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Cox's Bazar is a

town, a fishing port and district


headquarters in Bangladesh. It is known for its wide and
long sandy beach, which is considered by many as the
world's longest natural sandy sea beach.[2][3] The
beach in Cox's Bazar is an unbroken 125 km sandy sea
beach with a gentle slope. It is located 150 km south of
the industrial port Chittagong. Coxs Bazar is also
known by the name Panowa, whose literal translation
means "yellow flower." Its other old name was
"Palongkee".

CYGNUS COMMUNICATION
St. Martin's Island is a small island
(area only 8 sq. km) in the northeastern part of the Bay of Bengal, about 9 km south of the tip of the Cox's Bazar-Teknaf peninsula, and
forming the southernmost part of Bangladesh. There is a small adjoining island that is separated at high tide, called Chhera island. It is about
8 km west of the northwest coast of Myanmar, at the mouth of the Naf River. The first settlement started just 250 years ago by some
Arabian sailors who named the island Zajira. During British occupation the island was named St. Martin Island. The local names of
the island are "Narical Gingira", also spelled "Narikel Jinjira/Jinjera", which means 'Coconut Island' in Bengali, and "Daruchini Dip".
It is the only coral island in Bangladesh.

Package Tour
Study Tour
City Sightseeing
River cruises
Adventure tour
Special Interested tour
Corporate Event
Transport Rantal Ticketing

CYGNUS COMMUNICATION
Regency place, House-91, Block-K, Suite- N-1, Shorwardi Avenue,
Baridhara, Dhaka-1212, Bangladesh.Phone : +88 02 9893967
9893071, E-mail : info@cygnusinnovation.com
Rangamati is the Administrative Headquarter of Rangamati Hill District in the Chittagong Hill Tracts of Bangladesh. The town is located at 2237'60N 9212'0E and has an
altitude of 14 metres (49 feet).[1]
It's a travel destination of Bangladesh which is known as "Lake City".
From Chittagong a 77 km road amidst green fields and winding hills leads to Rangamati; which is a wonderful repository of scenic splendours with flora and fauna of varied
descriptions. The township is located on the western bank of the Kaptai lake. Rangamati is a favourite holiday destination because of its beautiful landscape, scenic beauty,
lake, colourful indigenus groups (Chakma, Marma etc.), its flora and fauna, indigenous museum, hanging bridge, homespun textile products, ivory jewellery and the
indigenous men and women who fashion them. For tourists, the attractions of Rangamati are numerous. Indigenous life, fishing, speed boat cruising, hiking, bathing or
merely enjoying nature as it is.

The Sundarban is the largest littoral mangrove belt in the world, stretching 80km (50mi) into the Bangladeshi
hinterland from the coast. The forests aren't just mangrove swamps though; they include some of the last remaining
stands of the mighty jungles which once covered the Gangetic plain. The Sundarban covers an area of 38,500 sq km,
of which about one-third is covered in water. Since 1966 the Sundarban has been a wildlife sanctuary, and it is
estimated that there are now 400 Royal Bengal tigers and about 30,000 spotted deer in the area.

Bandarban is a district in South-Eastern


Bangladesh, and a part of the Chittagong
Division and Chittagong Hill Tracts.
Bandarban is regarded as one of the
most attractive travel destinations in
Bangladesh. Bandarban (meaning the
dam of monkeys), or in Marma or
Arakanese language as "Rwa-daw Mro"
is also known as Arvumi or the
Bohmong Circle (of the rest of the three
hill districts Rangamati is the Chakma
Circle, Raja Devasish Roy and
Khagrachari is the Mong Circle, Raja
Sachingprue Marma). Bandarban town
is the home town of the Bohmong Chief
(currently King, or Raja, U Cho Prue
Marma) who is the head of the Marma
population. It also is the administrative
headquarter of Bandarban district,
which has turned into one of the most
exotic tourist attractions in Bangladesh
since the insurgency in Chittagong Hill
Tracts has ceased more than a decade
back.

Sylhet is a major urban center in


north-east Bangladesh. It is the principal
city and administrative capital of Sylhet
Division. The city is located on the
banks of Surma River in the Barak Valley
and has a population of 500,000 people,
making it the fourth largest city in
Bangladesh.
Sylhet is known in Bengal as the "City of
Saints". It is home to the mausoleums
and mosques of Shah Jalal and Shah
Paran, Bengals most revered Sufi saints.
Every year, the city receives hundreds
and thousands of pilgrims to the
Dargahs of Shah Jalal and Shah Paran,
earning a reputation as the "spiritual
capital of Bangladesh".[3] Sylhet is also
famed for its natural setting, amidst
rainforests, waterfalls, hills and river
valleys.
Located in the heart of Bangladeshs tea
country, Sylhet is a hub of the tea
industry. Many Sylhetis have emigrated
abroad over the years, and the city
receives some of the highest annual
remittance inflows in Bangladesh,
particularly from the British Bangladeshi
community. These remittances have
fuelled a real estate and construction
boom. Sylhet is also a center of the
Bangladeshi oil and gas sector, with the
countrys largest natural gas reserves
located in Sylhet Division.

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