Bangladesh: বাংলাদেশ, officially the People's
Republic of Bangladesh (Bengali: গণপ্রজাতন্ত্রী বাংলাদেশ Gônoprojatontri Bangladesh) is
a sovereign state located in South Asia. It is bordered by India and Burma and
by the Bay of Bengal to the south. The capital (and largest city) is Dhaka,
located in central Bangladesh. The official state language is Bengali. The name
Bangladesh means "Land of Bengal" or "Country of
Bengal" in the Bengali language, from Bangla "Bengal" and
desh holding a dual meaning of "land" and "country".
The borders of present-day Bangladesh were established
with the partition of Bengal during the reign and demise of the British India.
Its map was chartered by Sir Cyril Radcliffe during the creation of Pakistan
and India in 1947, when the region became East Pakistan, part of the newly
formed nation of Pakistan. Due to political exclusion and economic exploitation
by the politically dominant West Pakistan, popular agitation grew against West
Pakistan and led to the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, after the
Bangladeshi Declaration of Independence on 26 March 1971. With the intervention
of the Indian Army, the war came to an end on 16 December 1971 with the
surrender of the Pakistan Army at Ramna Race Course.
Bangladesh is a parliamentary democracy, with an
elected parliament called the Jatiyo Sangshad.
It is the ninth-most populous country and among the most densely populated
countries in the world. Just like in the rest of South Asia the poverty rate
prevails, although the United Nations has acclaimed Bangladesh for achieving
tremendous progress in human development. Geographically, the country straddles
the fertile Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta and is subject to annual monsoon floods
and cyclones.
The country is listed among the Next Eleven economies.
It is a founding member of the South Asian Association for Regional
Cooperation, BCIM, the D-8 and BIMSTEC, and a member of the Commonwealth of
Nations, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the Non-Aligned Movement.
However, Bangladesh continues to face a number of major challenges, including
widespread political and bureaucratic corruption, widespread poverty, and an
increasing danger of hydrologic shocks brought on by ecological vulnerability
to climate change.
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