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After his arrival in Bangladesh then Commander in Chief of Bangladesh Army General M.A.G. Osmani appointed him as the commander in chief of the recently Bangladesh Navy and he was upgraded to the rank of Commander. Later on 7 April 1972 he post was as ameliorated as the Chief of Naval Staff with the rank of a captain.
BNS Shaheed Moazzem is a naval base of the Bangladesh Navy, established after the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971, and named in honour of shaheed (Martyr) Lieutenant Commander Moazzem Hossain [1] who had sacrificed his life for his motherland in the Bangladesh Liberation War.
The Bangladesh Navy (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ নৌবাহিনী) is the naval warfare branch of the Bangladesh Armed Forces, responsible for the defence of Bangladesh's 118,813 square kilometres (45,874 sq mi) of maritime territorial area from any external threat, the security of sea ports and exclusive economic zones of ...
On 23 March 1979, University Officers Training Corps, Bangladesh Cadet Corps and Junior Cadet Corps were all merged by President Ziaur Rahman. [1] The organization is tri service combined from Bangladesh Army, Navy and Air Force. [2] At present, its headquarters is located in Sector 6, Uttara, Dhaka. [3]
The Anti-Corruption Commission of Bangladesh is crippled by the 2013 amendment [225] of the Anti Corruption Commission Act introduced by the ruling Awami League government, which makes it necessary for the commission to obtain permissions from the government to investigate or file any charge against government bureaucrats or politicians.
Nurul Huq (12 January 1936 – 25 January 2021) was a Bangladesh Navy Captain who served as the 1st Chief of Naval Staff from 7 April 1972 to 6 November 1973 and the chairman of BIWTA and BIWTC.
The government stated that the cases were filed those were "politically motivated" and meant for "harassment". He had a total of 120 cases against him. [7] In September 2011, the government of Bangladesh withdrew 105 cases against Salim. [35] In February 2012, a case over assaulting police officers in 2004 was withdrawn by the government. [36]
The non-cooperation movement, [a] also known as the one-point movement, [b] was a pro-democratic disinvestment movement and a mass uprising against the Awami League-led government of Bangladesh, initiated within the framework of 2024 Bangladesh quota reform movement.