Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir | |
Native Name: | মির্জা ফখরুল ইসলাম আলমগীর |
Native Name Lang: | bn |
Office: | 9th General Secretary of Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
Term Start: | 20 March 2011 |
1Blankname: | Chairperson |
Predecessor: | Khandaker Delwar Hossain |
Office1: | Vice President of Asia Pacific Democrat Union |
Term Start1: | 16 March 2019 |
1Blankname1: | Chairman |
1Namedata1: | Ranil Wickremesinghe |
Office2: | Secretary General of the Jatiya Oikya Front |
Term Start2: | 13 October 2018 |
Term End2: | 12 December 2022 |
Leader2: | Kamal Hossain |
Predecessor2: | Post Established |
Office3: | Minister of State for Agriculture |
Primeminister3: | Khaleda Zia |
Term Start3: | 10 October 2001 |
Term End3: | 17 November 2005 |
Predecessor3: | A. Z. A. Nasiruddin |
Successor3: | Iqbal Hasan Mahmud Tuku |
Office4: | Minister of State for Civil Aviation and Tourism |
Primeminister4: | Khaleda Zia |
Predecessor4: | Mir Mohammad Nasiruddin |
Successor4: | M. A. Matin |
Term Start4: | 18 November 2005 |
Term End4: | 27 October 2006 |
Office5: | Member of Parliament |
Constituency5: | Thakurgaon-1 |
Term Start5: | 10 October 2001 |
Term End5: | 27 October 2006 |
Predecessor5: | Khademul Islam |
Successor5: | Ramesh Chandra Sen |
Constituency6: | Thakurgaon-1 |
Term Start6: | February 1996 |
Term End6: | June 1996 |
Predecessor6: | Khademul Islam |
Successor6: | Khademul Islam |
Birth Date: | 1948 1, df=yes |
Birth Place: | East Dinajpur District, East Bengal, Dominion of Pakistan (present-day Thakurgaon District, Bangladesh) |
Nationality: | Bangladeshi |
Party: | Bangladesh Nationalist Party |
Alma Mater: | University of Dhaka |
Spouse: | Rahat |
Parents: | Mirza Azimuddin Sarkar (Grandfather) Mirza Ruhul Amin (Father) Fatema Amin (Mother) |
Signature: | Mirza fakhrul sir.png |
Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir (born 26 January 1948) is a Bangladeshi politician. He has been the secretary general of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) since 2016.[1] He was a member of the parliament for Thakurgaon-1 constituency from 2001 to 2006. In that term, he was also appointed as the Minister of State in charge of the Ministry of Agriculture and later Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism.[2]
Alamgir was born on 26 January 1948 in Thakurgaon District to Mirza Ruhul Amin, a former member of parliament and Mirza Fatima Amin, a homemaker.[3] [4]
Alamgir was active in student politics at Dhaka University. He was a member of the then East Pakistan Students Union (EPSU), now known as Bangladesh Students Union, and was elected as the secretary general of the organization's SM Hall unit in the university. Alamgir rose through the ranks of EPSU and, at the height of the 1969 uprising against the Ayub Khan administration, he was elected as the organization's Dhaka University president.
In 1972, Alamgir became a teacher of economics at Dhaka College.
Among other government responsibilities, Alamgir served in the administration of President Ziaur Rahman. He worked as a secretary of Deputy Prime Minister S.A. Bari, and State Minister Amirul Islam Kamal until the latter resigned in 1982. Following this, Alamgir taught economics at Thakurgaon Govt. College and also worked for the Bangladesh government's Directorate of Inspection and Audit as an auditor and UNESCO until 1986.
In 1986, with the municipal polls ahead, Alamgir resigned from his government post. He ran for chairman in Thakurgaon municipality in the 1988 municipal elections as a neutral candidate, and won.
Alamgir joined Bangladesh Nationalist Party amid the countrywide uprising to topple the military regime of Gen Hussain Muhammad Ershad in the early 1990s. In 1992, Alamgir was nominated as president of the BNP's Thakurgaon District unit.
Alamgir ran in the 5th parliamentary election in 1991 from Thakurgaon-1 constituency on the Bangladesh Nationalist Party ticket but lost to Awami League candidate Khademul Islam.[5] He lost to another Awami League candidate again in the 7th parliamentary election in 1996, but this time with a very narrow margin: 51%–47%.[6]
In the 8th parliamentary election in 2001, as a Bangladesh Nationalist Party candidate, Alamgir beat Awami League candidate Ramesh Chandra Sen by 37,962 votes, garnering 134,910 votes.[7]
The government newly formed by Alamgir's BNP party appointed him Minister of State in charge of the Ministry of Agriculture. A cabinet reshuffle later named him Minister of State in charge of the Ministry of Civil Aviation and Tourism, where he served until the BNP government left office in October 2006.
Alamgir ran again in the 9th parliamentary election in 2008, losing marginally to the Awami League candidate he previously beat, Ramesh Chandra Sen.[8]
See main article: The 5th National Council of Bangladesh Nationalist Party. The 5th National Council of BNP in December 2008 named Alamgir senior joint secretary general, a post previously held by Tarique Rahman (now the vice-chairman of the BNP).
Alamgir became well known in Bangladesh for his frequent appearance in the media as the BNP's spokesperson, particularly as leader of the opposition to the Awami League-led government that took office in January 2009.
Alamgir was named acting secretary general of the BNP by its chairperson, Begum Khaleda Zia, following the death of secretary general Khandaker Delwar Hossain in March 2011. Some senior BNP figures disputed the nomination, stating that the BNP constitution does not allow for this. The dispute was ruled out on 21 March 2011, hours before Zia left for Saudi Arabia at invitation of the Saudi royal family.[9]
Alamgir continued criticizing the government vibrantly on different issues. Upon organizing mass antigovernmental showdowns, he warned the government to not obstruct the opposition events. The party organized a number of countrywide populous showdowns and agitations against the government, most notably on the issue of the caretaker government, which the Awami League government demolished, enforcing its decisive two-thirds majority in the parliament in 2011.
Alamgir's motorcade came under a violent attack by an armed mob in Lakshmipur on 2 August 2011 as it was approaching the main town where Alamgir was about to attend a party meeting. The attackers were not identified, but Alamgir and his companions alleged that they were members of the ruling party, the Awami League. Though Alamgir was unhurt, three vehicles (including the one in which he was riding) were vandalized, and ten people were injured.
In February 2012, Alamgir criticized the government for its role in the Pilkhana massacre. He claimed the violence was intended to permanently damage the national security of Bangladesh and accused the Awami League government of not properly investigating the incident.
As of March 2012, Alamgir is one of the top contenders to fill the post of BNP's secretary general.
In 2023, Bangladesh Nationalist Party organized a mass gathering in front of their central office in Nayapaltan, Dhaka on 28 October.[10] In the following day, the Detective Branch (DB) of Dhaka Metropolitan Police (DMP) initially raided Alamgir's residence on charges of inciting of attacking on the police and attacked at the residence of the Chief Justice during the massive gathering. Exactly 10 minutes after the raid, the DB officials came back and took Alamgir into custody.[11] Which is confirmed by Press Wing Member of BNP Chairperson Shairul Kabir Khan and Additional Deputy Commissioner of DB, Gulshan Division, Hafiz Al Asad to Prothom Alo.[12] After the capture, he was taken to the head office of the Detective Branch. Deputy Commissioner of Media and Public Relations Department of DMP Farooque Hossain told Prothom Alo that he will be shown as arrested.[13] About nine and a half hours after the capture, the police reported that Alamgir was arrested. DMP Commissioner Habibur Rahman told Prothom Alo that he was arrested in the case of murder and car burning in Paltan police station.[14]
The Communist Party of Bangladesh (CPB) has demanded the release of all arrested leaders and activists including Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir.[15]
Alamgir's father was Mirza Ruhul Amin.[16] Alamgir is married to Rahat Ara Begum, who attended University of Calcutta and presently works in an insurance company in Dhaka. The couple has two daughters, Dr. Shamaruh Mirza and Mirza Safaruh. Shamaruh attended University of Dhaka and was a teacher in the institution. She is now a medical scientist and the co-founder of SiTara's Story.[17] Safaruh, also a University of Dhaka graduate, teaches in a school in Dhaka.[18]
Alamgir's uncle, Mirza Ghulam Hafiz, was a BNP politician who served as the Minister of Land (1978–79), Minister of Law, Justice, and Parliamentary Affairs (1991–96), and was elected MP from a Dhaka constituency in 1979. Hafiz was the speaker of the 2nd national parliament of Bangladesh (1979–82).[19]
Another uncle, Wing Commander S. R. Mirza, served in the first government of Bangladesh that was formed in exile (the Mujibnagar Government) in April 1971. He was named to head the newly formed Directorate of Youth Camps that oversaw training facilities for freedom fighter recruits in 1971.[20]