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BNP outlines 8 social policies
Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on Tuesday said that the fascist Awami League government had destroyed the country’s economy after 2009 and transformed it into the ‘mafia economy.’
www.newagebd.net
BNP outlines 8 social policies
It pledges family card, farmer card
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha . Dhaka 21 January, 2026, 00:35
Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on Tuesday said that the fascist Awami League government had destroyed the country’s economy after 2009 and transformed it into the ‘mafia economy.’
‘The country had been turned into a heaven for a small group, while banks were systematically looted. Huge amounts of money were taken out of the country from the banking sector and transferred abroad, where certain individuals became owners of huge assets and wealth. The economy of the country was turned into a mafia economy,’ he said.
Fakhrul made the remarks as the chief guest in a discussion titled ‘Policy Dissemination on Priority Social Policies.’
BNP organised the event at hotel Sheraton in Banani of Dhaka while diplomats from various countries took part in the discussion.
Fakhrul said that last 15 years of so-called development were characterized by bloodlessness, lack of accountability and corruption. The country was pushed into a state of unprecedented election rigging, where voters were effectively absent from the electoral system. The situation eventually led to the uprising of students and the people in July, which created a new hope and a new opportunity.
The BNP leader further said inside the country there was no significant employment and meaningful investment. He said BNP has been a pro-people and pro-development political party since the declaration of independence and has always moved forward, initiating political as well as economic reforms since its inception.
‘Today, the challenges are enormous, but BNP has already worked hard to prepare policies that will enable the shattered economy to grow in a civil and sustainable way.’
Fakhrul said that these policies would pave the way for sustainable development and empower lower-income people to rise. A new era would begin where a larger section of the population would participate in the economic development process under the concept of economic democratisation.
Member of the BNP chairperson’s advisory council Ziauddin Haider presented the keynote speech. In his speech, he shared BNP’s detailed social policy framework under its broader 31-point state repair agenda. The speech, advocating for a shift from divisive politics to outcome-based governance, outlines eight priority areas designed to address the daily struggles of citizens amid economic strain, high inflation, and rising poverty.
BNP’s eight core social policies include Family Card: A rights-based social protection scheme providing monthly support of Tk 2,000-2,500 to households via an adult woman; Krishok Card: A digital instrument to provide farmers with subsidised inputs, easier credit, insurance, and fair market access.
Besides, BNP announces a fully functional primary healthcare unit in every union and ward, enrolment in education to focus on learning quality, relevance, a youth-centred strategy linking skills training to SME growth, IT, the blue economy, and overseas employment, nation-building policy in sports by making physical education compulsory, a focus on large-scale water governance, mass tree plantation, and waste management and providing financial security and honorariums to religious leaders of all faiths.
BNP standing committee member Abdul Moyeen Khan, joint secretary general-foreign affairs Humayun Kabir, international affairs secretary Rashedul Haque, chairman’s advisory council member Mahdi Amin and Dhaka University pro-vice-chancellor for academic Professor Mamun Ahmed, among others, participated.
It pledges family card, farmer card
Bangladesh Sangbad Sangstha . Dhaka 21 January, 2026, 00:35
Bangladesh Nationalist Party secretary general Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir on Tuesday said that the fascist Awami League government had destroyed the country’s economy after 2009 and transformed it into the ‘mafia economy.’
‘The country had been turned into a heaven for a small group, while banks were systematically looted. Huge amounts of money were taken out of the country from the banking sector and transferred abroad, where certain individuals became owners of huge assets and wealth. The economy of the country was turned into a mafia economy,’ he said.
Fakhrul made the remarks as the chief guest in a discussion titled ‘Policy Dissemination on Priority Social Policies.’
BNP organised the event at hotel Sheraton in Banani of Dhaka while diplomats from various countries took part in the discussion.
Fakhrul said that last 15 years of so-called development were characterized by bloodlessness, lack of accountability and corruption. The country was pushed into a state of unprecedented election rigging, where voters were effectively absent from the electoral system. The situation eventually led to the uprising of students and the people in July, which created a new hope and a new opportunity.
The BNP leader further said inside the country there was no significant employment and meaningful investment. He said BNP has been a pro-people and pro-development political party since the declaration of independence and has always moved forward, initiating political as well as economic reforms since its inception.
‘Today, the challenges are enormous, but BNP has already worked hard to prepare policies that will enable the shattered economy to grow in a civil and sustainable way.’
Fakhrul said that these policies would pave the way for sustainable development and empower lower-income people to rise. A new era would begin where a larger section of the population would participate in the economic development process under the concept of economic democratisation.
Member of the BNP chairperson’s advisory council Ziauddin Haider presented the keynote speech. In his speech, he shared BNP’s detailed social policy framework under its broader 31-point state repair agenda. The speech, advocating for a shift from divisive politics to outcome-based governance, outlines eight priority areas designed to address the daily struggles of citizens amid economic strain, high inflation, and rising poverty.
BNP’s eight core social policies include Family Card: A rights-based social protection scheme providing monthly support of Tk 2,000-2,500 to households via an adult woman; Krishok Card: A digital instrument to provide farmers with subsidised inputs, easier credit, insurance, and fair market access.
Besides, BNP announces a fully functional primary healthcare unit in every union and ward, enrolment in education to focus on learning quality, relevance, a youth-centred strategy linking skills training to SME growth, IT, the blue economy, and overseas employment, nation-building policy in sports by making physical education compulsory, a focus on large-scale water governance, mass tree plantation, and waste management and providing financial security and honorariums to religious leaders of all faiths.
BNP standing committee member Abdul Moyeen Khan, joint secretary general-foreign affairs Humayun Kabir, international affairs secretary Rashedul Haque, chairman’s advisory council member Mahdi Amin and Dhaka University pro-vice-chancellor for academic Professor Mamun Ahmed, among others, participated.