DYING IN DHAKA

Afsan Chowdhury is a Bangladeshi liberation war researcher, columnist and journalist.

Published on

The capital of Bangladesh, Dhaka, is a killer city and shows no sign of letting up on its homicidal spree. Every day, newspapers report of one death or another as people fall to everything from bullets, berserk trucks, to less prosaic ones like slum fires. Nevertheless, such a dangerous place has not deterred a high migration rate to the city from the rest of the country. Either the state of life in Dhaka has not been well advertised or it's really much worse out there.

And Dhaka doesn't just kill people or murder them through conventional mayhem. There is a more dangerous killer at work and one that works at a slow but sure pace: pollution. Air quality has reached a point where parts of Dhaka have deservingly earned the distinction of being among the most lethal places to breathe in the entire world. The only people who seem to be glad about this killer pollution are the mask makers, as hundreds of Dhaka residents go around sporting this useless protection against the foul air; the one thing it does well is hide the citizens' grimaces. The mask is also a symbol of the state of things: the protection the people can access can't save them.

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