Ziaur Rahman

President

Birthday January 19, 1936

Birth Sign Capricorn

Birthplace Bagbari, Bengal, British India

DEATH DATE 1981-5-30, Chattogram, Chittagong, Bangladesh (45 years old)

Nationality India

#18524 Most Popular

1936

Ziaur Rahman (19 January 1936 – 30 May 1981) was a Bangladeshi military officer and politician who served as the President of Bangladesh from 1977 until his assassination.

He was the founder of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) and served as its chairman until his assassination.

Ziaur Rahman was born on 19 January 1936 to a Bengali Muslim family of Mandals in the village of Bagbari in Gabtali, Bogra District.

His father, Mansur Rahman, was a chemist who specialised in paper and ink chemistry and worked for a government department at Writers' Building in Kolkata.

His grandfather, Moulvi Kamaluddin Mandal, migrated from Mahishaban to Nashipur-Bagbari after marrying his grandmother Meherunnisa.

His mother's name was Jahanara Khatun.

Ziaur Rahman was raised in his home village of Bagbari and studied in Bogra Zilla School.

1946

In 1946, Mansur Rahman enrolled Ziaur Rahman for a short stint in a boys school of Calcutta, Hare School, where he studied until the dissolution of the British Empire in India and partition of India and Pakistan in 1947.

1947

Mansur Rahman exercised his option to become a citizen of a Muslim majority Pakistan and in August 1947 moved to Karachi, the first capital of Pakistan located in Sindh, West Pakistan.

Zia, at the age of 11, had become a student in class six at the Academy School in Karachi in 1947.

1952

Ziaur Rahman spent his adolescent years in Karachi and by age 16 completed his secondary education from that School in 1952.

1953

In 1953, Ziaur Rahman was admitted into the D. J. Sindh Government Science College.

In the same year, he joined the Pakistan Military Academy at Kakul as a cadet.

1960

In August 1960, his marriage was arranged to Khaleda Khanam Putul, the 15-year-old daughter of Iskandar Majumder and Taiyaba Majumder from the Feni District (part of then Noakhali District).

Khaleda Khanam Putul, later known as Khaleda Zia, went on serve as the Prime Minister of Bangladesh three times.

Ziaur Rahman, a captain in the then Pakistan Army who was posted at that time as an Officer of the Defence Forces.

His father, Mansur Rahman could not attend the marriage ceremony, as he was in Karachi.

1965

Throughout his military career, Ziaur Rahman was awarded two gallantry awards for two campaigns he participated in; he was awarded the Hilal-i-Jurat for the Indo-Pak War in 1965, and Bir Uttom in 1972 for the Bangladesh Liberation War.

1971

Ziaur was a prominent Bangladesh Forces commander during the country's Independence war from Pakistan in 1971.

He originally broadcast the Bangladesh declaration of independence on 27 March from Kalurghat radio station in Chittagong.

After the war of Independence, Ziaur became a brigade commander in Bangladesh Army, and later the deputy chief of staff and chief of staff of Bangladesh Army.

His ascent to leadership of the country resulted from a conspiracy that had begun with the killing of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding president of Bangladesh, in a military coup d'état followed by a coup and counter-revolt within the military to gain control at the helm.

Ziaur Rahman gained de facto power as head of the government already under martial law imposed by the Mushtaq government.

1975

He previously served as the second chief of army staff from 1975 to 1978 with a minor break.

Ziaur, sometimes known as Zia, was born in Gabtali and trained at the Pakistan Military Academy in Abbottabad.

He served as a commander of the Pakistan Army in the Second Kashmir War against the Indian Army, for which he was awarded the Hilal-e-Jurrat from the Pakistani government.

1977

He took over the presidency in 1977.

1978

As president in 1978, Ziaur Rahman founded the Bangladesh Nationalist Party (popularly known by its abbreviation BNP).

He reinstated multi-party politics, freedom of the press, free speech and free markets and accountability.

He initiated mass irrigation and food production programmes, including social programmes to uplift the lives of the people.

He retired from the Bangladesh Army with the rank of Lt. General in 1978.

Ziaur Rahman's death created a divided opinion on his legacy in Bangladeshi politics.

Awami League supporters vilify him for alleged connections to Mujib's assassination and controversial actions during his presidency.

Critics argue that the current authoritarian regime politically motivated the negative portrayal of Ziaur's legacy.

Nevertheless, Rahman is generally credited for his role in the Liberation War, stabilizing Bangladesh, industrializing agriculture, and fostering regional cooperation.

His political party, the BNP, remains a major force alongside its rival, the Awami League, with his wife, Khaleda Zia, leading the party and serving two terms as prime minister.

1985

His government initiated efforts to create a regional group in South Asia, which later became SAARC in 1985.

He improved Bangladesh's relations with the West and China, and departed from Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's close alignment with India.

Domestically, Ziaur Rahman faced as many as twenty-one coup attempts for which military tribunals were set up, resulting in thousands of Army and Air Force officers being executed, earning him a reputation of being 'strict' and 'ruthless' amongst international observers.

2017

He had two younger brothers, Ahmed Kamal (d. 2017) and Khalilur Rahman (d. 2014).