20/02/2026
For years, people in these areas have lived disconnected from the basic facilities guaranteed to other Bangladeshi citizens - reliable healthcare, quality education, proper roads, security, and equal access to justice. Development reaches slowly. Protection arrives late. Accountability often never comes.
For indigenous women and little childrens, the burden is even heavier. They are the one who suffers the most, land dispossession, insecurity, and systemic neglect - while carrying families, culture, and community on their shoulders. Their resilience is powerful, but resilience should not be a substitute for rights.
Justice is not a demand for sympathy. It is a demand for equality. Equal citizenship. Equal protection. Equal dignity. These hills are not remote. They are not separate. They are Bangladesh. And the people who live here deserve the same rights, the same services, and the same justice as anyone else. i implore the new government to ensure equal rights and extend support to our Bangladeshi Mothers, Sisters and Childrens living on the Hill tracts.
(05/02/2026)