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Third Caretaker Government [20] 2001-2001 Shahabuddin Ahmed: Latifur Rahman [b] Latif: Caretaker: Independent: None — Eighth Jatiyo Sangsad [21] 2001-2001 Shahabuddin Ahmed: Khaleda Zia: Khaleda II: Parliamentary: BNP: 2001: 210/300 2001-2002 Badruddoza Chowdhury: 2002-2002 Muhammad Jamiruddin Sircar: JeI: 2002-2006 Iajuddin Ahmed: Fourth ...
Bishwo Shahitto Kendro offers classes on world literature for Higher Secondary students, and also provides every book for those classes. For Secondary and Junior school level it operates a nationwide reading program, and provides books for the students. In 2007, it had 500 schools under this program, and over 100000 active student members.
In 1995, the "National Book Centre" law was passed in the parliament of Bangladesh, and the organization was subsequently renamed "National Book Centre". [4] In 2016, the government of Bangladesh announced plans to shift the National Book Centre and the Central Public Library to a newly constructed high-rise building. [ 5 ]
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He was the Election Commissioner of Bangladesh from 2007 to 2012 [1] and retired from the Bangladesh Army as a brigadier general. He wrote more than 32 books, and serves as a columnist and freelance commentator on national and international television as a security and defense analyst. [ 2 ]
The First Khaleda ministry was the Government of Bangladesh during the 5th and 6th legislative sessions of the Jatiya Sangsad following the 1991 Bangladeshi general election. It began on 20 March 1991 and but had to be sworn in again on 19 September after the 12th constitutional amendment took effect following a constitutional referendum .
Gazi was born in 1924 in Shara, Satkhira District, East Bengal, British India.He was born into a hunting family, his father was Meher Gazi, a notable tiger hunter who had killed 50 tigers and from who he inherited a muzzle loading double barrel rifle.
Later the government-in-exile came to be popularly known as the Mujibnagar Government. Mujibnagar was abandoned quickly after the oath ceremony as participants feared a raid by Pakistani forces. [38] The government settled in Kolkata, in exile, for the rest of the war—briefly at a house on Ballyganj Circular Road [39] and then at 8 Theatre ...