Sheikh Hasina

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Sheikh Hasina
শেখ হাসিনা
Sheikh Hasina 2018 (cropped).JPG
Prime Minister of Bangladesh
Assumed office
6 January 2009
PresidentZillur Rahman
Abdul Hamid
Preceded byFakhruddin Ahmed (Acting)
In office
23 June 1996 – 15 July 2001
PresidentAbdur Rahman Biswas
Shahabuddin Ahmed
Preceded byMuhammad Habibur Rahman (Acting)
Succeeded byLatifur Rahman (Acting)
Additional ministries
Ministries, Divisions and CommissionMinistry of Defence, Armed Forces Division, Ministry of Energy, Ministry of Women and Children Affairs, Cabinet Division, Planning Commission
Assumed office
6 January 2009
Preceded byKhaleda Zia
Leader of the House
Assumed office
6 January 2009
Preceded byKhaleda Zia
In office
23 June 1996 – 15 July 2001
Preceded byKhaleda Zia
Succeeded byKhaleda Zia
President of the Awami League
Assumed office
16 February 1981
General SecretaryAbdur Razzaq
Syeda Sajeda Chowdhury
Zillur Rahman
Abdul Jalil
Sayed Ashraful Islam
Obaidul Quader
Preceded byAbdul Malek Ukil
Member of Parliament
Assumed office
12 June 1996
Preceded byMujibur Rahman Howlader
ConstituencyGopalganj-3
In office
27 February 1991 – 15 February 1996
Preceded byKazi Firoz Rashid
Succeeded byMujibur Rahman Howlader
ConstituencyGopalganj-3
Leader of the Opposition
In office
10 October 2001 – 29 October 2006
Preceded byKhaleda Zia
Succeeded byKhaleda Zia
In office
20 March 1991 – 30 March 1996
Preceded byAbdur Rab
Succeeded byKhaleda Zia
In office
7 May 1986 – 3 March 1988
Preceded byAsaduzzaman Khan
Succeeded byAbdur Rab
Personal details
Born (1947-09-28) 28 September 1947 (age 73)
Tungipara, East Bengal, Pakistan (present-day Tungipara, Gopalganj, Bangladesh)
NationalityBangladeshi
Political partyAwami League (1980–present)
Other political
affiliations
Grand Alliance (2008–present)
Spouse(s)
M. A. Wazed Miah
(m. 1968; died 2009)
ChildrenSajeeb
Saima
RelativesSheikh Mujibur Rahman (father)
Sheikh Fazilatunnesa Mujib (mother)
See Sheikh-Wazed family
EducationEden Mohila College
University of Dhaka
Signature

Sheikh Hasina (Bengali: শেখ হাসিনা, /'ʃekʰ ɦɐsɪna/, SHEKH ha-si-na; English: /ˈʃk həˈsnə/, SHAYK hə-SEE-nə; born 28 September 1947),[1] also known by her married name Sheikh Hasina Wazed (Bengali: শেখ হাসিনা ওয়াজেদ), is a Bangladeshi politician who has been serving as the Prime Minister of Bangladesh since January 2009. She previously served as prime minister from June 1996 to July 2001. She is the longest serving prime minister in the history of Bangladesh, having served for a combined total of over 17 years.

Hasina is the daughter of Bangladesh's founding father and first president Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the eldest of his five children.[2] Her political career has spanned more than four decades. She previously served as opposition leader from 1986 to 1990, and 1991 to 1995, then as Prime Minister from 1996 to 2001. She has led the Awami League (AL) since 1981.[3][4][5][6] In 2009, she was sworn in for her second term as Prime Minister having won a landslide victory in the 2008 general election. In 2014, she was re-elected for a third term in an election that was boycotted by the BNP and criticised by international observers. She won a fourth term in 2018, following an election marred with violence and criticised by the Opposition as being rigged.

Hasina is considered one of the most powerful women in the world, ranking 39th on Forbes Magazine's list of The World's 100 Most Powerful Women in 2020, 26th in 2018,[7] and 30th in 2017.[8] She has also made a list of "top 100 Global Thinkers" of the present decade.[9] Hasina is a member of the Council of Women World Leaders, an international network of current and former female presidents and prime ministers.[10] Sheikh Hasina was included in Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in the World of 2018.[11] Reporters Without Borders in 2021 characterised Sheikh Hasina as a predator for curbing press freedom in Bangladesh since 2014.[12]

Background and early life[]

Sheikh Hasina was born in Tungipara, East Pakistan, on 28 September 1947. Her father was Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father and the first President of Bangladesh. Her mother was Sheikh Fazilatunnesa Mujib.[13] She has said in many interviews that she had grown up in fear due to her father's political works.[14] She married physicist M. A. Wazed Miah in 1968, who was chosen for her by her father.[15] During the peak of violence during the 1970 Pakistani general election, as well as her father's arrest, she had lived in refuge with her grandmother.[14] She was active in the student politics of the University of Dhaka.[16]

Hasina was not in Bangladesh when her father, and most of her family, were assassinated on 15 August 1975 during a military coup d'état by renegade officers of the Bangladesh Army. She was in West Germany with her husband, M. A. Wazed Miah, who was working as a nuclear physicist. She moved to Delhi in late 1975 having been granted asylum by India. Her son, Sajeeb Wazed Joy, studied at Indian boarding schools. During her time in India, Hasina was not involved in politics, but became close friends with Suvra Mukherjee, wife of the future Indian President Pranab Mukherjee.[15][17]

Hasina was barred from returning to Bangladesh until after she was elected to lead the Awami League on 16 February 1981, and arrived home on 17 May 1981.[14] She is the aunt of British MP Tulip Siddiq.[18][19]

Early political career[]

1981–1991: Movement against military rule[]

While living in exile in India, Hasina was elected President of the Awami League (AL) in 1981.[20] The AL has been described as a "left-of-center" party.[21][22][23]

Under martial law, Hasina was in and out of detention throughout the 1980s. In 1984, she was put under house arrest in February and again in November. In March 1985, she was put under house arrest for another three months.[24][25] Her party, along with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) under Khaleda Zia, continued to work to restore democratically elected government, which they achieved by the democratic election in 1991, won by the BNP.

Hasina and the AL participated in the 1986 Bangladeshi general election held under President Hussain Muhammad Ershad. She served as the leader of the parliamentary opposition in 1986–1987.[13] She led an eight-party alliance as opposition against Ershad.[26] Hasina's decision to take part in the election had been criticised by her opponents, since the election was held under martial law, and the other main opposition group boycotted the poll. However, her supporters maintained that she used the platform effectively to challenge Ershad's rule. Ershad dissolved the parliament in December 1987 when Hasina and her Awami League resigned in an attempt to call for a fresh general election to be held under a neutral government. During November and December in 1987, a mass uprising happened in Dhaka and several people were killed, including Noor Hossain, a Hasina supporter.

1991–1996: Transition to democracy and leader of the opposition[]

A young Sheikh Hasina.

After several years of autocratic rule, widespread protests and strikes had paralysed the economy. Government officers refused to follow orders and resigned. Members of the Bangladesh Rifles laid down their weapons instead of firing on protestors and curfew was openly violated. Hasina worked with Khaleda Zia in organising opposition to Ershad.[27] A huge mass protest in December 1990 ousted Ershad from power when he resigned in favour of his vice president, Justice Shahabuddin Ahmed, the Chief Justice of the Bangladesh Supreme Court. The caretaker government, headed by Ahmed, administered a general election for the parliament. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party led by Khaleda Zia won a general majority, and Hasina's Awami League emerged as the largest opposition party.[28] Of the three constituencies Hasina contested, she lost in two and won in one. Accepting defeat, she offered her resignation as the party president but stayed on at the request of party leaders.

Politics in Bangladesh took a decisive turn in 1994, after a by-election in Magura, held after the death of the MP for that constituency, a member of Hasina's party. The Awami League had expected to win back the seat, but the BNP candidate won through rigging and manipulation, according to the neutral observer who came to witness the election.[29] Hasina led the Bangladesh Awami League in boycotting the parliament from 1994.[30] Relations between Hasina and Zia nosedived after this.

1996–2001: First premiership[]

Hasina with US President Bill Clinton at the Prime Minister's Office in Dhaka, 2000.

The Awami League (AL), with other opposition parties, demanded that the next general elections be held under a neutral caretaker government, and that provision for caretaker governments to manage elections be incorporated in the constitution. The ruling Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) refused to act on these demands.[31]

Opposition parties launched an unprecedented campaign, calling strikes for weeks on end. The Government accused them of destroying the economy while the opposition countered that the BNP could resolve the issue by acceding to their demands. In late 1995, the MPs of the AL and other parties resigned en masse from parliament. Parliament completed its five-year term and the February 1996 general election was held. The election was boycotted by all major parties except the ruling BNP, who won all the seats in the parliament as a result. Hasina described the election as a farce.[32][33]

The new Parliament, composed almost entirely of BNP members, amended the constitution to create provisions for a caretaker government (CTG). The June 1996 general election was held under a neutral caretaker government headed by retired Chief Justice Muhammad Habibur Rahman. The AL won 146 seats, a plurality, but fell short of a simple majority. Khaleda Zia, leader of the BNP who won 104 seats, denounced the results and alleged vote rigging. This was in contrast with the neutral observers who said that the election was free and fair.[34]

Hasina served her first term as Prime Minister of Bangladesh from 1996 to 2001. She became the first Bangladeshi prime minister since independence to complete an entire five-year term.[13] She signed the 30-year water-sharing treaty of the Ganges with India. Her administration repealed the Indemnity Act, which granted immunity from prosecution to the killers of Sheikh Mujib, her father and the first President of Bangladesh. Her government opened the telecom industry to the private sector, which till then was limited to government-owned companies. In 1999 the government started the New Industrial Policy (NIP) which aimed to strengthen the private sector and encourage growth.[35]

Bangladesh joined two multilateral bodies, the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation (BIMSTEC) and D-8 Organization for Economic Cooperation (D-8). The NIP allowed foreign companies to open 100 percent owned subsidiaries.[35]

In the 2001 general election, despite winning 40% of the popular vote (slightly less than BNP's 41%), the AL won just 62 seats in the Parliament, while the 'Four Party Alliance' led by BNP won 234 seats, giving them a two-thirds majority in Parliament. Hasina herself ran in three constituencies,[36] and was defeated in a constituency in Rangpur, which included her husband's home town, but won in two other seats. Hasina and the AL rejected the results, claiming that the election was rigged with the assistance of the President and the caretaker government. The international community was largely satisfied with the elections, and the 'Four Party Alliance' went on to form a government.[37]

2001–2008: Opposition period[]

The Awami League MPs were irregular in attending the Parliament during the following period.[38] In late 2003, the Awami League started its first major anti-government movement, culminating in the declaration by party general secretary Abdul Jolil that the government would fall before 30 April 2004. This failed to happen and was seen as a blow to the party and Hasina, who had implicitly supported Jalil.

2004: Assassination attempt[]

During her second term as leader of the opposition, political unrest and violence increased. MP Ahsanullah Master died after he was shot in May 2004. This was followed by a grenade attack on 21 August on an Awami League gathering in Dhaka, resulting in the death of 24 party supporters, including Ivy Rahman, party women's secretary. In October 2018, a special court gave verdicts in two cases filed over the incident; the court ruled that it was a well-orchestrated plan, executed through abuse of state power, and all the accused, including BNP Senior vice-chairman Tarique Rahman (in absentia) and former top intelligence officials, were found guilty. The court prescribed various punishments.[39] Shah A M S Kibria, Hasina's former finance minister, was also killed that year (2004) in a grenade attack in Sylhet.[40][41]

In June 2005, A. B. M. Mohiuddin Chowdhury, the incumbent AL Mayor, won an important election in Chittagong, the second-largest city in Bangladesh. This election was seen as a showdown between the opposition and the ruling party.[42]

2006–2008: Detention during the caretaker government and military intervention[]

The months preceding the planned 22 January 2007 elections were filled with political unrest and controversy. Following the end of Khaleda Zia's government in October 2006, there were protests and strikes, during which 40 people were killed in the following month, over uncertainty about who would head the Caretaker Government. The caretaker government had difficulty bringing all parties to the table. The AL and its allies protested and alleged that the caretaker government favoured the BNP.[43]

The interim period was marred with violence and strikes.[44][45] Presidential Advisor Mukhlesur Rahman Chowdhury negotiated with Hasina and Khaleda Zia and brought all the parties to the planned 22 January 2007 parliamentary elections. Later the nomination of Hussain Muhammad Ershad was cancelled.[why?][by whom?] As a result, the Grand Alliance withdrew its candidates en masse on the last day possible.[46] They demanded that a voters' roll be published.

Later in the month, President Iajuddin Ahmed was compelled to declare a state of emergency. Consequently, Lt General Moeen Uddin Ahmed took control of the Government.[47] Political activity was prohibited. Fakhruddin Ahmed became the chief advisor with the support of the Bangladesh Army.[48][49][50]

In April 2007, Hasina was charged with graft and extortion by the military-backed Caretaker Government during the 2006-2008 political crisis. She was accused of having forced businessman to pay bribes in 1998 before his company could build a power plant. Farooq said that he paid Hasina for approving his project.[51] Hasina fled the country. First to the United States, and then to the United Kingdom.[52]

On 18 April 2007, the Government barred Hasina from returning, stating that she had made provocative statements and that her return could cause disorder. This was described as a temporary measure. The Caretaker Government had also been trying to get Khaleda Zia to leave the country.[53] Hasina vowed to return home, and on 22 April 2007, a warrant was issued for her arrest for murder.[54][55] Describing the case against her as "totally false and fake", Hasina said that she wanted to defend herself against the charges in court. On 23 April 2007, the arrest warrant was suspended,[56] and on 25 April 2007, the ban on Hasina's entry was dropped.[57] After spending 51 days in the United States and the United Kingdom, on 7 May 2007 Hasina returned to Dhaka, where she was greeted by a crowd of several thousand. She told reporters that the Government should not have delayed her return.[58]

On 16 July 2007, Hasina was arrested by police at her home and taken before a local court in Dhaka.[59] She was accused of extortion and denied bail, and was held in a building converted into jail on the premises of the National Parliament. The AL said the arrest was politically motivated.[60] On 17 July 2007, the Anti-Corruption Commission sent notices to both Hasina and Khaleda Zia, instructing them to provide details of their assets within one week.[61] Hasina's son Sajeeb Wazed Joy was out of the country and said he would try to organise a worldwide protest. These arrests of the political leaders were widely seen as a move by the military-backed interim Government to force Hasina and Zia out of the country and into political exile.[62][63] United Kingdom MPs condemned the arrest.[64] On 11 April 2007, the police filed murder charges against Hasina, alleging that she masterminded the killing in October 2006 of four supporters of a rival political party. The four alleged victims were beaten to death during clashes between the AL and rival party activists.[65] Hasina was visiting the United States at the time.[66]

On 30 July 2007, the High Court suspended Hasina's extortion trial and ordered her release on bail.[67] On 2 September 2007, an additional case was filed against Hasina by the Anti-Corruption Commission regarding the awarding of a contract for the construction of a power plant in 1997, for which she allegedly took a bribe of 30 million takas and kept the contract from going to the lowest bidder. Six others were also accused of involvement.[68][69] A graft case was filed against Zia on the same day.[68]

On 13 January 2008, Hasina was indicted on extortion charges by a special court along with two of her relatives, her sister Sheikh Rehana and her cousin Sheikh Selim.[70] On 6 February, the High Court stopped the trial, ruling that she could not be prosecuted under emergency laws for crimes alleged to have been committed prior to the imposition of the state of emergency.[71]

On 11 June 2008, Hasina was released on parole for medical reasons. The next day she flew to the United States to be treated for hearing impairment, eye problems and high blood pressure.[72][73] Syed Modasser Ali, her personal physician, threatened to sue the caretaker government over negligence regarding Hasina's treatment during her detention.[74] The caretaker Government held mayoral elections in which the AL won 12 out of 13 mayoral elections. The caretaker government extended her two-month medical parole by one more month.[75]

2009–2014: Second premiership[]

Hasina with British Prime Minister, David Cameron at 10 Downing Street (January 2011)

On 6 November 2008, Hasina returned to Bangladesh to contest the 2008 general election scheduled for 29 December.[76] She decided to participate in the parliamentary election under the banner of the "Grand Alliance" with the Jatiya Party, led by Hussain Muhammad Ershad, as its main partner. On 11 December 2008, Hasina formally announced her party's election manifesto during a news conference, and vowed to build a "Digital Bangladesh" by 2021.[77]

Her Awami League and the Grand Alliance (a total of 14 parties) won the 2008 general election with a two-thirds majority having won 230 out of 299 seats.[78] Khaleda Zia leader of the BNP-led coalition (4-Party Alliance) rejected the results of the election by questioning the Chief Election Commissioner "for stage-managing the parliamentary election".[79] Hasina was sworn into office as Prime Minister for a second term on 6 January 2009. Independent observers declared that the elections were held in a festive and peaceful atmosphere.[80] After being Prime Minister, Hasina reneged on her agreement with the Jatiya Party to make Ershad, its leader, the President.[81]

Hasina removed many of her parties politicians who supported reforms forced by the previous caretaker Government.[82] She had to confront a major national crisis in the form of the 2009 Bangladesh Rifles revolt over a pay dispute, that resulted in 75 deaths including Bangladesh Army officers.[83][84] Some Bangladesh Army officers blamed Hasina for the deaths by not sending in the Army earlier.[85] In 2011, the Parliament removed the law that required non-party Caretaker government hold elections.[86] In 2012, she maintained a hard line stance and refused to allow entry to Rohingya refugees fleeing Myanmar during the 2012 Rakhine State riots.[87]

Hasina with Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin in January 2013

On 27 June 2013, a case against Hasina and 24 other Bangladeshi Ministers and security personnel was lodged at the International Criminal Court (ICC) for the alleged violation of human rights.[88] She has been "credited internationally" for the achievement of some of the United Nations Millennium Development Goals.[89] In 2012 a coup attempt against her by mid ranking army officers was stopped, with the Bangladesh Army being tipped off by an Indian intelligence agency.[90] The Bangladesh Army described the army officers involved as being Islamist extremists.[91] In 2012, she had a falling out with Muhammad Yunus, Nobel laureate and founder of Grameen Bank, following a Norwegian documentary that was critical of Yunus transferring money from Grameen Bank to an affiliate organisation. Yunus transferred the money back after the documentary aired but it increased scrutiny of the Bank by the Government and media in Bangladesh. Yunus lost control of his Bank following a court verdict. He criticised Hasina and other Bangladeshi politicians. She responded by saying she did not understand why Yunus blamed her when it was a court verdict that removed him from Grameen Bank.[92] During this term, her Government led and succeeded in forming the International Crimes Tribunal, to investigate and prosecute suspects involved in the Bangladesh Genocide, committed by the Pakistan Army and their local collaborators, Razakars, Al-Badr, and Al-Shams during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.[93]

2014–2019: Third premiership[]

Hasina with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, 2018

Sheikh Hasina secured a second-consecutive term in office with her ruling Awami League and its Grand Alliance allies, winning the 2014 general election by a landslide. The AL-led Grand Alliance won 267 seats, surpassing its 2008 poll success – when it secured 263 parliamentary seats. [94] Sheikh Hasina's Awami League has run Bangladesh since 2009 and won 288 seats in this election.[95] One of the leading opposition parties accused it of using stuffed ballot boxes.[94] The election was boycotted by major opposition parties including the BNP.

The election was controversial with reports of violence and an alleged crackdown on the opposition in the run-up to the election. 153 seats (of 300) went uncontested in the election, of which the Awami League won 127 by default.[96][97] Hasina's Awami League won a safe parliamentary majority with a total of 234 seats.[98][99] As a result of the boycott and violence voter turnout was lower than the previous few elections at only 51%. The day after the result, Hasina said that the boycott should "not mean there will be a question of legitimacy.[100][101] People participated in the poll and other parties participated." Despite the controversy Hasina went on to form a Government with Ershad's Jatiya Party (who won 34 seats) as the official opposition.[102][103]

Hasina with G7 Leaders and guests, Shima Kanko Hotel in Japan, 2016

The election has been called "an electoral farce".[20] The BNP wanted the elections to be held under a neutral caretaker government and had hoped to use protests to force the government to do so.[104][105]

In March 2017, Bangladesh's first two submarines were commissioned.[106] In September 2017, Hasina's government granted refuge and aid to around a million Rohingya refugees and urged Burma to end violence against the Rohingya community.[107] The majority of the Bangladeshi people supported the government's decision to provide refugee to Rohingya. Hasina received credit and praise for her actions.[108]

Hasina supported calls to remove the Statue of Justice in-front of the Supreme Court. This was seen as the Government bowing down to the pressure of those who use religion for political ends.[109] Hasina is a patron of the Asian University for Women, led by Chancellor Cherie Blair, and including the First Lady of Japan, Akie Abe, as well as Irina Bokova, the Director-General of UNESCO.[110]

2019–present: Fourth premiership[]

Hasina won her third-consecutive term, her fourth overall, when her Awami League won 288 of the 300 parliamentary seats. The leader of the main opposition alliance, Kamal Hossain, declared the vote "farcical" and rejected the results. Before the election, Human Rights Watch and other rights organisations had accused the Government of creating an intimidating environment for the Opposition.[111] The New York Times editorial board described the election as farcical, the editorial stated that it was likely Hasina would have won without vote-rigging and questioned why she did so.[112]

The BNP, the main opposition party that has been out of power for 12 years and boycotted the 2014 general election, fared extremely poorly. Bagging only eight seats, the party and its Jatiya Oikya Front alliance have been marginalised to the weakest opposition ever, since Bangladesh's post-Ershad democratic restoration in 1991.[113]

In May 2021, Hasina provided the inaugural address for the opening of a new headquarters for the Bangladesh Post Office, named the Dak Bhaban. In her address, Hasina urged for further development of the postal service in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in Bangladesh. Developmental measures outlined in the address include continuing the service's digital transformation, and the construction of cooling units in postal warehouses to pave the way for the sending of perishable food by mail.[114]

Controversies[]

The Padma Bridge graft scandal was a political incident in Bangladesh that involved the ruling Awami League government who allegedly sought, in exchange for the awarding of the construction contract, large amount of money from the Canadian construction company SNC-Lavalin. The allegations were subsequently found to be false and without merit, and a Canadian court subsequently dismissed the case.[115]

As a result of the allegations, The World Bank pulled out of a project to provide funding for the Padma Bridge, citing corruption concerns, cancelling 10241.346 crore (US$1.2 billion) of credit for the 6km-long (four miles) road-rail bridge over the Padma River.[116] One of the individuals implicated was Minister of Communications Syed Abul Hossain who subsequently resigned and was later acquitted of any wrong-doing.[117] On 11 July 2012, BNP General-Secretary Mirza Fakhrul Islam Alamgir said the Awami League government should make public a letter sent by the World Bank, wherein the Bank brought graft charges against Hasina and three other figures.[118] On 17 January 2016, Sheikh Hasina stated that a Managing Director of a bank in the United States provoked the World Bank to cancel the loan.[119]

On 24 January 2017, in a speech in parliament, Prime Minister Hasina blamed Muhammad Yunus for the World Bank's pulling out of the project.[120] According to her, Yunus lobbied with the former United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to persuade the World Bank to terminate the loan.[121] On 10 February 2017, a justice of the Superior Court of Ontario dismissed the bribery-conspiracy case for lack of any evidence.[122]

In 2018 Hasina's government passed the controversial "Digital Security Act 2018", under which any criticism deemed inappropriate by the government over the internet or any other media, would be met with various degrees of prison terms. This was heavily criticised both domestically and internationally for suppressing peoples freedom of speech as well as undermining press freedom in Bangladesh.[123][124][125][126][127]

Personal life[]

Hasina married M. A. Wazed Miah in 1968 who was a Bangladeshi physicist and the writer of a number of texts in physics and some political history books, a former Chairman of the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission.[1] Her husband died on 9 May 2009.[1][128] She has one son, Sajeeb Wazed, and one daughter, Saima Wazed.[1][129] Saima's's father-in-law is former minister of Expatriates' Welfare and Overseas Employment and present minister of LGRD, Khandaker Mosharraf Hossain.[130] Hasina's only living sibling is Sheikh Rehana who lives in London.[131]

Writings[]

  1. সাদা কালো (Black and White)[132]
  2. Democracy in Distress Demeaned Humanity[133]
  3. শেখ রাসেল (Sheikh Rasel)[134]
  4. আমরা জনগণের কথা বলতে এসেছি (We are here saying for people)[135]
  5. আন্তর্জাতিক সম্পর্ক উন্নয়নে শেখ হাসিনা (Developing International relation by Sheikh Hasina)[136]
  6. Living in Tears[137]
  7. রচনাসমগ্র ১[138]
  8. রচনাসমগ্র ২[139]
  9. সামরিকতন্ত্র বনাম গণতন্ত্র (Counterfactual versus democracy)[140]
  10. Development for the masses[141]
  11. Democracy proverty elimination and peace[142]
  12. বিপন্ন গণতন্ত্র লাঞ্চিত মানবতা (Democracy is at crisis and oppression humanity)[143]
  13. জনগণ এবং গণতন্ত্র (People and democracy)[144]
  14. সহেনা মানবতার অবমাননা (Can't bear the offence of humanism)[145]
  15. ওরা টোকাই কেন (Why they are dumpster diving)[146]
  16. বাংলাদেশে স্বৈরতন্ত্রের জন্ম (Autocracy born in Bangladesh)[147]
  17. বাংলাদেশ জাতীয় সংসদে বঙ্গবন্ধু শেখ মুজিবুর রহমান (Sheikh Mujib is in Parliament)[148]
  18. শেখ মুজিব আমার পিতা (Sheikh Mujib: My father)[149]
  19. সবুজ মাঠ পেরিয়ে (Beyond the green field)[150]
  20. দারিদ্র দূরীকরণে কিছু চিন্তাভাবনা[151]
  21. বিশ্ব প্রামান্য ঐতিহ্যে বঙ্গবন্ধুর ভাষণ[152]
  22. নির্বাচিত ১০০ ভাষণ (Selected 100 speech)[153]
  23. নির্বাচিত প্রবন্ধ (Selected Essay)[154]
  24. The quest for vision 2021- 1st-part[155]
  25. The-quest-for-vision-2021--2nd-part[156]

Honours[]

  • Mother of humanity by Channel 4[157]
  • Planet 50-50 champion by UN-Women.[158]
  • Agent of Change Award by Global Partnership Forum.[158]
  • One of the Time 100 in 2018, where she was praised for accepting Rohingya refugees but criticised for "stumbling badly on human rights" and exhibiting a "tendency toward authoritarianism" by presiding over a government that uses extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances to quash criticism and suppress political dissent.[159]
  • 59th place on Forbes' list of 100 most powerful women in the world.[160]
  • Degree of Doctor of Law by the Boston University on 6 February 1997.[161]
  • Honorary Doctor of Law by the Waseda University[162] of Japan on 4 July 1997.
  • Honorary Doctorate of Philosophy in Liberal Arts by the Abertay University on 25 October 1997.[161]
  • The Félix Houphouët-Boigny Peace Prize by the UNESCO for 1998.[163][164]
  • Mother Teresa Award by the All India Peace Council in 1998.[161]
  • M.K. Gandhi Award for 1998 by the Mahatma M K Gandhi Foundation of Oslo, Norway.[161]
  • Awarded Medal of Distinction in 1996-97 and 1998–99 and Head of State Medal in 1996-97 by the Lions Clubs International.[165]
  • Honorary Degree of 'Desikottama' (Doctor of Literature, honoris causa) by the Visva-Bharati University of West Bengal, India on 28 January 1999.[161][166]
  • The Ceres Medal[167][168] by the Food and Agriculture Organization for 1999.[161][169]
  • Doctor of Law[170] (honoris causa), by the Australian National University on 20 October 1999.[161]
  • Honorary Doctor of Law by the University of Dhaka[171] on 18 December 1999.[161]
  • Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters by University of Bridgeport on 5 September 2000.[161]
  • The Pearl S. Buck Award[172] by the Randolph College on 9 April 2000.[161]
  • Named Paul Harris Fellow by the Rotary Foundation.[161]
  • Indira Gandhi Prize for 2009.[173][174]
  • Doctor of Literature (honoris causa) by the Tripura University in January 2012.[175][176][177][178]
  • UNESCO Peace Tree award for her commitment to women's empowerment and girl's education in 2014.[179]
  • UN environment prize for leadership on climate change.[180]
  • Doctor of the University (Honorary) by the Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University on 16 November 2015.[181]
  • Doctor of Letters (Honorary) by the Kazi Nazrul University, West Bengal, India on 26 May 2018.[182][183]

In popular culture[]

See also[]

References[]

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Further reading[]

External links[]

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