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A. H. M. Moniruzzaman, career diplomat belonging to the Bangladesh Foreign Service, was the head of Bangladesh Mission to the European Commission in Brussels, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland; Ayub Quadri, retired bureaucrat, adviser for the ministries of Education and Cultural Affairs to Caretaker government of Bangladesh
This is a list of notable residents and people who have origins in the Sylhet Division of Bangladesh and the Barak Valley of the Indian state of Assam.This list also includes British Bangladeshis, Bangladeshi Americans, Bangladeshi Canadians, and other non-resident Bengalis who have origins in Greater Sylhet.
Fatima Yasmin is a Bangladeshi bureaucrat and vice-president of the Asian Development Bank (ADB).She served as senior secretary of the Finance Division. [1] She is the first female Secretary of finance division in the history of Bangladesh.
Fakhruddin Ahmed, former governor of the Bangladesh Bank; Kazi Zafarullah, industrialist and politician; Khuda Buksh, life insurance salesman and humanitarian; Parveen Haque Sikder, director of National Bank Limited; Sheikh Fazle Fahim, global trade leader; Wahiduzzaman, director of the State Bank of Pakistan and founder of Zaman Industrial ...
Barrister Nihad Kabir is a Bangladeshi woman business magnate, lawyer and educator.She is well known for being one of the prominent women lawyers in Bangladesh. [1] She is an advocate of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh who also served as the President of Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Dhaka from 2017 to 2022.
Dr. Kamal Hossain, lawyer and politician, 1st Law Minister of Bangladesh, creator of the Constitution of Bangladesh; M Sakhawat Hossain, Election Commissioner of Bangladesh (2007–2012) Sher-e-Bangla A. K. Fazlul Huq, Prime Minister of Bengal (1937–1943), Chief Minister of East Bengal (1954) and Governor of East Pakistan (1956–1958) [6]
Bangladesh has continuously had a female prime minister for 30 years. This is the longest unbroken tenure for a democratically elected female head of government in the world. 21% of MPs in the Jatiya Sangsad are women, the highest proportion in South Asia. [16] [17]
As an NGO, Women's World Banking (WWB) partners with financial institutions and policymakers to design and develop solutions and programs that facilitate systemic change for women. As an investor, WWB Asset Management advances women in the workplace and as customers through direct equity to bring financial security, prosperity and independence ...