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The Bangladesh Employees Welfare Board was established on 29 January 2004. [2] In 2013, protestors from Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh and Hefazat-e-Islam Bangladesh damaged 53 buses of the board kept at its depot at Dilkusha. The government announced plans to build a 30-story highrise to generate income for the board. [3]
[6] [7] The Anti-Corruption Commission of Bangladesh is crippled by the 2013 amendment of the Anti Corruption Commission Act introduced by the ruling Awami League government, which makes it necessary for the commission to obtain permission from the government to investigate or file any charge against government bureaucrats or politicians. [8]
The Government agencies in Bangladesh are state controlled organizations that act independently to carry out the policies of the Government of Bangladesh. The Government Ministries are relatively small and merely policy-making organizations, allowed to control agencies by policy decisions. Some of the work of the government is carried out ...
Non government teachers contribute six percent of their salaries to the trust for a retirement fund that will be available to them after retirement and with additional funding from the government of Bangladesh. In April 2019, the government increased it to ten percent which was protested by the Bangladesh Shikkhak Union, a teachers union. [8 ...
Government of Bangladesh: Headquarters: Bangladesh Secretariat, Dhaka: ... Bangladesh Employees Welfare Board (BKKB) Bangladesh Public Administration Training Centre ...
The Regulation of Salary of Employees Laws Repeal Ordinance, 1977; The Export Promotion Bureau Ordinance, 1977 [Repealed] The Bangladesh Travel Agencies (Registration and Control) Ordinance, 1977 [Repealed] The Housing and Building Research Institute Ordinance, 1977; The Rural Electrification Board Ordinance, 1977 [Repealed]
Bangladesh Shikkhak Union, a teachers union, protested the government order to increase the contribution to the pension fund from six percent of their salary to ten percent in 2019. [4] This move was protested by another union of teachers called National Front of Teachers and Employees when it was first proposed in 2017. [5]
The Anti-Corruption Commission of Bangladesh is crippled by the 2013 amendment [225] of the Anti Corruption Commission Act introduced by the ruling Awami League government, which makes it necessary for the commission to obtain permissions from the government to investigate or file any charge against government bureaucrats or politicians.