations over a century ago in other parts of the world. Here in BD we lay the blame solely on the government. Why don't the people demand proper zoning of buildings? and enforce them - themselves? Do they complain when someone rents the ground floor out as a shop? No - because they are doing the same. Bloody hypocrites.

We also had the building collapse the other day. The tilting buildings in Begunbari are now being demolished. Other's without approved plans will be demolished. What really will happen is that those unplanned building owners will now be spending five times as much in bribes to get their plans approved. Making those in the planning department even more fat and the whole story will be forgotten about.

So now there is a drive to make sure unsafe buildings are safe. The very concept of a building in Bangladesh is unsafe - it's clad in metal bars on all sides with a dodgy road that fire engines cannot get to. Together with a shop or some kind of commercial outfit usually on the ground floor. Not to forget the eyesore of a transformer on stilts outside the building - that's probably had a truck reverse into it so its leaning to the side a bit.

Of course they should do something about it. They being the government. Nothing for us, the public, to do is there?!

Another media outlet shut - this time Amar Desh




So not content with closing Channel 1 they have now gone after Amar Desh. Whatever the problems with the editor and acting editor may have been it does not justify closing down of a newspaper.

One can only conclude that it is because it is a BNP leaning paper the reason it was shut down. Couple of things to note tho.

1. Why is the law so stupid that it warrants the closure of a newspaper? What about the job, the economics, the freedom of speech. (I know, I know - Bangladeshi bureaucrats don't give a toss about that!! - I'm just baffled it's - 2010)

2. What have the other media outlets done - both AL & BNP leaning media outlets? They could have all gone on strikes or some kind of movement. How about a standard banner on front page criticising the government of ALL papers published in Bangladesh until they re-instate Amar Desh? What the AL leaning papers don't realise is that if the law and the lawmakers are not resolved over this then it will be their turn next time BNP are in power.

I'll finish with two sentences: Amar Desh - history. Amar Sonar Bangla - the future! LOL!