Radwan Chowdhury, Fairfax, VA
Sheikh Mujibur (Mujib) Rahman
Sheikh Mujibur (Mujib) Rahman was the leader of the independence movement that led to the establishment of the country of Bangladesh. He was the country’s first president and became the Prime Minister after his party the Awami League, the founding party of Bangladesh, won a majority of the votes in the general election in 1973. Sheikh Mujib was assassinated in a 1975 military coup. Sheikh Mujib is considered the founding father of Bangladesh. The coup leaders were granted immunity from prosecution under an Indemnity Ordinance implemented immediately after the coup by the late president Khandaker Mushtaque Ahmed. It was later incorporated in the constitution by assassinated president Ziaur Rahman. (Agence France Press 18 October 1996) Some of the individuals involved with the coup were subsequently appointed to foreign diplomatic posts.
Political Events and Rashed Chowdhury
Political violence is common in Bangladesh’s history. Since its creation, Bangladesh has experienced nineteen reported coup attempts, two full-scale military takeovers, and two assassinations of supreme leaders (Human Rights Watch). The regime of General Ziaur (Zia) Rahman, founder and leader of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, came to power in another coup in November 1975.
p>In June 1996, Sheikh Mujib’s daughter, Sheikh Hasina Rahman was elected Prime Minister under the Awami League party. In August 1996, she announced her intention to bring to trial the former army officers who assassinated her father and twenty other family members. She repealed the Indemnity Ordinance. She also declared 15 August as “national mourning day” to mark the anniversary of her father’s death. The 1975 coup leader Colonel Abdur Rashid and a number of other military officers involved in the killings left Bangladesh shortly after Sheikh Hasina’s coming to power. Colonels Farook Rahman and Shahriar Rashid Khan and Major Muhammad Khairuzzman were arrested in Bangladesh on August 12. Arms, fake passports and some foreign currency were seized from the homes of the officers. Five other senior coup leaders deserted the foreign missions to which they were posted and sought asylum abroad. (India Abroad 23 August 1996). The government called upon western and Moslem countries not to give political asylum to the military officers involved in the coup. There were reports of the diplomats seeking asylum in Canada. One of the accused coup leaders was jailed in Bangkok. (Agence France Presse 18 October 1996).
There is a Rashed Chowdhury, charge d’affairs for Brazil listed as one of the participants in the coup. (Deutsche Presse-Argentur 10 August 1996). An Amnesty International report lists Lt. Col. A.M. Rashed Chowdhury as one the of the officers being sought (Amnesty May 1997, 5). The RIC found no other information referring to Mr. Chowdhury.
References:
Agence France Presse. 18 October 1996. “Bangladesh to Repeal Act Barring Trial of 1975 Coup Leaders.”
Amnesty International. May 1997. Bangladesh: Trial of Alleged Killers of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and His Family Members (AI: ASA 12/02/97). London. Amnesty International, International Secretariat.
Deutsche Presse-Argentur. 10 August 1996. “Bangladesh Urges No Asylum for Mujib’s Killers.” (Nexis)
Human Rights Watch (HRW). 1995. Human Rights Watch World Report 1996. New York: Human Rights Watch (REFWORLD).
India Abroad. 23 August 1996. “Security is Tightened for Hasina’s Relatives.” (Westlaw).
Reuters News Service. 22 July 1996. “Bangladesh Sacks Six Diplomats, Urges No Asylum.” (Nexis)
Additional Sources Checked:
Area Handbook Series: Bangladesh: A Country Study. 1988. Edited by James Heitzman and Robert L. Worden. Washington, DC: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress.
Asian Survey Vol. XXXII, No. 2, February 1992
Vol. XXXIII, No. 2, February 1993
Vol. XXXVII, No. 2, February 1997
Vol. XXXVII, No. 3, March 1997