Mohammad Mohammadullah Explained

Mohammad Mohammadullah
Native Name Lang:bn
Office:3rd President of Bangladesh
Primeminister:Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Term Start:24 December 1973
Term End:25 January 1975
Predecessor:Abu Sayeed Chowdhury
Successor:Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Birth Date:21 October 1921
Birth Place:Raipur, Bengal, British India
(now Chittagong, Bangladesh)
Death Place:Dhaka, Bangladesh
Party:Awami League (Before 1980; 1996–1999)
Otherparty:Nationalist Party (1980–1996)
Alma Mater:University of Dhaka
Surendranath College
Office1:4th Vice President of Bangladesh
Predecessor1:Mirza Nurul Huda
President1:Abdus Sattar
Successor1:A. K. M. Nurul Islam
Termend1:24 March 1982
Termstart1:23 March 1982
Office2:2nd Speaker of Jatiya Sangsad
Predecessor2:Shah Abdul Hamid
Successor2:Abdul Malek Ukil
Deputy2:Mohammad Baitullah
Termend2:26 January 1974
Termstart2:7 April 1973

Mohammad Mohammadullah (Bengali: মোহাম্মদ মুহম্মদুল্লাহ; 21 October 1921 – 12 November 1999) was the third president of the People's Republic of Bangladesh. Mohammadullah became the Acting President on 24 December 1973, was elected president on 24 January 1974, and took oath of office on 27 January 1974. He remained President until 25 January 1975.

Birth and education

Mohammadullah was born in Saicha, Raipur, Lakshmipur, on 21 October 1921.[1] His father Munshi Abdul Wahab was a social worker. In 1943, he completed his secondary school certificate from Lakshmipur Adarsha Samad Government High School. Mohammadullah earned a bachelor's degree with honours in history from Dhaka University and obtained LLB degree from Ripon College Kolkata and again from Dhaka University in the same year 1948. In 1950, he became a member of the Dhaka Bar. In 1964, he was enrolled in Dhaka High Court as an advocate.[2]

Political life

Mohammadullah was an active member of the East Pakistan Awami League from 1950. He had walked into the Awami League office in Nawabpur and told Sheikh Mujibur Rahman he would like to volunteer for Awami League and started working in office management.[3] In 1953, he was elected as office secretary of East Pakistan and held the same position till 1972 after being nominated by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. He actively participated in the six point movement in 1966, for which he was jailed for a long time.Mohammadullah was elected to the East Pakistan Provincial Assembly on the ticket of the Awami League in 1970. He was appointed as the political advisor to the Acting President Syed Nazrul Islam during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.

On 10 April 1972, he was elected as the Deputy Speaker of the Bangladesh Constituent Assembly (Ganoparishad) and the same year he became the acting Speaker. On 12 November 1972, he was elected Speaker. He was elected to the Member of the Parliament (JS) from the Raipur-Lakshmipur constituency, and was re-elected Speaker of the House again in 1973.

He became the Acting President of the Republic on 24 December 1973 and President on 24 January 1974.In January 1975, the fourth amendment was passed which removed then President Mohammad Mohammadullah from office and made Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman president for a five-year term.[4]

He was made Minister of Land Administration and Land Reforms in the Cabinet of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on 26 January 1975. He was appointed as the Vice President by collaborators of the Assassination of Sheikh Mujib on August 1975. Mohammadullah joined the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) in 1980. He was appointed vice president by President Abdus Sattar in March 1982 but the tenure lasted just a day, because General Hussain Muhammad Ershad took over the reins of administration of the country. Mohammadullah was elected a member of the parliament (JS) once again in 1991 on BNP ticket.

Death

Mohammadullah died on 12 November 1999 at the age of 78. He was buried at Banani graveyard near Naval Headquarters.

Honours

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Iftikhar-ul-Awwal . Life Sketches: Lieutenant-Governors, Governors & Presidents . Hundred Years of Bangabhaban, 1905-2005 . 2006 . Press Wing Bangabhaban . 978-984-32-1583-3 . 344.
  2. Web site: Mohammadullah, Mohammad . Banglapedia . 11 November 2016.
  3. Book: Mujibur Rahman, Sheikh . The unfinished memoirs . 2012 . 978-0-670-08546-0 . Oxford University Press . 210–211 . 840484565.
  4. News: Liton . Shakhawat . Did Gen Zia abolish Sangsad's power? . The Daily Star . 26 June 2015.
  5. http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/savifadok/315/1/Coronation.pdf Final Programmes for The Coronation and The Silver Jubilee Celebration