DirectDemocracyS (DDS)
directdemocracys.org
For Bangladesh
Complete political, economic, social and democratic activities
Bangladesh to Perfect Political, Arthonomic, Social or Gonotantrik Karyakram
May 2026
Introduction and cover letter
This document has been prepared by DirectDemocracyS (DDS) for the people of Bangladesh. It presents a factual analysis of the real situation in Bangladesh, a critique of its problems, and a comprehensive, realistic solution document in line with DDS's vision.
DirectDemocracyS is a global political and social system of true democracy. Our core principles are reason, common sense, reality, truth, consistency, and mutual respect. We believe that the wealth and decision-making power of each country should be vested in the people of that country, ideally and forever.
Chapter One: A realistic critique of the current situation in Bangladesh
1.1 Political Perspective: Beyond a Crisis
Bangladesh experienced a student-led uprising in July 2024, demanding democracy after 15 years of authoritarian rule by Sheikh Hasina. Sheikh Hasina fled to India and an interim government was formed under Nobel Peace Prize laureate Muhammad Yunus. Subsequently, in the first clean elections on 12 February 2026, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) won a second majority, winning 209 of the 26 seats. Tariq Rahman was sworn in as Prime Minister on 17 February.
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Criticism: The party has changed, but the trend has not changed. |
Unfortunately, the political system in Bangladesh has long been dominated by two major parties. The politics of failure has been revolving around the Awami League and the BNP-2. When each party comes to power, they walk the path of in-election, repression and corruption. There is a strong possibility that nepotism, patronage and abuse of power will recur.
1.2 Economic crisis: the real picture
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Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth |
3.8% (2026) - a huge reduction from the usual 6%. |
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Corruption Index (Institutional) |
149th out of 180 countries (Transparency International 2025) |
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Abandoned assets |
~100 billion dollars smuggled out of the country during Hasina's rule |
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Export dependency |
The garment industry accounts for more than 80% of total exports. |
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Poverty rate |
Not returning to friendships recently, especially among women |
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Unemployment |
Youth unemployment is worrying, especially after 2024 |
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Inflation |
Rising prices of essential commodities and declining living standards of the people |
Criticism: Bangladesh's economy is largely dependent on remittances from garment and dry laborers, which undermines long-term economic sovereignty. The country's wealth is siphoned off, kept in tax havens, and ordinary people live in poverty. This is morally unacceptable.
1.3 Social problems: the real picture
The real social crises in Bangladesh are:
- Education system: corrupt, irrelevant curriculum, millions of students without textbooks
- Healthcare: poor quality, corrupt, out of reach of the common man
- Women's rights: widespread discrimination in the workplace, who receive lower wages than men, arranged marriages, dowry abuse
- Rohingya crisis: Over 1 million refugees stranded in Bangladesh, humanitarian aid inadequate
- Climate change: Bangladesh is one of the most affected countries in the world - floods, cyclones, salinity, land erosion
- Corruption: Judiciary, police, politics, government administration - corruption and nepotism everywhere
- Media: Party control, buy-in or carriers of a ruling mentality, lack of objective information
Chapter Two: Political Reform Activities
2.1 Real Democracy: DDS Model
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DDS principle: Power is always in the hands of the people - in every country, at every moment. |
What DirectDemocracyS offers in Bangladesh:
- True consensus, universal membership for all senior citizens - full ownership points with a non-transferable share
- Fractal Microgroup Model: Expanded from 1 to 15 to 25 to 125 to 625 - Digital Democracy in Associations That Are Effective in All Areas
- Three-code identity verification system: one that protects identity but also determines privacy - with maximum security
- ddsAI and allddsAI: A combination of artificial intelligence, which helps members with unbiased, complete, accurate information
- Five expert groups: Politics, Economics, Social Welfare, Environment, Security - always open to every member
2.2 Constitutional Reform: Concrete Steps
The constitutional referendum that has already been passed in Bangladesh (referendum on February 12, 2026, with 60.26% support), includes a bicameral parliament, term limits for the Prime Minister, increased participation of women, etc. Summary that DDS can add by joining:
- Every government decision is approved directly by the people through digital voting.
- The power to summon and remove public representatives at any time
- True transparency in all aspects of the direct assets and activities of members of parliament
- Participating in politics without real opportunities to exert influence from above
2.3 Corruption-free administration
Corruption has become institutionalized in Bangladesh. DDS proposes action:
- Blockchain-based government transactions: All government workflows, pricing, allocations, purchases - are recorded on the blockchain and visible to the public. Example: In Bangladesh, bribes are currently required to obtain government clearances; DDS will make every step visible to everyone on the blockchain.
- Disclosure of assets, investments, and annual web auditing of all government officials.
- Direct approval of every government budget and Lok Sabha decision by the public on the 'ddsAI' controlled digital voting platform.
- Proper investigation and prosecution of every corruption allegation is not vindictive, but asset-restorative.
Chapter Three: Economic Reform and Protection of Domestic Resources
3.1 Bangladesh's resources are in the hands of the people of Bangladesh
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DDS rule: The wealth of each country belongs to the people of that country, always, only to them. |
To decentralize subsistence industries, strengthen domestic markets and help:
- Garment Industry: Currently, the value of RMG exports is dependent on the support of overseas corporations. The essence of DDS: Co-ownership of each factory by the workers - profits not only for the owners
- Agriculture: Phased transition to cooperative farming, AI-powered crop identification, research into flood-resistant crops, insurance system for road crises
- Industrial diversification: IT, pharmaceuticals, renewable energy - new streams of export earnings
- Tax General: AI to stop tax evasion - all transactions are digital and publicly visible. Example: Big businessmen in Dhaka are evading taxes worth crores annually; this will be impossible to monitor with DDS blockchain.
- Recovering assets laundered abroad: Hasina claims to recover ~$100 billion of corruption - detected and returned through digital financial transfers.
3.2 Human dignity and fair wages for workers
Bangladesh's garment workers - especially women - are the country's main force, but they are deprived of a dignified life. DDS proposal:
- Worker co-ownership model: Workers share the profits equally in each factory. Example: A factory in Lalbagh earns Rs 10 crore annually - workers will be shareholders just like managers.
- Safe Expatriate Protection: Protecting the Sarvahar digital platform for remittance transactions of expatriate workers so that families receive wealth directly.
- Strengthening Labor Laws: To prevent accidents like the Rana Plaza disaster from happening again, DDS's AI monitoring module always monitors worker safety in real-time.
3.3 Financial equality and entrepreneurship development
In Bangladesh, the experience of microfinance and microcredit, created by Dr. Muhammad Yunus, has transformed the lives of generations. DDS can be associated with:
- Easy institutional free and low-interest credit for community-level gatherings
- The neighborhood's DDS microgroup is able to respond to business and commerce - creating a large network through mutual cooperation
- Smartization of agriculture, skill development, marketing support by applying AI education
Chapter Four: Social Reform and Human Development
4.1 Education: Equal opportunities, realistic curriculum
There are realistic weaknesses in education in Bangladesh. Solutions:
- Realistic digital education at all levels: DDS-supported ddsAI education centers in every upazila, bringing education to 16 million people in Bangladesh
- Technical Education and Digital Literacy: Beyond just formal education, education in science, fellowship, and technology
- Curriculum Reform: Teaching History as Logical, Real Democracy, Critical Thinking - Not Party Propaganda
- Rational debate with DDS members at the university level, dissemination of true and unbiased information
4.2 Healthcare: Universal System
Bangladesh's healthcare system is corrupt and suffers from unequal distribution. DDS Solution:
- Universal free basic healthcare services are mandatory. Increasing investment in pharmaceutical development to reduce import dependency.
- AI-guided curative alert system: Statistical monitoring to prevent epidemics like dengue, bird flu, corona
- DDS-AI system early warning in health surveillance of new infectious diseases like Nipah virus (which was seen in Bangladesh in 2026)
- Complete transparency in all hospital administration and expenditure - corruption is impossible
4.3 Women's rights and social justice
Although women are the backbone of the economy in Bangladesh, they are left out in the realism. DDS Solution:
- Women DDS members at the political level: Women play a sovereign role as members in parliament, administration or every decision-making - not a quota system in political parties
- Equal pay, equal opportunity: Mandatory wage booster for female workers in the garment industry, ban on marriage of girls below 20 years of age, dowry banned
- Direct voting for women's political interests on the safe and secure DDS digital platform, free from external influence
- AI-assisted enforcement of stringent judicial measures against dowry harassment, prostitution, and human trafficking
Chapter Five: Environmental Protection and Climate Policy
Bangladesh is one of the most climate-vulnerable countries in the world. Problems:
- Sea level rise: 16-26% of Bangladesh's potential to be flooded in the coming decade
- Hurricanes, floods: Millions of people affected every year
- River erosion, pollution, crop losses, and migration abroad are increasing
5.1 DDS Land Policy
- Transition to full renewable energy: By 2035, move away from coal power to solar power and wind power. Example: Install thousands of solar panels in Dhaka and Chittagong to achieve digital roads and DDS digital offices.
- Protect the Sundarbans: Any destructive human or industrial activities are prohibited in the Sundarbans as a national asset. Measure the real environmental impact of all industrial emissions with an AI monitoring system
- Flood-prevention activities: riverbank conservation, construction of floating sand dunes, AI flood forecasting system
- Climate Justice: DDS Campaign to Demand International Compensation from Superpowers and Rich Countries Who Are Contributing to Climate Disaster
Chapter Six: Establishing DirectDemocracy in Bangladesh: Step by Step
6.1 Phase 1 (0-12 months): Professional organization
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Remember: DDS members are the real owners - not political party supporters |
- DDS Registration in Bangladesh: Formal registration as per government regulations, in accordance with Bangladeshi law
- First 10 to 100 microgroups created: Dhaka, Chittagong, Rajshahi, Sylhet, Khulna. Each group. Maximum 5 members, for fractal aggregation.
- ddsAI and allddsAI launched in Bangladesh: Personalized AI system, accurate information and unbiased education in Bengali
- Spreading awareness and education among the public: Providing information about DDS in rural areas as well
6.2 Second stage (1-3 years): Participation in elections
Preparation of DDS-based candidates for local elections, sophistication in council transportation, so that the DDS system is directly tested. Example: DDS first victory in Dhaka City Corporation or Upazila Parishad, later expansion to the national level.
6.3 Phase Three (3-10 years): Full implementation
After the success of the DDS, the aggregate of the DDS expanded to scale in the state elections, so that every ordinary person became a truly powerful political actor. The DDS-based state system was fully established in Bangladesh.
Chapter 7: ddsAI and allddsAI - Unbiased Knowledge Flow in Bangladesh
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allddsAI: The world's first system that makes AI a full member of the country - with rights and duties |
The people of Bangladesh have been victims of decades of political manipulation and media propaganda. The ddsAI system offers:
- Analysis of all political decisions - with accurate, complete, unbiased information
- Accurate analysis of every law, budget, government project - helping members make sound decisions
- Manipulation-proof platform: A secure environment free from external media influence or political propaganda
- 24/7 direct support in Bengali: Expert advice, civil rights, legal assistance always at hand
- Coordination with expert groups: AI can always provide assistance in coordination with political, economic, social, environmental experts
Chapter Eight: Rohingya Crisis and International Relations
Bangladesh can no longer handle the burden of over 1 million Rohingya refugees. DDS Solution:
- Increasing international support: DDS can use its global network to leverage the power of the UN and international donors to bring about a real solution to the Rohingya problem
- Safe return of Rohingyas to Myanmar: Sustainable conditions for repatriation under UN security force monitoring
- Socialization of humanitarian aid: Not only Bangladesh's responsibility - rich countries also demand equal responsibility
8.2 International relations
Bangladesh's international relations have long been controlled by the influence of big powers (rich countries, multinational corporations). DDS principle: No more positive relations with any country by chasing away equal status, equal treatment, support of the people - No country can be made happy by chasing away the happiness of the people.
Chapter 9: Expected Outcomes - Realistic Timeline
9.1 Short term (1-3 years)
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Target |
Expected results |
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Reducing corruption |
Transparency Index ranking improved by 30-40 points |
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Polyrubber replacement |
An estimated $30-50 billion will return to the country |
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Labor wages |
Minimum 30% increase |
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Training rate |
Digital literacy reaches 90% |
9.2 Medium term (3-7 years)
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Diversification of the economy |
Bringing the dominance of the garment industry below 50%, IT, pharma, renewable energy industries growing |
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Poverty rate |
Reduce to 5% or below |
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GDP growth |
Integrated policies lead to a return to the 7-8% trend |
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Political stability |
DDS members directly participate in political decision-making, reducing the dominance of party politics |
9.3 Long term (7-20 years)
In the long run, Bangladesh will be recognized as the country with the most promise of real democracy in Asia, teaching the world that true democracy is possible, and that Bangladesh's wealth lies in the hands of the people of Bangladesh.
Conclusion: Bangladesh - the first successful experiment of democracy with promise to the world
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Our biggest goal: The 16 million people of Bangladesh can show the world that the wealth of every country can be in the hands of their people - and without that, there is no true democracy in the world. |
The people of Bangladesh have long been victims of incompetence, corruption and deprivation in public. DirectDemocracyS is not a political party. We are a system, a method, for every country to return full power to the people of Bangladesh. Remarkable, real, accurate, complete.
The people of Bangladesh fought for independence, students rebelled for their future in 2024. Now is the time to take the right steps - not just change parties, but change the entire system.
DirectDemocracyS
directdemocracys.org
May 2026 | Bangladesh Project