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   MD ziaur rahaman
 
  Born: 1936 AD Died: 1981 AD, at 45 years of age.
  Nationality: Bangladeshi Categories: Politician, Presidents, Prime Ministers
 
 
 
  Ziaur Rahman 1936 – He was born in the village of Bagbari in the Bogra District of the province of Bengal (now in northwest Bangladesh.)
  1953 – He spent his adolescent years in Karachi and enrolled in the D. J. College.
  1955 – He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Pakistan Army.
  1957 – He was transferred to the East Bengal Regiment after serving for two years in Karachi.
  1959 – He worked in the department of military intelligence.
  1960 – His marriage was arranged to Khaleda Zia, a young Bengali girl from the Dinajpur District who was 15 years old.
  1966 – He was appointed military instructor at the Pakistan Military Academy, later going on to attend the prestigious Command and Staff College in Quetta, where he completed a course in command and tactical warfare.
  1975 – He was appointed chief of army staff following the assassination of Sheikh Mujib Rahman.
  1977 – He declared himself as the President.
  1978 – He won a referendum.
  1981 – He was assassinated in an abortive military coup.
 
 
 
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  The "ind ependent, sovereign republic of Bangladesh"  was first proclaimed in a radio message broadcast from
  a captured station in Chittagong on March 26, 1971. Two
  days later, the "Voice of Independent Bangladesh" announced  that a "Major Zia" (actually Ziaur Rahman, later president of  Bangladesh) would form a new government with himself  occupying the "presidency." Zia's selfappointment was considered brash, especially by Mujib, who in subsequent
  years would hold a grudge. Quickly realizing that his action
  was unpopular, Zia yielded his "office" to the incarcerated
  Mujib. The following month a provisional government was
  established in Calcutta by a number of leading Awami  League members who had escaped from East Pakistan. On April 17, the "Mujibnagar" government formally  proclaimed independence and named Mujib as its president.  On December 6, India became the first nation to recognize
  the new Bangladeshi government. When the West Pakistani
  surrender came ten days later, the provisional government had  some organization in place, but it was not until December 22  that members of the new government arrived in Dhaka, having
  been forced to heed the advice of the Indian military that order  must quickly be restored. Representatives of the Bangladeshi
  government and the Mukti Bahini were absent from the ceremony
  of surrender of the Pakistan Army to the Indian Army on December 16.  Bangladeshis considered this ceremony insulting, and it did much
  to sour relations between Bangladesh and India.  At independence, Mujib was in jail in West Pakistan, where he  had been taken after his arrest on March 25. He had been convicted
  of treason by a military court and sentenced to death. Yahya did not  carry out the sentence, perhaps as a result of pleas made by many
  
 
 foreign governments. With the surrender of Pakistani forces in  Dhaka and the Indian proclamation of a cease-fire on the western front,
  Yahya relinquished power to a civilian government under Bhutto,  who released Mujib and permitted him to return to  Dhaka via London and New Delhi.  On January 10, 1972, Mujib arrived in Dhaka to a tumultuous welcome.
  Mujib first assumed the title of president but vacated that office  two days later to become the prime minister. Mujib pushed through a
  new constitution that was modeled on the Indian Constitution.  The Constitution--adopted on November 4, 1972--stated that the
  new nation was to have a prime minister appointed by  the president and approved by a single-house parliament.
  The Constitution enumerates a number of principles on which  Bangladesh is to be governed. These have come to be known as  the tenets of "Mujibism" (or "Mujibbad"), which include  the four pillars of nationalism, socialism, secularism, and democracy.
  In the following years, however, Mujib discarded everything  Bangladesh theoretically represented: constitutionalism,
  freedom of speech, rule of law, the right to dissent, and equal
  opportunity of employment.  Data as of September 1988
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 Rahman, (Shahid) Ziaur (1936-1981)
  Preside   n  t of Bangladesh,          Chief of Army Staff,  leading   freedom fighter, who declared
  the Independence          of Bangladesh.
  Ziaur Rahman was born on l9 January 1936
  at Ba  gbari in          Bogra.                                             His father Mansur Rahman
  was a chemist working in
  a government                  department  in Calcutta. His early
  childhood was spent
  partly in                  the rural area
  of Bogra and partly in Calcutta.
  After the partition                  of India (1947),
  when his father was
  transferred to Karachi,
  Zia                  had to leave
  the Hare School in
  Calcutta and became
  a student                  of the
  Academy School
  in Karachi.
  He completed his secondary
  education                  from that
  School in 1952. In 1953,
  he got himself admitted
  into                  the D.J. College
  in Karachi. In
  the same year he joined
  the Pakistan                  Military
  Academy at Kakul
  as an officer cadet.                |            
  |                                
 
  |                          Shahid Ziaur Rahman was
  commissioned in 1955 as a
  second          lieutenant. He served
  there for two years, and in 1957,
  he was transferred          to
  East Bengal Regiment.
  He also worked in
  the military intelligence
  department          from 1959 to 1964.
  In the Indo-Pakistan War of 1965
  he made his mark as          a
  valiant fighter in the Khemkaran
  sector as the commander of a company,           and incidentally, his company
  was one of those which were
  offered maximum          gallantry
  awards for heroic performances
  in the war. He was appointed
  a professional instructor in the Pakistan Military Academy in 1966.
  In          the same year he was sent to
  the Staff College in Quetta for
  attending          a command course.  In 1969, he joined
  the Second East Bengal Regiment as
           its second-in-command at Joydevpur.
  He was sent to West Germany for
  higher          training. On his return home in
  1970 Ziaur Rahman, then a major,
  was transferred          to Eighth East
  Bengal Regiment at Chittagong  as its second in command.        After the military crackdown  since the night of 25 March          1971  sheikh          mujibur rahman
  was arrested and the political
  leaders dispersed.           The people were at a loss.  At this crucial moment when
  the political leadership          failed
  to give any direction,
  the Eighth East Bengal Regiment under
  the          leadership of Major Ziaur Rahman
  revolted against the Pakistan Army and
           took up the Bangladesh flag as its mainstay
  on the night between 26 and          27 March 1971.
  Then he took up the momentous decision of declaring the          Independence of Bangladesh.  Ziaur Rahman and his troops were
  in the forefront          of the War of Independence.
  Major Zia and the armed forces under his
  command          kept the Chittagong and Noakhali
  areas under control for a few days and          went
  across the border for further preparations.        Ziaur Rahman played a brilliant role in
  the War of Liberation both at the level
  of planning and execution. As the  commander of Sector I up to June 1971,  later on as the head of Z-Force,  Ziaur Rahman distinguished himself
  as a brave warrior and was offered  the gallantry award of Bir Uttam. After the most creditable
  performances during the nine-month war,
  he was appointed brigade commander in Comilla.
  In June 1972, he was made Deputy
  Chief of Staff of the armed forces of Bangladesh.
  In the middle of 1973, he became a
  Brigadier, and a Major General by the end
  of the year. When Khondakar Moshtaq  Ahmad assumed the office of the presidency,
  Ziaur Rahman became the chief
  of army staff on 25 August 1975.
  When Khaled Mosharraf with the support of  the Dhaka Brigade under
  the command of Shafat Jamil staged
  a coup d'etat on 3 November 1975,  Ziaur Rahman was forced to
  resign his command and was  put under house arrest.
  The Sepoy-Janata Biplob
  of 7 November, however,
  took him to the centre of  political power. In fact, he
  had to assume the responsibility of
  managing the affairs of Bangladesh
  on the crest of the Sepoy-Janata Biplob. On 7 November 1975, Ziaur Rahman
  was proclaimed the Chief Martial Law
  Administrator. In a meeting at the army  headquarters on the same day, a new
  administrative set-up for the running
  of an interim government was arranged
  with Justice Sayem as the Chief Martial
  Law Administrator and the three  service chiefs, Major General Zia,
  Air Vice Marshal MG Tawab and  Rear Admiral MH Khan, as Deputy  Chief Martial Law Administrators.
  Ziaur Rahman became Chief
  Martial Law Administrator
  on 19 November 1976, when
  Justice Sayem relinquished his
  
 
 position and ultimately,
  the President of Bangladesh  on 21 April 1977, when President  Sayem resigned. After assuming office as head  of the state Ziaur Rahman issued
  a proclamation order amending
  the Constitution to insert  Bismiliah-ir-Rahmanir Rahim  (In the name of Allah, the Beneficent,  the Merciful) in the Preamble of  the Constitution. In Article
  8(1) and 8(1A) the principle of 'absolute
  trust and faith in the Almighty
  Allah has been added. In Article
  8(1), socialism has been defined as
  'economic and social justice'.
  In Article 25(2) it has also
  been provided that "the state
  shall endeavour to consolidate,  preserve and strengthen
  fraternal relations among  Muslim countries based  on Islamic solidarity." Ziaur Rahman introduced  and popularised the new
  concept of Bangladeshi  nationalism. He believed
  that in a plural society
  like Bangladesh where
  people are of diverse
  ethnicity and where they profess
  different faiths, have different
  cultural traits and various lifestyles,
  nationalism should better be conceptualised
  in terms of territory rather than language
  or culture. This is what he emphasised upon.
  Bangladeshi nationalism took firm root and  shape as a unifying force with its
  emphasis on national unity and
  integration of all citizens of
  Bangladesh irrespective of caste,
  creed, gender, culture, religion and ethnicity. Assuming power, Zia immediately moved to
  restore law and order in the country and
  for the purpose strengthened the police
  force, practically doubling its size from
  40,000 to 70,000 and arranging for  their proper training. He also restored
  order in the armed forces. For
  the purpose, he took certain steps
  for the development of professionalism
  in them through rigorous training and
  restoring discipline. He expanded their  strength substantially from less than
  50,000 in 1974-75 to about  90,000 in 1976-77. Although Zia
  
 
 was successful in restoring discipline
  within the armed forces, he had to
  confront a number of mutinies and
  attempted coups forcing him to adopt
  certain stern actions against those who  had taken part in those uprisings. A believer in democracy Zia moved as
  fast as he could to democratise the polity  by re-instituting the institution of
  election either for enabling a political
  party to assume power or for
  transferring it to other political
  party peacefully. As a first step,
  that is why, he allowed the disbanded
  political parties to be revived and
  political activities to be carried on
  once again. Having that in view,
  he also disallowed the ban on the
  newspapers and inaugurated the  free flow of news by making
  the news media free. For
  the same purpose, he re -instituted
  the independence of judiciary as
  the bulwark of rights of the people.
  The prevailing situation persuaded him  to take part in active politics so that
  he could establish democratic order in
  the country. In February 1978
  he floated Jatiyatabadi Ganatantric
  Dal with Vice President Justice
  Abdus Sattar as its head.
  Zia himself became the nominee of
  the Nationalist Front consisting of
  six political parties in the presidential
  election. He won a comprehensive  victory by securing 76.67% of the votes. On 1 September 1978, a new political party,   bangladesh nationalist party (BNP),
  was launched with Zia as its chairman.
  The parliamentary elections were held in
  February 1979 and BNP won 207 seats
  out of 300. On 1 April 1979,
  the first session of the jatiya sangsad
  was convened. On 9 April, martial law
  was lifted after the enactment of the
  Fifth Amendment.  President Zia's dynamic economic policy  laid emphasis on private sector
  development. A new development  strategy designed to encourage
  the private entrepreneurs, both  local and foreign, and to promote
  agricultural development through
  massive subsidies to the farmers
  was initiated. The process of handing
  over nationalised industries to their
  former owners began. Promotion
  of export of conventional and  non-conventional goods became
  a national priority. Food production
  reached a new height and Bangladesh  began exporting rice. To bring in dynamism in his action
  plan Zia put forward a 19-point
  programme, and that was designed
  to bring rapid socio-economic
  transformation in the country.
  The main thrust of the programme
  was self-reliance and rural uplift
  through people's participation.
  Its primary objectives were accelerated
  agricultural growth, population control,  self-sufficiency in food, decentralisation
  of administration and greater incentives
  to the private sector. It was designed
  to meet the basic needs of the people and
  special needs of women, youths and workers,
  and it aimed at establishing a political  order based on social justice. For bringing rapid socio-economic
  transformation in the country, President
  Zia transformed the politics of
  the country into a production-oriented one.
  He chalked out programmes of action for
  the purpose, terming these as revolutions
  and motivated his party men to realise
  those programmes through their devotion
  and commitment. The first of those
  was canal digging, and it was designed to  supply adequate water to the farmers,
  especially during the lean season.
  The second was to remove illiteracy
  from the society so that an air of
  enlightenment might prevail all around
  using both formal and non-formal  techniques all over the country.
  Moreover, motivational programmes
  were set on for the enhancement of
  productions both in the field and
  factories. The initiation of family planning
  programme, revolutionary as it was,
  was designed to stabilise population at
  a level which might be termed as
  optimum from the economic point
  of view. The institution of Gram Sarker
   aimed at enlisting the support of the people for a
  self-reliant Bangladesh, which president Zia
  advocated. Zia began executing his programme
  in right earnest and beneficial results were in sight.
  The excavation and re-excavation of more than
  1,500 canals in a year and a half, record production
  of food grains in two successive years  (1976-77 and 1977-78), an average annual
  GDP growth of 6.4% during 1975-78, a
  vigorous mass education campaign, introduction
  of village government (Gram Sarkar) and
  Village Defence Party (VDP) made deep
  impression in the minds of the people. Having the objectives of establishing good
  neighbourly relations with India and other
  South Asian countries on equal footing
  Zia started bringing in changes first at
  the internal setting through resurgence of
  nationalistic aspirations of the people  and then by stabilising countervailing  forces at the regional and international levels.  The foreign policy goals were thus
  devised anew, and dynamic international
  relations were set on with a view to preventing
  Bangladesh from hurtling down to the abyss
  of dependence. At the regional level, Bangladesh
  developed a pattern of mutuality with such states
  as Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka, and Maldives  along with India so much so that it ultimately led to
  the forging of regional co-operation in the region for
  the first time in its history. At the international level, Bangladesh, then a lonely
  sojourner, picked up friends from both the right,
  centre and left and established a kind of viable
  comradeship amongst them. Bangladesh was lifted
  from the dead end of the Indo-Soviet axis and Indian
  hegemonic circle. Bangladesh came closer to
  the Muslim world of more than fifty states,
  which began to take fresh look at Bangladesh
  and its problems. One of the superpowers of
  the time became a good friend of Bangladesh,
  though its role was not people-friendly during
  the Liberation War. Bangladesh developed a good
  working relation with China. South East Asian  countries were drawn closer. The distant  Europe remained no longer disinterested in  the affairs of Bangladesh.        Through certain creative moves, he drew  Bangladesh into          the world of the liberal west,
  the fraternal middle East and West Asia,          and
  the rising South East Asia. He attended many
  international conferences          and visited dozens of
  countries to promote the cause of the nation's
  multilateral          and bilateral relations.
  The dividend was rich. Bangladesh was elected          to
  the Security Council in one of its non-permanent
  seats in 1978, and          became actively involved in
  the activities of the UN members.
  In the middle          East and West Asia Bangladesh
  emerged as a forceful actor. It was President
           Zia who conceived of the idea of, and initiated  actions for, regional          co-operation is South Asia.
  For the purpose, he visited these countries          during
  1979-80 to speak of the need to develop a
  framework for mutual          co-operation.  south          asian association for regional cooperation
  (SAARC) was the          outcome of his efforts, which
  was formally launched in Dhaka in 1985.
           Zia did not survive to see his dream come true.
  He was assassinated in          Chittagong on 30 May 1981 i n an abortive army coup. He lies buried at Sher-e-Banglanagar, Dhaka.  | 
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