• Thursday, April 25, 2024

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Bangladesh’s Ershad, opposition leader and former army ruler, passes away

Hossain Mohammad Ershad REUTERS/Rafiqur Rahman/File Photo

By: LakshmiPS

Bangladesh’s former military ruler Hussain Muhammad Ershad died on Sunday due to complications from old age at a hospital in Dhaka, officials said here.

He was 91 and is survived by his wife Raushan Ershad, a teenage son from his now severed second marriage and two other adopted children.

Ershad, the Jatiya Party chief and also the leader of the opposition in Parliament, was admitted to the Combined Military Hospital (CMH) on June 22 after his condition deteriorated.

The former president breathed his last at 7:45 am on Sunday at the intensive care unit of the facility where he was kept in life support for the last nine days after his organs gradually stopped functioning, the Inter Service Public Relations (ISPR) said.

“Previously, he used to try to respond through his eyes, but on Saturday he could not even blink his eyes,” Ershad’s younger brother and Jatiya Party leader G M Quader told reporters here yesterday.  President Abdul Hamid, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Speaker Dr Shirin Sharmin Chiudhuy mourned Ershad’s death and prayed for the eternal peace of the departed soul.

A former army chief, Ershad took over the state power in a bloodless coup in 1982 and subsequently ran the country for eight years until he was forced to quit in a pro-democracy mass upsurge in 1990.

Despite being imprisoned subsequently on several charges, Ershad emerged as one of the most powerful political leaders in the 1990s after his Jatiya Party became the country’s third biggest political outfit.

He was elected to parliament several times, once contesting from the prison even.       Ershad, who was also a prolific poet, was considered to be a soft hearted person in private life though he faced with iron hand the opposition street campaigns to topple him during his nearly a decade of rule, first as a dictator and then as an elected president.

His rule was marked by a move to make Islam the state religion of Bangladesh.

The first namaj-e-janaza was held after Johr prayers at Dhaka Cantonment’s Central Mosque. After a second namaz-e-janaza at the parliament, his body would be taken for burial at the Banani army graveyard.

Ershad was born in 1930 in Dinhata, a subdivision of Coochbehar district of present-day India’s West Bengal to Mokbul Hossain and Mazida Khatun. His parents migrated from Dinhata to Bangladesh (the then East Pakistan) in 1948 a year after the India-Pakistan partition.

He was one of nine siblings.    Ershad studied in Carmichael College in Rangpur, and later graduated from the Dhaka University in 1950. He joined the Pakistani army in 1952, when Bangladesh was part of Pakistan.

(With inputs from PTI and Reuters)

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