Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Abu Sayeed Chowdhury

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Abu Chowdhury

Party
  
Bangladesh Awami League

Political party
  
Awami League

Religion
  
Islam


Abu Sayeed Chowdhury archivethedailystarnetphoto20100802201008

Born
  
31 January 1921Tangail, Bengal Presidency, British India(now in Bangladesh) (
1921-01-31
)

Died
  
August 2, 1987, London, United Kingdom

Prime Minister
  
Succeeded by
  
Preceded by
  
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman

বিচারপতি আবু সাঈদ চৌধুরী এর জীবনী | biography of Justice Abu Sayeed Chowdhury


Abu Sayeed Chowdhury (31 January 1921 – 2 August 1987) was a jurist and the second President of Bangladesh. Abu Sayeed Chowdhury was born on 31 January 1921 in a Zamindari (Landed) family of Nagbari in Tangail District. His family's old heritage and wealth is widely known. His father Abdul Hamid Chowdhury apart from being a Zamindar become the speaker of the East Pakistan Provincial Assembly later on in his life. Abdul Hamid Chowdhury was given the title "Khan Bahadur" by the British Empire, a title which he later renounced to give his voice to the movement against British atrocities and the British Empire.

Contents

Education

Abu Sayeed Chowdhury graduated in 1940 from the Presidency College in Calcutta.He later on obtained his Masters and Law degrees from Calcutta University in 1942 and after the second world war he went to the United Kingdom to do Bar-at-Law in London.

Professional career

Abu Sayeed Chowdhury joined the Calcutta High Court Bar in 1947, and after the partition of India he came over to Dhaka and joined the Dhaka High Court Bar (1948). He was a practising Advocate of Dhaka High Court and was a very renowned lawyer. In 1960, he was appointed as advocate general of East Pakistan.He was elevated to the post of Additional Judge of the Dhaka High Court on 7 July 1961 by the then President of Pakistan Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan and was confirmed as Judge of the Dhaka High Court after two years. He had been a member of the Constitution Commission (1960–61) and chairman of the Bengali Development Board (1963–1968). Justice Chowdhury was appointed as vice-chancellor of Dhaka University in 1969. In 1971, while in Geneva he resigned from his post as vice-chancellor as a protest against the genocide in East Pakistan by the Pakistan army. From Geneva he went to the UK and became the special envoy of the provisional 'Mujibnagar' government. An umbrella organisation, 'The Council for the People's Republic of Bangladesh in UK' was formed on 24 April 1971 in Coventry, UK, by the expatriate Bengali's, and a five-member Steering Committee (central committee) of the Council was elected by them. He was the High Commissioner for the People's Republic of Bangladesh, London from 1 August 1971 to 8 January 1972)

President of Bangladesh

After liberation, Justice Chowdhury returned to Dhaka and was elected as President of Bangladesh on 12 January 1972. On 10 April 1973, he was again elected as President of Bangladesh, and in the same year (December) he resigned and become special envoy for external relations with the rank of a minister. On 8 August 1975, he was included in the cabinet of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as minister of Ports and Shipping. After Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib was assassinated he became the minister for Foreign Affairs in the cabinet of President Khondakar Mostaq Ahmad (August 1975), a position which he held till 7 November 1975.

UN Committee

In 1978, Justice Chowdhury was elected a member of the United Nations Sub-committee on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. In 1985, he was elected chairman of the UN Human Rights Commission. He was honoured with the insignia of 'Deshikottam' by Visvabharati University. Calcutta University awarded him the honorary degree of Doctor of Law an event which was attended by the Prime Minister of India, Indira Gandhi. His book Probasey Muktijuddher Dingooli (1990) is a valuable contribution to the understanding of Bangladesh War of Liberation. He died of a heart attack in London on 2 August 1987 and was buried in his village, Nagbari of Tangail.

References

Abu Sayeed Chowdhury Wikipedia


Similar Topics