Dhaka Rushes: Protests against brutal Murder of Bangladeshi-American writer Avijit Roy
Protests against brutal Murder of Bangladeshi-American writer Avijit Roy
- News Shooter / Video Journalist
Dhaka, Bangladesh
3 reviews$300 - $600 / Day
Request QuoteMir Mukarram Hossain is a journalist and filmmaker based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. In a decade long career, he cruised through few prestigious local and international media outlets -The Daily Prothom Alo, online new media bdnews24.com, BBC, DW TV, AJplus, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, CBS, and few more production companies in home and abroad. Mir, a graduate in mass communication & journalism of the University of Dhaka is all set with his passion & profession of visual storytelling. His craftsmanship encompasses screenwriting, direction, producing and creating multimedia contents for any medium. His debut short film After 12 AM has premiered in Busan International Film Festival 2018, South Korea and the film will be available in Netflix soon. Alongside freelancing, he runs his own production company BOXOFFICE Multimedia Limited that renders audiovisual production solutions for corporate companies, government agencies, local & international NGOs.
Protests against brutal Murder of Bangladeshi-American writer Avijit Roy
The story is about one of the most populated city Dhaka which become empty for eid migration. No other city experienced it All its bus, train and lunch station become most crowded and people struggle to go their home. Over crowded vehicles leave stations but return empty. This one way journey makes the city almost empty. No other city, only Dhaka, a city of traffic jam become almost empty for eid.
A Buddhist temple in Dhaka offers Ifter during Ramadan in Dhaka where 90 % are Muslims. The monks of the temple get busy like other Muslim kitchen in Dhaka. This is a very rare and unique approach in Bangladesh. For last six year they are doing it.
Haunted by the Rana Plaza collapse Nasir Uddin Sohel could not face returning to a large factory. After receiving counselling from ILO he used his compensation money to set up his own small garment factory. A year on, the business has grown from two sewing machines to eight and he now employs six other Rana Plaza survivors.
As labour inspectors, Farzana Islam and her colleagues are on the front line to ensure the safety and rights of over four million ready-made garment workers in Bangladesh.
Badly injured while helping to rescue fellow workers from the rubble of Rana Plaza, Shahjahan Selim is now permanently disabled. Through ILO medical and business skills assistance Selim has overcome adversity to open a small shop which after just one year of operation has grown to twice its original size.
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