Nawajesh Ahmed

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Nawajesh Ahmed (1916–2000) was a lawyer, politician, and civil servant. He served as food and agriculture minister of the then East Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.[1]

Quick Facts Food and Agriculture Minister of East Pakistan, Governor ...
Nawajesh Ahmed
নওয়াজেস আহমদ
Food and Agriculture Minister of East Pakistan
In office
17 September 1971  14 December 1971
GovernorAbdul Motaleb Malik
AdministratorA. A. K. Niazi
Preceded byunknown
Succeeded bydissolved
Member of the East Bengal Legislative Assembly
for Nadia East
In office
14 August 1947  12 March 1954
LeaderKhawaja Nazimuddin
Nurul Amin
Preceded byhimself
Succeeded bydissolved
Member of the Bengal Legislative Assembly
for Nadia East
In office
23 April 1946  14 August 1947
LeaderHuseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy
Khawaja Nazimuddin
Preceded byAftab Hossain Joardar
Succeeded byhimself
Personal details
Born1916
Nadia district, Bengal Presidency, British India
Died13 March 2000(2000-03-13) (aged 83–84)
Chuadanga, Bangladesh
Political partyBML
Other political
affiliations
CML (1962–1971)
PML (1947–1962)
AIML (pre-1947)
Residence(s)Saran, Court Road, Chuadanga
EducationB.A., LL.M
Alma materMajdia Rail Bazar High School
Krishnagar Government College
University of Calcutta
OccupationLawyer
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Early life

Ahmed was born in 1916 in Shyamnagar, Ranaghat, Nadia district in the Bengal Presidency of British India. After passing the matriculation examination from Majdia Rail Bazar High School in 1928, he passed the intermediate examination two years later from Krishnagar Government College and obtained his bachelor's degree. He then earned his B.A. and a LL.M. degrees from Ripon College.[2][3]

Career

Summarize
Perspective

He began practicing as a lawyer at the Ranaghat court from 1938. In the 1946 Bengal Legislative Assembly election, he participated as a politician of the All-India Muslim League and elected as a member of the legislative assembly from the Nadia East constituency.[2][4] Before the partition of India, he relocated with his family to Chuadanga subdivision's Bastupur in Nadia district (which later became part of Kushtia District). After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, he served as the first chairman of Kushtia District in the newly formed province of East Bengal (part of Pakistan),[2] president of the Kushtia District School Board, and joint secretary of Pakistan Muslim League parliamentary group.[3] In the 1960s, he became a member of the Council Muslim League. During the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, he was appointed as a minister in the Malik ministry.[5] After the independence of Bangladesh, on 24 December 1971, he was arrested by the government for collaborating with Pakistan during the war.[6] On 30 November 1973, the government announced a general amnesty for detained cabinet members, and he was released.[7] later, he served as the vice-president of the Bangladesh Muslim League.[7] He worked at the Chuadanga court and was elected president of the Chuadanga Bar Association.[2]

Personal life and death

His father's name was Monir Uddin. He had a zamindari estate comprising nine villages in Chuadanga.[2] He was awarded the title of Khan Sahib by the British authorities, which he renounced in 1946 at the call of Mohammad Ali Jinnah, leader of the All-India Muslim League.[3] Among his three sons and two daughters, the eldest son served as the chairman of the Housing and Public Works Department. His residence was situated at Court Road in Chuadanga, where he passed away on 13 March 2000.[2]

References

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