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Fading colours: Bangladesh’s threatened rickshaw art

Fading colours: Bangladesh’s threatened rickshaw art

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Fading colours: Bangladesh's threatened rickshaw art

But many fear that despite being added by the United Nations cultural agency this month to its list of intangible cultural heritage, the colourful craft is fading in the face of faster, modern motorised rickshaws.

Rickshaw mechanic Mohammad Sabuj, 40, says he is mourning the decline in the “beautiful” paintings, which adorn the vehicles’ carriage covers, seats and footrests.

“It has become rare nowadays,” he said. “When I was younger, rickshaws were full of colourful art and designs – but nowadays the trend has fallen.”

Rickshaw driver Shahid Ullah, 72, has been pedalling his bike for half a century through the congested and narrow streets of Dhaka, a city of around 20 million people.

But as people switch to cars and buses for transport – or motorised Chinese-made rickshaws without the same space on the frame to carry the art – his trade is disappearing.

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Dying art

Ullah welcomed the UNESCO decision this month to recognise the art, which it called a “key part of the city’s cultural tradition and a dynamic form of urban folk art, providing inhabitants with a sense of shared identity”.

The rickshaw art was one of dozens of practices that made UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list on December 6, alongside Italian opera singing, Peru’s ceviche seafood dish, Thailand’s Songkran New Year festival and Ivory Coast’s traditional loincloth weaving.

“It’s a good thing for us,” Ullah said. “We feel proud.”

UNESCO South Asia chief Tim Curtis said that rickshaw painting was “under threat”, and that the listing would help boost the craft by “finding innovative and sustainable ways of keeping this living heritage alive”.

Increasing costs of fuel and other basic goods have hit the craft hard, said mechanic Sabuj.

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“Drivers need to pay more to the rickshaw owners than before and the design also requires more money now,” he said.

Depending on the complexity of the design, painting costs between $45-$90 – as much as a third of the cost of a new bicycle rickshaw, which costs around $230-270.

Painting costs are usually borne by the owner, who rents bikes out to drivers.

A new motorised rickshaw is more expensive – between $750-900 – but they are seen as earning a quicker return.

Abdul Motaleb, another rickshaw driver, said people admired the art but still used modern transport including the packed metro system.

“People prefer faster vehicles,” Motaleb said.

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Rickshaw artist Hanif Pappu, 62, said the number of youngsters coming to learn the trade had slumped.

“Now no one sends their children to learn this art,” he said. “They see that the trainers themselves are starving.”

For Pappu, the UNESCO listing will not halt the decline.

“It came too late,” he said. “Rickshaw painting is dying in the country.”

‘Raw creation’

With the rickshaws weaving through the chaotic roads of Dhaka, Pappu said the paintings were a roving art exhibition carrying the creator’s message to a mobile audience.

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“Look at this, it’s a message of peace,” he said, pointing to a painting of a tranquil rural scene with birds and a house that he said was a reminder in the busy city of the countryside many had left behind to find jobs.

“It’s a message of a happy family,” he added. “We try to give such messages in our work.”

He is proud of the colourful creations, which he has been painting since he was a boy, recalling how movie posters were once popular designs.

“It is a heritage of Bangladesh,” he said. “It is our own raw creation.”

But Pappu worries for the future.

“I could have left this work for the sufferings I faced, but I didn’t because I feel it is now mixed with my blood. Will anyone stay in this profession for 55 years like I did?” he said.

“If this trend continues, this industry will vanish. It won’t survive.”

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Vibrant greens and swirling yellows, film stars, birds and architecture: Bangladesh’s bicycle rickshaw drivers have for decades used their transport as a unique moving canvas of urban folk art.

But many fear that despite being added by the United Nations cultural agency this month to its list of intangible cultural heritage, the colourful craft is fading in the face of faster, modern motorised rickshaws.

Rickshaw mechanic Mohammad Sabuj, 40, says he is mourning the decline in the “beautiful” paintings, which adorn the vehicles’ carriage covers, seats and footrests.

“It has become rare nowadays,” he said. “When I was younger, rickshaws were full of colourful art and designs – but nowadays the trend has fallen.”

Rickshaw driver Shahid Ullah, 72, has been pedalling his bike for half a century through the congested and narrow streets of Dhaka, a city of around 20 million people.

But as people switch to cars and buses for transport – or motorised Chinese-made rickshaws without the same space on the frame to carry the art – his trade is disappearing.

Advertisement

Dying art

Ullah welcomed the UNESCO decision this month to recognise the art, which it called a “key part of the city’s cultural tradition and a dynamic form of urban folk art, providing inhabitants with a sense of shared identity”.

The rickshaw art was one of dozens of practices that made UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list on December 6, alongside Italian opera singing, Peru’s ceviche seafood dish, Thailand’s Songkran New Year festival and Ivory Coast’s traditional loincloth weaving.

“It’s a good thing for us,” Ullah said. “We feel proud.”

UNESCO South Asia chief Tim Curtis said that rickshaw painting was “under threat”, and that the listing would help boost the craft by “finding innovative and sustainable ways of keeping this living heritage alive”.

Increasing costs of fuel and other basic goods have hit the craft hard, said mechanic Sabuj.

Advertisement

“Drivers need to pay more to the rickshaw owners than before and the design also requires more money now,” he said.

Depending on the complexity of the design, painting costs between $45-$90 – as much as a third of the cost of a new bicycle rickshaw, which costs around $230-270.

Painting costs are usually borne by the owner, who rents bikes out to drivers.

A new motorised rickshaw is more expensive – between $750-900 – but they are seen as earning a quicker return.

Abdul Motaleb, another rickshaw driver, said people admired the art but still used modern transport including the packed metro system.

“People prefer faster vehicles,” Motaleb said.

Advertisement

Rickshaw artist Hanif Pappu, 62, said the number of youngsters coming to learn the trade had slumped.

“Now no one sends their children to learn this art,” he said. “They see that the trainers themselves are starving.”

For Pappu, the UNESCO listing will not halt the decline.

“It came too late,” he said. “Rickshaw painting is dying in the country.”

‘Raw creation’

With the rickshaws weaving through the chaotic roads of Dhaka, Pappu said the paintings were a roving art exhibition carrying the creator’s message to a mobile audience.

Advertisement

“Look at this, it’s a message of peace,” he said, pointing to a painting of a tranquil rural scene with birds and a house that he said was a reminder in the busy city of the countryside many had left behind to find jobs.

“It’s a message of a happy family,” he added. “We try to give such messages in our work.”

He is proud of the colourful creations, which he has been painting since he was a boy, recalling how movie posters were once popular designs.

“It is a heritage of Bangladesh,” he said. “It is our own raw creation.”

But Pappu worries for the future.

“I could have left this work for the sufferings I faced, but I didn’t because I feel it is now mixed with my blood. Will anyone stay in this profession for 55 years like I did?” he said.

“If this trend continues, this industry will vanish. It won’t survive.”

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Estonia summons Russian embassy chief over GPS jamming

Estonia summons Russian embassy chief over GPS jamming

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Estonia summons Russian embassy chief over GPS jamming

Estonia’s foreign ministry has summoned the head of the Russian embassy in Tallinn to protest the jamming of GPS signals, the Baltic country said on Wednesday.

Estonia accuses neighbouring Russia of violating international regulations by disturbing GPS navigation in airspace above the Baltic states, echoing concerns from airlines that say they have contended with such interference for months.

The Estonian foreign ministry on Wednesday summoned Russia’s charge d’affaires to convey its message. Moscow and Tallinn last year expelled each other’s ambassadors as relations deteriorated in the wake of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

“Jamming the GPS signal is an element of Russia’s hybrid activities, disrupting everyday life and threatening the security of allies,” Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said in a statement.

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Russia’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

GPS, short for Global Positioning System, is a network of satellites and receiving devices used for positioning, navigation and timing on Earth in everything from ships and planes to cars.

The jamming of GPS signals can be disruptive to commercial airliners but they can usually navigate by other means.

Finnish carrier Finnair last month said it would pause all flights to Tartu in Estonia to allow the local airport to upgrade its navigation system, which has so far relied only on GPS.

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Australia boosts funds to Taiwan-ally Tuvalu amid Pacific contest for influence with China

Australia boosts funds to Taiwan-ally Tuvalu amid Pacific contest for influence with China

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Australia boosts funds to Taiwan-ally Tuvalu amid Pacific contest for influence with China

Australia will quadruple its financial assistance to Tuvalu, a Pacific Island nation at risk from rising seas, to cement a landmark climate migration and security deal as China also courts small island states.

On a visit to Tuvalu, foreign minister Penny Wong said on Wednesday evening Australia has committed A$110 million ($72.27 million) in its national budget to Tuvalu.

The sum includes A$50 million ($32.85 million) to build the first undersea cable connecting the island’s residents to global telecommunications services, and A$19 million for a land reclamation project to fortify Tuvalu’s coastline from rising seas.

Another A$15 million will be spent on a national security coordination centre, as well as A$10 million in direct budget support.

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The funding is a significant boost on the A$17 million ($11.17 million) Australia provided to Tuvalu in 2023-24.

China’s ambitions for a greater security presence in the Pacific became an election issue in Tuvalu in January, as two leadership contenders said Tuvalu should consider switching ties from Taiwan to Beijing for more funds, and revise a new security pact with Australia.

Neighbour Nauru cut ties with Taiwan a fortnight before Tuvalu’s vote, after China built a port and promised more aid.

Tuvalu’s new prime minister Feleti Teo pledged to stick with Taiwan, and to ratify the Falepili Union signed with Australia in November. The treaty allows Tuvalu citizens to migrate to Australia for work or study, while recognising Tuvalu continues to exist despite the rising sea levels.

“Australia has provided a security guarantee to support Tuvalu in a humanitarian disaster, a pandemic or the event of attack,” Wong said in a speech on Wednesday evening.

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“It is also the first time in history that two nations have agreed in a legally binding instrument that statehood endures in the face of sea level rise,” she added.

The treaty allows Australia to vet Tuvalu’s deals with third countries in a broad range of security areas from ports to telecommunications.

On Thursday, Wong and Teo are expected to say that the security cooperation does not limit Tuvalu’s ability to enter into diplomatic agreements with other nations, according to an advance copy of a joint statement viewed by Reuters.

“We recognise that the people of Tuvalu deserve the choice to live, study and work elsewhere, as climate change impacts intensify at home,” the text of the statement reads.

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Probe launched after Boeing cargo plane lands in Istanbul without front landing gear

Probe launched after Boeing cargo plane lands in Istanbul without front landing gear

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Probe launched after Boeing cargo plane lands in Istanbul without front landing gear

A FedEx Airlines Boeing cargo plane landed at Istanbul Airport on Wednesday without its front landing gear, a Turkish Transport Ministry official said, adding there were no casualties and authorities had launched an investigation.

The aircraft, flying from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport, informed the control tower in Istanbul that its landing gear had failed to open and touched down with guidance from the tower, managing to remain on the runway, a ministry statement said.

Airport rescue and fire fighting teams were scrambled before landing, but no one was injured. The ministry gave no reason for the failure.

The aircraft involved is a nearly 10-year-old Boeing 767 freighter, one of the most common cargo planes and based on the 767 passenger model dating back to the 1980s.

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An official from Turkey’s transport ministry said its teams were conducting examinations at the scene as part of the ongoing investigation, but did not provide further details.

Boeing referred queries to FedEX, which said in a statement it was coordinating with investigation authorities and would “provide additional information as it is available”.

Video footage obtained by Reuters showed sparks flying and some smoke as the front of the plane scraped along the runway before coming to a halt and being doused with firefighting foam. No fire appeared to have broken out.

The video showed the pilots holding the plane’s nose above the runway for several seconds after the main wheels had touched the ground, apparently executing the emergency drill for landing with a retracted nose gear that pilots train for, according to the SKYbrary aviation database.

In June last year, a small 22-year-old Boeing 717 flown by Delta Airlines made a similar smooth landing without a nose gear in Charlotte, North Carolina, in an incident later blamed on a fractured component.

The runway was temporarily closed to air traffic, but other runways at Istanbul airport were still operating normally, the airport operator IGA said.

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Manufacturers are not typically involved in the operation or maintenance of jets once they enter service, but Boeing has been under intense media and regulatory scrutiny following a series of incidents on its smaller 737.

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