Thursday, January 23

Author: Sumon Admin

Tourism rebounds on Eid vacationers
ENGLISH, Featured

Tourism rebounds on Eid vacationers

Tourism rebounds on Eid vacationers Suman Saha: Kuakata, the beachside tourist spot, is prepped up by tourism industry operators ahead of the Eid vacation. Photo: Banglar Chokh The tourism industry expects good business from the Eid as hotel and resort operators received a lot of bookings in the run-up to the festival, thanks to a stable political climate. “We expect an increased number of tourists during the Eid vacation,” said Omar Sultan, president of Cox's Bazar Hotel-Motel and Guesthouse Owners Association. Different hotels, motels and guesthouses in the beach city have sold 50 percent of the rooms for the July 31-August 1 duration, he said. The industry was hit hard last year due to volatile politics over the national election. Hoteliers are now hopeful of recovering losses s...
Home so far away
ENGLISH, Featured

Home so far away

They were killed in N'ganj, Munshiganj, Tangail, Noakhali and Bhola road crashes Online Report: A bus of Bhola Transport fells into a roadside ditch in Charfashion upazila of Bhola, killing four passengers on Tuesday. Photo: STAR As the time of spending the happiest days of the year came, 18 souls could not make it to their destinations this Eid-ul-Fitr. At least 18 people have died in road crashes in Narayanganj, Munshiganj, Tangail, Noakhali and Bhola during the Eid holiday. Four of them were killed in a road accident as a private car plunged into a roadside ditch in Shiddhirganj upazila of Narayanganj. The deceased are identified as -- Sumon, Pintu, Salam and Abdullah, reports our Narayanganj correspondent. The Chashara-bound car lost its control over the steering on Dhaka-Naray...
The world’s 10 most dangerous airlines
ENGLISH, Featured

The world’s 10 most dangerous airlines

The world's 10 most dangerous airlines Hamburg-based Jet Airliner Crash Data Evaluation Centre (JACDEC) annually ranks the safest and most unsafe 60 largest airlines in the world based on the number of accidents and incidents over the past 30 years - compared with passenger miles. It also factors in international safety benchmarks, such as the IOSA Audit and the USOAP country factor to calculate its rankings. This is their top 10 of the airlines with the worst records - as well as who's safest.  
Russia should be axed as World Cup hosts, says Clegg
Featured, London

Russia should be axed as World Cup hosts, says Clegg

World Cup - Clegg urges Russia 2018 axe Nick Clegg has joined calls for Russia to face the axe as hosts of the 2018 World Cup as part of tougher sanctions over the shooting down of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine. Nick Clegg said it was unthinkable at present that the 2018 World Cup could be held in Russia The Deputy Prime Minister said it was "unthinkable" at present that the tournament could go ahead in the country blamed by the West for supplying arms to the separatist rebels accused of causing the deaths of all 298 on board. Football's world governing body FIFA this week ruled out calls from some German politicians for Russia to be boycotted, insisting the tournament could be "a force for good". But Mr Clegg told The Sunday Times that allowing it to go a...
£40k for a holiday home – should you go for it?
ENGLISH, Featured

£40k for a holiday home – should you go for it?

A home in the sun for £40,000: Is it too good to be true? We look at the pros and cons of buying on the continent now it's become cheaper As the pound shoots up against the euro, the price of a bolthole on the continent is rapidly shedding its cost.Last summer the value of sterling was around €1.14, whereas it’s now hovering at €1.26.Coupled with a few years of falling prices in Europe and, suddenly, that farmhouse in the Tuscan Hills or villa next to the beach looks remarkably good value – especially when compared with overheated parts of the British market.It's entirely possible to pick up a property for as little as £40,000 in southern Italy and a home for less than £100,000 in Spain and Portugal (See gallery below). Perhaps it’s not surprising, then, that overseas property special...
Mesut Ozil’s donation sparks baffling charity money row
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Mesut Ozil’s donation sparks baffling charity money row

News Desk: Mesut Ozil reportedly gave away his £237,000 World Cup winnings, but there are conflicting reports as to just who the beneficiary is. The International Business Times mistakenly reported that Ozil, who helped Joachim Loew’s Germany to a 1-0 win over Argentina in the World Cup final, had donated his winnings to the children of Gaza – according to a story in the Middle East Monitor. Amid unrest in the Middle East, it was claimed that Ozil – who is of Turkish decent and a practising Muslim – was prepared to donate his semi-final and final winnings, which equate to a grand sum of £237,000, to the occupied territory. However, this was quickly proved to be false, and conflicting reports now suggest that charities in Brazil are the beneficiary of the Arsenal midfielder’s earnings. ...
This man is about to make millions off the World Cup
ENGLISH, Featured

This man is about to make millions off the World Cup

World Cup spray inventor ‘set to make millions’ Heine Allemagne (Pic: about.me/allemagne) International News Desk: The man who came up with the vanishing spray used at the World Cup is set to make millions from his quirky invention. Brazilian inventor Heine Allemagne came up with the clever idea after playing around with shaving foam after watching a World Cup qualifier in which the defenders constantly shuffled forward in the wall at free kicks. "I was watching Brazil v Argentina in 2000, and the commentator caught my attention when he said he wanted to see the day that the wall could be kept at the correct distance," he told Brazilian website Zero Hora. "I thought: 'There must be a way.' A cheap product, biodegradable, and marks that would go away after some time, to make ...
Whirlwind wedding: celebs who ‘did a Cheryl’
ENGLISH, Featured

Whirlwind wedding: celebs who ‘did a Cheryl’

Cheryl Cole and other speedy celebrity proposals and marriages Cheryl Cole and Jean-Bernard Fernandez-Versini News desk: Celebrities tend to live their lives at an accelerated speed - particularly when it comes to love. We're still getting over the shock news that Cheryl Cole has tied the knot with her partner of just three months, Jean-Bernard Fernandez-Versini. We barely had time to even acknowledge them as a couple before the X Factor judge sprung the news on us earlier this week with an Instagram post of her engagement and wedding rings! The pop star said 'I do' to the French restaurateur following their whirlwind romance, which started in May this year. "I usually do not discuss my personal life but to stop the speculation I want to s...
How to handle interview questions you can’t answer
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How to handle interview questions you can’t answer

Special Desk: The thought of not being able to answer an interview question is a scary one for many job applicants. It happens more often than you might think. Sometimes, you simply don't know the answer. In other cases, you may know, but your brain freezes. Being prepared for not being able to respond can help alleviate some of the anxiety, and help you make the most out of a difficult situation. Here's advice on what to do if you don't know or aren't sure how to respond to a question during a job interview. Don't Panic Your mind set going into any interview is a critical ingredient for success. Many candidates assume that they must have a near perfect interview in order to land the job. In reality, it helps to recognize that other interviewees will also have difficulty answering all ...
London

Probe into ‘stolen’ Barclays files

An investigation is under way after c onfidential files relating to customers of Barclays Bank were allegedly stolen and sold on to rogue City traders. The Mail on Sunday said highly sensitive information, including customers' earnings, savings, mortgages, health issues and insurance policies, ended up in the hands of unscrupulous brokers. The leak was exposed by an anonymous whistle-blower who passed the newspaper a memory st ick containing files on 2,000 of the bank's customers, it said. He claimed it was a sample from a stolen database of up to 27,000 files, which he said could be sold by shady salesmen for up to £50 per file. Each report is about 20 pages long, and among the victims are doctors, businessmen, scientists, a musician and a cleaner, the newspaper said. All the custome...