Bangladesh
We work across radio, television and social media to address the rights of women and girls, health, and to support the Rohingya people in Cox's Bazar.

- Our office: Dhaka, and Cox’s Bazar
- Our areas of focus: Refugee response, conflict mitigation, climate change and resilience, disaster resilience and humanitarian coordination, maternal and child health, sexual and reproductive health and rights, disability inclusion, media development
- Our partners: Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, US Government - Bureau of Population, Refugee and Migration; UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO), H&M Foundation, International Rescue Committee (IRC), UNFPA, UNHCR, Unicef, UN Women, USAID, World Vision.
About our work
Our Bangladesh office runs diverse and wide-reaching projects spanning long-term development and critical humanitarian assistance.
We responded quickly to the Rohingya refugee crisis, and currently lead the Common Service for Community Engagement and Accountability – an innovative model for better informing and coordinating humanitarian efforts to support Rohingya and host communities. With our partners, we’re providing trusted information, dispelling harmful rumours, and providing advice, tools and training to over 50 agencies to help them understand the changing needs and perceptions of Rohingya people.
We work in partnership with the International Rescue Committee and funded by US Bureau of Population, Refugee and Immigration to ensure integrated approaches to delivering health, nutrition, livelihood and protection services to both the Rohingya community and the host communities. With UNHCR and Terre Des Hommes, we deliver multimedia content and support to religious leaders, Rohingya people and volunteers, to improve community engagement and promote community-led approaches.
We are also leading YouthRISE, a four-year consortium programme funded by USAID supporting the host communities in Cox’s Bazar to reduce conflict and violence, including gender-based violence, and promote peaceful conflict resolution.
Bangladesh is one of three countries where we’re delivering our flagship media development initiative, Protecting Independent Media for Effective Development (PRIMED). We aim to support individual media outlets to generate professional, ethical and informative content to understand and engage audiences, and to develop effective and sustainable business models.
Our previous projects have included tackling gender inequality and economic empowerment through The Future of Work, working with women in garment factories to encourage them to overcome traditional barriers to pursue higher-level positions - smashing gender stereotypes, building skills and earning more to support their families.
Through our AGAMI (Accelerated Gender-Equitable Adolescents, Maternal and Child Intervention) project, we developed a mobile app to train community health workers in sexual and reproductive health issues. And our Hello, I Am multimedia programme, across radio, social media, public service announcements and community screenings, aimed to reduce rates of child marriage, school drop-out and teenage pregnancy. Our research shows fathers and boys have a better understanding of the value of girls’ education after engaging with our work.
In August, BBC Media Action Bangladesh relaunched Hello Check with a fresh brand identity and new name - BBC Hello Check. First launched in 2017, the platform has reached over 12 million young people and resumed regular publishing in July 2025 after a three-year pause. BBC Hello Check is now active on Facebook, YouTube, and TikTok, delivering engaging, informative, and entertaining content, like this guide to creating your own floating garden, also known locally as dhap, to help audiences make informed decisions and adapt to climate change.
Filming this was an incredible experience. I was truly amazed to witness the locally led adaptation techniques used by farmers in rural Bangladesh. The sight of the floating gardens was breathtaking, as far as the eye could reach, there were these beautiful beds drifting on the water."
Latest news from Bangladesh
Our projects in Bangladesh

Responding to the Rohingya emergency in Bangladesh
We’re supporting local radio partners to produce a dedicated Lifeline radio programme for Rohingya people and host communities in living in Cox’s Bazar.

Protecting independent media for effective development
We are working with media support organisations and local partners to find out how best to support public interest media in Sierra Leone, Ethiopia and Bangladesh.
Hello I Am - challenging child marriage in Bangladesh
Watch our films with Rutgers showing how girls are breaking down barriers, in school and on the cricket pitch.
Communication to counter the COVID-19 ‘info-demic’
BBC Media Action launches new project in Asia to tackle the spread of mis- and dis-information around COVID-19 (coronavirus) which is as harmful as the disease itself.

































