Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Md Sayedur Rahman is a Bangladeshi physician and former vice-chancellor of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University. [1] In November 2024, he became the special assistant (status equivalent to a minister of state) to the chief adviser of the Interim government of Bangladesh .
[11] [12] On 13 March 2023, Khan was sued on charges of rape at the Khulna Women and Child Abuse Prevention Tribunal-3 by a female employee of the Bangladesh Agricultural University. [9] The employee worked as the personnel assistant of Khan. [9] The woman divorced her husband after Khan promised to marry her but afterwards changed his mind. [13]
Khan was born in the village of Boronaogaon in Pabna. [3] on October 6, 1946. His father Chayen Uddin was a school teacher and mother Taiyabuna Nessa was a housewife. He was the youngest of four brothers, and had one sister. He lost his father at an early age in the sixth grade. Quamrun Rahman Khan, his wife, is a retired school teacher.
Md Abdur Rahman Khan is a Bangladeshi government official who serving as secretary of Internal Resources Division [1] and the chairman of the National Board of Revenue. [2] Prior to join here, he was secretary of the Financial Institutions Division. [3] He is the former President of the Institute of Cost and Management Accountants of Bangladesh ...
Syed Sabahuddin Abdur Rahman (c. 1911 — 18 November 1987) was an Indian historian and writer. He was the editor of Maarif , a monthly journal. He had served as the director and secretary of Darul Musannefin Shibli Academy , a research academy founded by Shibli Nomani and based in Azamgarh .
Khan's father, Ataur Rahman Khan, was a member of parliament and founding member of Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh. [2] [3] In 1988, Ataur Rahman Khan, on a tour with senior leaders of Harkat-ul-Jihad-al-Islami Bangladesh, visited Afghanistan and met with Osama bin Laden. [4] [3] He completed his PhD at the Islamic University, Bangladesh. [2]
British journalist David Frost made it based on the political life of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. [332] In the 1973 Japanese Documentary "Bengaru no chichi: Râman" (Rahman, The Father of Bengal), produced by Japanese director Nagashi Oshima, depicts Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's personal life, daily activities and subsequent plans.
1972: Bangladesh, documentary on Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's nation-building activities was made by ABC TV of the United States. 1972: David Frost Program in Bangladesh, a documentary based on interviews with Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. British journalist David Frost made it based on the political life of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. [2]