Muhammad Shamsul Huq Explained

Muhammad Shamsul Huq
Native Name Lang:bn
Office:Vice-Chancellor of the University of Dhaka
Term Start:23 September 1975
Term End:1 February 1976
Predecessor:Abdul Matin Chowdhury
Successor:Fazlul Halim Chowdhury
Office1:Vice-Chancellor of the University of Rajshahi
Term Start1:1965
Term End1:1969
Predecessor1:Momtazuddin Ahmed
Successor1:Syed Sajjad Hussain
Office2:Foreign Minister of Bangladesh
Term Start2:March 1977
Term End2:March 1982
Predecessor2:Abu Sayeed Chowdhury
Successor2:A R Shamsud Doha
Birth Date:12 October 1911
Birth Place:Pashchimgaon, Laksam, Tippera, Eastern Bengal and Assam, British India
Profession:University academic
Awards:Ekushey Padak (2003)
Death Place:Dhaka, Bangladesh

Muhammad Shamsul Huq (12 October 1911 – 23 February 2006) was a Bangladeshi government minister and educationist. He served as an education minister in erstwhile East Pakistan, and became the minister of foreign affairs six years after the independence of Bangladesh.[1] Shamsul Huq also served as vice-chancellor in both the University of Dhaka and University of Rajshahi.[2] He was awarded the Ekushey Padak in 2003 by the government of Bangladesh.[3]

Early life and education

Shamsul Huq was born on 12 October 1912 to a Bengali Muslim parents Karimul Huq and Mahmuda Khatun in the village of Pashchimgaon in Laksam, Tipperah District, Bengal Province. In 1927, he passed his matriculation exam from the local Faizunnisa-Badrunnisa High School in Paschimgaon. He completed his Intermediate of Arts from Feni College in 1929. Shamsul Huq earned his bachelor's in political economy and political philosophy from the Islamia College of Calcutta in 1931. He got his master's from the University of Calcutta in 1933. He also received training from the University of London from 1945 to 1946, under the Post-War Education Reforms Programme.[2]

Career

Huq served as the third vice-chancellor of the University of Rajshahi from 31 August 1965 to 4 August 1969.[4] He then served the government of Pakistan under General Yahya Khan as a minister in the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology Research until the independence of Bangladesh.[5] [6]

From 23 September 1975 to 1 February 1976, Huq served as the fifteenth vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka.[7] He became Bangladesh's fifth Minister of Foreign Affairs in November 1975, serving this role until March 1982. From 1977 to 1978, Shamsul Huq was a member of the president of Bangladesh's advisory board. Along with President Ziaur Rahman, he contributed to the formulation of the formation of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) in 1980.[8]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Web site: List of Former Foreign Ministers . Ministry of Foreign Affairs . 20 August 2017 . en . https://web.archive.org/web/20170829193856/http://mofa.gov.bd/foreign-minister . 29 August 2017 . dead.
  2. . Huq, Muhammad Shamsul.
  3. Web site: http://www.moca.gov.bd/site/page/c706da0c-29ee-4f0f-95d9-fa6705e19001/একুশে-পদকপ্রাপ্ত-সূধীবৃন্দ . bn:একুশে পদকপ্রাপ্ত সুধীবৃন্দ . Government of Bangladesh . 20 June 2016.
  4. Web site: List of former Vice Chancellor . . 10 April 2019.
  5. Book: Zaman . Habibuz . Seventy Years in a Shaky Subcontinent . 1999 . Janus Publishing Company Lim . 978-1-85756-405-1 . 184 . 20 August 2017 . en.
  6. Book: Mustafa . Sayid Ghulam . English Essays of Pakistan . 1997 . Ferozsons . 978-969-0-01374-3 . 129 . 20 August 2017 . en.
  7. Web site: Vice-Chancellors of the University Since 1921 . . 10 April 2019.
  8. Book: Ahmed . Zahid Shahab . 2012 . Regionalism and Regional Security in South Asia: The Role of SAARC . Routledge . 32 . 978-1-4094-6769-4 . 20 August 2017 . en.