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Sheikh Mohammad Shafiuddin Ahmed was born on 1 December 1963 into a Bengali family of Muslim Sheikhs in the village of Karfa in Lohagara, Narail, then part of the Jessore District of East Pakistan. [9] His family had been freedom fighters in Khulna. [2] His father, late Sheikh Mohammad Rokon Uddin Ahmed was a freedom fighter, professor and ...
After Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the first president of Bangladesh, there is no single numbering system for the subsequent presidents that is universally accepted and followed, even by government representatives. Different sources may calculate the numbering in different ways, depending whether they count acting presidents, how multiple terms are ...
Shahabuddin Ahmed, former president; Majid-ul-Haq, minister; Ghulam Azam, Islamist politician, former leader of Jamaat-e-Islami Bangladesh, accused of war crimes for his role in 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War; Muhammad Ali Bogra, Prime Minister of Pakistan, 1953–1955
Mohammed Shahabuddin, the president of Bangladesh since April 2023, is the country's sole top constitutional authority since Sheikh Hasina resigned as prime minister and fled to India on Monday.
Mohammed Shahabuddin [b] (born 10 December 1949), natively known as Chuppu, [c] is a Bangladeshi jurist, civil servant and politician who has served as the 16th and current president of Bangladesh since 2023. [1] He was elected unopposed in the 2023 presidential election as the nominee of the ruling Awami League.
Shahabuddin Ahmed [a] (1 February 1930 – 19 March 2022) was a Bangladeshi politician who served as the president of Bangladesh from 1996 to 2001, and the chief justice of Bangladesh from 1990 to 1995. [1] He previously served as the acting president during 1990–91 when Hussain Muhammad Ershad resigned from the post.
Shahabuddin had taken office as the acting president of the country after he was unanimously agreed upon by the leaders of all political parties to be ceremoniously appointed by Ershad just before resigning as vice-president in place of Moudud Ahmed. [2] He administered the oath of office to his council of advisers at Bangabhaban on 9 December ...
Ahmed served as a platoon commander for the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, before studying art, and his experiences in the war are clearly reflected in his artwork. He was member of guerilla team Crack Platoon [7] He has painted numerous scenes from the war (e.g. the Killing of the Intellectuals) as well as portraits of key figures such as Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.