Bangladesh president dies in Singapore

Updated 21 March 2013
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Bangladesh president dies in Singapore

DHAKA: Bangladesh President Zillur Rahman, a veteran ruling party politician named to the largely ceremonial post in 2009, died yesterday in a Singapore hospital, officials said. He was 84.
Rahman, who was suffering from kidney and respiratory problems, was flown to Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital by air ambulance on March 10 after his conditions worsened.
The nation declared three days of mourning after his death in the early evening in Singapore and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina Wajed expressed her “profound shock” and lamented “an irreparable loss to the country and its people.”
Rahman’s secretary Shafiul Alam told AFP that the close aide of the nation’s founding leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman had been suffering from “old age complications.” He leaves behind a son, who is a lawmaker, and two daughters.
The body of the former deputy chief of the ruling Awami League will be flown back to the country today, he said, adding that a funeral plan would be announced later.
A lawyer by profession and one of the longest serving lawmakers of the country who first joined Parliament in 1973, Rahman made his name as a pre-independence activist who pushed for Bangladesh to break free from Pakistani rule.
As a student leader and political organizer he played an active role in the Language Movement in 1952 for the establishment of Bengali as a state language, a crucial campaign that helped cement the idea of Bangladeshi statehood.
Authorities in what was then East Pakistan sentenced him to twenty years of imprisonment in absentia during the independence war of 1971 and confiscated all his properties.

After the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and his family in 1975, he was also put behind bars for four years by the military government which overthrew the elected government.
A third period of detention followed in 1986.
More latterly, he played a key role in keeping the party united after Hasina was arrested by a military-backed government in 2007.
The Awami League won a landslide victory in the December 2008 general elections and Rahman became a member of Parliament for the sixth time and subsequently took the oath as the 19th President on Feb. 12, 2009.
Rahman’s wife Ivy Rahman, also a politician, died in August 2004 after she was critically injured in a grenade attack on an Awami League party rally that also killed 20 other people.
The president’s death comes amid some of the worst political violence in post-independence Bangladesh, which has seen at least 86 people killed since Jan. 21.
The trigger for the unrest has been a war crimes tribunal that has begun sentencing people over atrocities committed during the 1971 independence war. The political opposition says it is being targeted by the tribunal.


Indian forces kill Maoist rebel leader: police

Updated 5 sec ago
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Indian forces kill Maoist rebel leader: police

  • New Delhi has launched an all-out campaign against the insurgents and vowed to end the Maoist rebellion by March 2026
  • Police in the eastern state of Odisha said they had killed Maoist commander Ganesh Uike in a gunfight

BHUBANESWAR, India: Indian security forces killed a senior Maoist rebel commander and three other fighters including two women in a raid on Thursday, police said, as authorities push a major offensive against the guerrillas.
New Delhi has launched an all-out campaign against the insurgents and vowed to end the Maoist rebellion by March 2026.
Police in the eastern state of Odisha said they had killed Maoist commander Ganesh Uike in a gunfight in Kandhamal district, after security forces received a tip-off about his location.
Uike, 69, the leader of the Maoist rebels in the coastal state, had a bounty of more than $120,000 on his head.
“Four dead bodies of Maoists” were recovered following the gunfight, top state police officer Yogesh Bahadur Khurania said, identifying one of them as Uike.
Khurania said that the other three — two women and a man — were also rebel fighters, adding that their identities were being ascertained.
There were no casualties among the security forces.
Two Maoist fighters were killed in the same state on Wednesday.
India has been cracking down on the remnants of the Naxalite rebellion, named after the village in the Himalayan foothills where the Maoist-inspired insurgency began nearly six decades ago.
The rebellion once controlled nearly a third of the country, with an estimated 15,000 to 20,000 fighters at its peak in the mid-2000s, but it has been dramatically weakened in recent years.
Since 2024, over 500 Maoist rebels have been killed, according to the Indian government.