Abu Sayeed Chowdhury | |
Native Name Lang: | bn |
Office2: | 41st Chairman of the United Nations Commission on Human Rights |
Predecessor2: | Pieter Kooijmans |
Successor2: | Héctor Charry-Samper |
Office1: | Foreign Minister of Bangladesh |
President1: | Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad |
Term Start1: | 15 August 1975 |
Term End1: | 7 November 1975[1] |
Predecessor1: | Kamal Hossain |
Successor1: | Muhammad Shamsul Haque |
Office: | 2nd President of Bangladesh |
Primeminister: | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman |
Term Start: | 12 January 1972 |
Term End: | 24 December 1973[2] |
Predecessor: | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman |
Successor: | Mohammad Mohammadullah |
Office3: | 1st Bangladesh High Commissioner to the United Kingdom |
Term Start3: | 1 August 1971 |
Term End3: | 8 January 1972 |
President3: | Sheikh Mujibur Rahman |
Successor3: | S.A. Sultan |
Office4: | Vice Chancellor of the University of Dhaka |
Term Start4: | 2 December 1969 |
Term End4: | 20 January 1972 |
Successor5: | Syed Sajjad Hussain |
Predecessor5: | M Osman Ghani |
Parents: | Abdul Hamid Chowdhury |
Birth Date: | 1921 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Nagbari, Bengal, British India (now Dhaka, Bangladesh) |
Death Place: | London, England, U.K. |
Party: | Awami League |
Children: | Abul Hasan Chowdhury |
Abu Sayeed Chowdhury (Bengali: আবু সাঈদ চৌধুরী; 31 January 1921 – 2 August 1987) was a jurist and the second president of Bangladesh.[3] Besides that, he held the positions of the Chairman of the United Nations Commission on Human rights, the vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka, the Foreign Minister of Bangladesh and the first Bangladesh High Commissioner to the UK.
Chowdhury was born on 31 January 1921 to Bengali Muslim zamindar family in the village of Nagbari in Tangail, Mymensingh district, Bengal Presidency (now Bangladesh). His father, Abdul Hamid Chowdhury, was a former speaker of the East Pakistan Provincial Assembly.[4]
Chowdhury graduated in 1940 from the Presidency College in Calcutta. He obtained his master's and law degrees from University of Calcutta in 1942 and after the second world war he completed bar-at-law in London.[5]
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 in 1948.[5] In 1960, he was appointed as the 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 Pakistani President Ayub Khan and was confirmed as judge of the Dhaka High Court after two years. He had been a member of the Constitution Commission (1960–1961) and chairman of the Bengali Development Board (1963–1968).
Chowdhury was appointed as the vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka in 1969.[5] In 1971, while in Geneva he resigned from the post as a protest against the genocide in East Pakistan by the Pakistan army.[3] 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 Bengalis, and a five-member steering 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.[6]
After liberation, Chowdhury returned to Dhaka and was elected as President of Bangladesh on 12 January 1972. On 10 April 1973,[5] 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 Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as minister of ports and shipping. After Rahman was assassinated, he became the minister for foreign affairs in the cabinet of President Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad in August 1975, a position which he held till 7 November the same year.[5]
In 1978, Chowdhury was elected a member of the United Nations Sub-committee on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities.[5] In 1985, he was elected chairman of the UN Human Rights Commission.[3] He was honoured with the insignia of Deshikottam by Visva-Bharati University. Calcutta University awarded him the honorary degree of Doctor of Law.
Chowdhury died of a heart attack in London on 2 August 1987 and was buried in his village, Nagbari of Tangail.[7]
Right after the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, Abu Sayeed Chowdhury joined the cabinet of the new government as the foreign minister and praised the mastermind of the assassination Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad by saying, "President Khondaker Mostaq Ahmad believes in democracy and he wants to restore democratic atmosphere in the country."[8]