As new year approaches, Bangladeshis flock to world’s longest beach

Cox’s Bazar beach in southern Bangladesh can be seen in this photo. (File/Unsplash)
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Updated 27 December 2023
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As new year approaches, Bangladeshis flock to world’s longest beach

  • Cox’s Bazar has 120km of uninterrupted stretch of sand
  • It has recently become popular during end-of-year holidays

COX’S BAZAAR: Running along the waters of the Bay of Bengal, the coast of Cox’s Bazar is the favorite place for Bangladeshis to welcome the new year, as they enjoy sunsets on the world’s longest beach.

Located on the country’s southern edge, Cox’s Bazar has in recent years become synonymous with the largest refugee settlement, as it is hosting some 1 million Rohingya who fled persecution and deadly violence in Myanmar in 2017

Few outside Bangladesh know that the coastal district that lies 400 km south of the capital Dhaka is home to a 120-km uninterrupted stretch of sand.

Chains of green hills parallel to the beach and its warm shark-free waters are also a site of old Hindu temples and Buddhist viharas, which draws hundreds of thousands of visitors, especially in late December.

Sultana Sharmin tries to take her family to Cox’s Bazar every winter, as she takes a year’s end break from her work at a bank in Dhaka and her children are on school holidays.

“Sitting here on the beach reenergizes me every time. It takes away all my tiredness of everyday city life. That’s why I visit this coast again and again,” Sharmin told Arab News.

To reach the coast from Dhaka takes about eight hours by road or train, or an hour by air — a trip not all Bangladeshis can afford.

“Most of the local tourists dream of visiting Cox’s Bazar at least once in a lifetime. People come here usually in winter, as the sea is calm and quiet during this period of the year,” Sharmin said.

“To me, the most beautiful thing about this beach is the sunset here. When the sun slowly disappears in the sea, it looks heavenly. Words can’t express my joy of seeing this sight.”

There are about 500 hotels and guesthouses in the city, with Cox’s Bazar Chamber of Commerce president Abu Morshed Chowdhury estimating that they have received some 100,000 local tourists in the past two days.

The number is set to grow over the weekend, as the peak season gains momentum.

But while Bangladeshis would always visit the coast between December and February, when the weather is pleasant and temperate, it has only in the past decade become popular during end-of-year holidays.

“Since 2008 or 2009, it has been a trend to gather in Cox’s Bazar to enjoy the holidays and welcome the New Year,” said Saifullah Sifat who has been working as a lifeguard on the Cox’s Bazar beach for the past 10 years.

“People start coming in huge numbers to Cox’s Bazar beach from the beginning of December as the winter school vacation starts. We are under much pressure during those days as it’s very tough to watch so many people at a time. My team remains extra vigilant to avoid accidents. But since it’s winter, the sea remains mostly calm.”

For visitors from Dhaka, trips to Cox’s Bazar are a chance to feast on fresh seafood and breathe clean air — both scarcities in their city that is one of the world’s most densely populated and most polluted.

“The air is very fresh and clean here,” said Abdus Sobhan, a businessman who arrived in Cox’s Bazar with his wife and three daughters.

“Another interesting thing about Cox’s Bazar is the seafood. Different types of sea fish are available in restaurants here. Among them, I like the pomfret most. It’s a bit costly but the freshness of the fish compensates the price. I don’t get sea fish this fresh in the capital.”

Sobhan likes to start his vacation days with a morning trip on Marine Drive, an 80-km road that runs along the Bay of Bengal from Cox’s Bazar city to Teknaf, the southernmost point in mainland Bangladesh.

“It is built beside the beach. All along the way, people can enjoy the vast view of the sea,” he said.

“Bangladesh has very small land and we don’t have many natural tourist sights. But we are blessed with the longest sand beach in the world.”


Progress for Ukraine talks in Paris uncertain with US focus shifting to Venezuela

Updated 06 January 2026
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Progress for Ukraine talks in Paris uncertain with US focus shifting to Venezuela

  • Ukraine’s allies are meeting in Paris to discuss security guarantees after a potential ceasefire with Russia. The Trump administration’s focus on Venezuela could complicate progress
  • France and the UK lead efforts to strengthen post-ceasefire defenses for Ukraine, possibly with European forces

PARIS: Ukraine’s allies are meeting Tuesday in Paris for key talks that could help determine the country’s security after a potential ceasefire with Russia. But prospects for progress are uncertain with the Trump administration’s focus shifting to Venezuela.
Before the US capture of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, French President Emmanuel Macron had expressed optimism about the latest gathering of so-called “coalition of the willing” nations. For months, they have been exploring how to deter any future Russian aggression should it agree to stop fighting Ukraine.
In a Dec. 31 address, Macron said that allies would “make concrete commitments” at the summit “to protect Ukraine and ensure a just and lasting peace.”
Macron’s office said Tuesday’s meeting will gather an unprecedented number of officials attending in person, with 35 participants including 27 heads of state and government. The US will be represented by President Donald Trump’s envoys, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.
Macron’s office said the US delegation was initially set to be led by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who changed his plans for reasons related to the military intervention in Venezuela.
Participants seek concrete outcomes on five key priorities once fighting ends: ways to monitor a ceasefire; support for Ukraine’s armed forces; deployment of a multinational force on land, at sea and in the air; commitments in case there’s another Russian aggression; and long-term defense cooperation with Ukraine.
But whether that’s still achievable Tuesday isn’t so clear now, as Trump deals with the aftermath of his decision to effect leadership change in Venezuela.
Ukraine seeks firm guarantees from Washington of military and other support seen as crucial to securing similar commitments from other allies. Kyiv has been wary of any ceasefire that it fears could provide time for Russia to regroup and attack again.
Recent progress in talks
Before the US military operation targeting Maduro, Witkoff had indicated progress in talks about protecting and reassuring Ukraine.
In a Dec. 31 post, Witkoff tweeted that “productive” discussions with him, Rubio, and Kushner on the US side and, on the other, national security advisers of Britain, France, Germany and Ukraine had focused on “strengthening security guarantees and developing effective deconfliction mechanisms to help end the war and ensure it does not restart.”
France, which with the United Kingdom has coordinated the monthslong, multination effort to shore up a ceasefire, has only given broad-brush details about the plan’s scope. It says Ukraine’s first line of defense against a Russian resumption of war would be the Ukrainian military and that the coalition intends to strengthen it with training, weaponry and other support.
Macron has also spoken of European forces potentially being deployed away from Ukraine’s front lines to help deter future Russian aggression.
Important details unfinalized
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said during the weekend that potential European troop deployments still face hurdles, important details remain unfinalized, and “not everyone is ready” to commit forces.
He noted that many countries would need approval from parliament even if leaders agreed to military support for Ukraine. But he recognized that support could come in forms other than troops, such as “through weapons, technologies and intelligence.”
Zelensky said that post-ceasefire deployments in Ukraine by Britain and France, Western Europe’s only nuclear-armed nations, would be “essential” because some other coalition members ”cannot provide military assistance in the form of troops, but they do provide support through sanctions, financial assistance, humanitarian aid and so on.”
“Speaking frankly as president, even the very existence of the coalition depends on whether certain countries are ready to step up their presence,” Zelensky said. “If they are not ready at all, then it is not really a ‘coalition of the willing.’”