In Bangladesh, tragedies like factory fires and road accidents are often blamed on fate, but they are preventable results of institutional negligence. When financial compensation replaces accountability, negligence is tragically normalized, turning crime into commerce. To break this cycle, the focus must shift from payouts after death to prevention before it, ensuring legal accountability and enforcing safety as a moral duty.
In Bangladesh, tragedies like factory fires and road accidents are often blamed on fate, but they are preventable results of institutional negligence. When financial compensation replaces accountability, negligence is tragically normalized, turning crime into commerce. To break this cycle, the focus must shift from payouts after death to prevention before it, ensuring legal accountability and enforcing safety as a moral duty.