SHEIKH
HASINA, Honorable Prime Minister of People's Republic of Bangladesh
(2nd term), was born on 28 September, 1947 at Tungipara under Gopalganj
district. She is the eldest of five children of the Father of the Nation
Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founder of independent
Bangladesh.
She
graduated from the University of Dhaka in 1973. She was elected Vice
President of the Students Union of Government Intermediate Girl’s
College. She was a member of the students League Unit of Dhaka
University and Secretary of the Students League Unit of Rokeya Hall. She
actively participated in all the mass movements since her student life.
Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
along with the members of his family was martyred on the fateful night
of 15 August 1975. Sheikh Hasina and her younger sister Sheikh Rehana
were the only survivors as they were in West Germany at that time. Later
she went to the United Kingdom from where she started her movement
against the autocratic rule in 1980. Sheikh Hasina was unanimously
elected President of Bangladesh Awami League in 1981 in her absence,
while she was forced to live in exile in New Delhi. Ending six years in
exile, she returned home finally on 17 May 1981.In the parliamentary
election held in 1986, she won three seats. She was elected Leader of
the Opposition. She led the historic mass movement in 1990 and announced
the constitutional formula for peaceful transfer of power through Articles 51 and 56 of the Constitution.
Following the election of 1991 Sheikh Hasina
became Leader of the Opposition in the country’s Fifth Parliament, She
steered all the political parties in the parliament towards changing the
Presidential system into the Parliamentary one.
Sheikh
Hasina created awareness among the people and waged a struggle for
Non-party Caretaker Government to ensure free and fair polls. Her
movement reached the peak after a non-cooperation movement in March 1996
and the provision for Non-party Caretaker Government was incorporated
in the Constitution.
At
the call of Sheikh Hasina a large number of people of all walks of life
expressed solidarity with the movement at the ‘Janatar Mancha’. In the
Parliamentary election held on 12 June 1996, Bangladesh Awami League
emerged as the majority party and she assumed the office of the Prime
Minister of Bangladesh on 23 June 1996.
After becoming the Prime Minister, Sheikh Hasina adopted a number of pragmatic policies for overall development of the nation including poverty alleviation.
During
the last four years her government achieved laudable success including
signing of the historic 30 year Ganges Water Sharing Treaty with India,
signing of historic peace Accord on Chittagong Hill Tracts and
inauguration of the Bangabandhu Bridge on the river Jamuna.
Sheikh Hasina was conferred Degree of Doctor of Law by the Boston University of the US
A on 6 February 1997 and Honorary Doctor of Law by the Waseda
University of Japan on 4 July 1997. She was also conferred the Honorary
Doctorate of Philosophy in Liberal Arts by University of Abertay Dundee
of the United Kingdom on 25 October, 1997. She was conferred Honorary
Degree of Desikottama (Doctor of Literature, honoris causa) by
Visva-Bharati University of West Be
ngal,
India on 28 January 1999. She was also conferred the degree of Doctor
of Laws, honoris causa, on the ground of her distinguished creative
contributions in the service of society by the Australian National
University on 20 October 1999. Dhaka University conferred Honorary
'Doctor of Laws' degree to Sheikh Hasina on 18 December, 1999 for her
outstanding contribution towards peace and democracy. The World famous
Catholic University of Brussels, Belgium conferred Honorary Doctorate
degree (Doctor Honoris Causa) on Sheikh Hasina on 04 February, 2000 for
her decisive role in establishing democracy, protecting human rights and
peace. Sheikh Hasina has been conferred Honorary Doctor of Humane
Letters by the Bridgeport University, USA on 5 September, 2000.
Sheikh Hasina
has been awarded UNESCO's Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize for 1998 for her
remarkable contribution to bringing peace through ending the 25 years
of conflict in Chittagong Hill Tracts with political courage and
statesmanship.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
received prestigious Pearl S. Buck Award '99 on 9 April 2000 in
recognition of her vision, courage, achievements in political, economic
and humanitarian fields by Randolph Macon Women's College of USA. The UN
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has been awarded the
prestigious CERES' medal to Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina in recognition
to her fight against hunger on 02 August, 1999. The All India Peace
Council awarded her 'Mother Teresa Award' in 1998. The Mahatma M K
Gandhi Foundation of Oslo, Norway awarded Sheikh Hasina ‘M K Gandhi
Award’ for 1998 for her contribution towards promotion of communal
understanding, non violent religions harmony and growth of democracy at
the level of grassroots in Bangladesh. Sheikh Hasina was named Paul
Haris Fellow by the Rotary Foundation of Rotary International. She was
also given Medal of Distinction in 1996-97 and 1998-99 and Head of State
Medal in 1996-97 by the International Association of Lions Clubs.
She has authored several books including "Why
Are They Street Children", "The Origin of Autocracy", 'Miles to Go",
"Elimination of Poverty and Some Thoughts", "People and Democracy", "My
Dream My Struggle" and "Development for the Masses." She performed holy Hajj and Umrah several times.
Sheikh
Hasina is the Chairperson of "The Father of the Nation Bangabandhu
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Memorial Trust". She has been helping a lot of
poor boys and girls for their education.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina,
throughout her life has been a strong proponent of peace, freedom and
democracy. From an early age, inspired by the lofty ideals and love for
the people of her father, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman,
the liberator of Bangladesh, she developed a strong sense of identity
for the common people. She always spoke out against oppression and
violation of human rights. This commitment has hardened over the years,
particularly when her parents, brothers and scores of relatives were
brutally assassinated by the misguided members of the military in 1975
soon after the independence of Bangladesh.
Since
that time her resolve for democracy and development for the teeming
millions of Bangladesh has become firmly entrenched. She struggled for
the return of democracy in Bangladesh
and fought valiantly for its establishment in the country in every
possible manner. She was committed to making Parliament the centre of
all national activities.
In
1996, the people of Bangladesh gave her a strong mandate as the Prime
Minister of the country. Despite serious resource and constraints and
recurrent natural calamity as well as widespread poverty, Prime Minister
Sheikh Hasina, during the first two years of her government, has lived
up to her unswerving commitment to the cause of peace, democracy,
development and human rights.
Her
first act of peace within months of her assumption of office was the
initiative for resolution of the long-standing water-sharing dispute
with India through a 30-years treaty. This put an end to a very complex
regional dispute.
Her visionary idea of a business summit among the political and private sector leaders of Bangladesh, India and Pakistan has added a new chapter in the history of South Asia.
Her
dedicated leadership also made possible a peace agreement in the
Chittagong Hill Tracts, thereby solving the 23-year old insurgency in
the Hill districts of Bangla
desh.
This peace accord brought an area inhabited by nearly 5 million people
out of violence and into a time of peace and development. Though the
international media has not given much prominence to this accord, it is
uniquely remarkable because the peace accord benefited such a large
number of people and the whole area has been brought under development
programs following the complete surrender of arms by the insurgents.
Her
quest for peace has taken her to India and Pakistan to talk to the
leaders of these two countries soon after the nuclear test urging
reduction of tension in the region.
Prime Minister Hasina
has been a strong advocate for the Culture of Peace at global, regional
and national levels. In many major conferences, she espoused the
concept of the Culture of Peace, most recently in South Africa at the
12th Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) which has a membership of
114 countries. Her initiative has resulted in the first-ever resolution
by the Plenary of the United Nations General Assembly on the Culture of
Peace. She also provided leadership for the declaration by the UN of the
period 2001 to 2010 as the International Decade for Culture of Peace
and Non-Violence for the Children of the World.
Prime Minister Hasina’s determination for the eradication of poverty, in particular through wide-ranging microcredit programmes, has been recognized world-wide. Her co-chairpersonship of the Microcredit Summit in February 1997 which resolved to bring 100 million families of the world out of poverty by 2005 focused world attention to her strong commitment to the eradication of poverty and enlistment of the poorest of the poor. She has been a champion of microcredit by spreading the message in major international forums. Her leadership led to the adoption for the first time by UN General Assembly a far-reaching resolution on the role of microcredit in the eradication of poverty.
Along
with poverty eradication, she has focused on the empowerment of women
and has successfully completed legislation to ensure adequate
representation of women in the local government bodies, leading to the
election of more than 14,000 women to these bodies in 1997. She has
taken major initiatives to stop violence against women and children.
She
has also provided leadership in the field of education, particularly
for the education of girls in her own country as well as advocating it
for global support. Her government has greatly enhanced budgetary
allocation for primary education focusing on girls’ education.
To improve the quality of life of the people of Bangladesh, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
has particularly focused on human development, paying special attention
to healthcare, family planning, nutrition, women’s rights and survival
and development of children. At the UN and other forums, she has been a
major voice in support of the cause of children and their rights.
Prime
Minister Sheikh Hasina has, all along her life, defended human rights
in every possible way. Her active promotion of the rights of women and
children has drawn appreciation by both of government and NGOs as well
as international organizations. She has promoted the right to
development as having centrality in the human rights regime. At the NAM
Summit in South Africa in 1998, her proposal for a Convention on the
Right to Development received welcoming endorsement of the Heads of
State and Government. She initiated the establishment of a National
Human Rights Commission and the office of Ombudsperson as well as
Bangladesh’s recent accession to six major human rights instruments
including the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights.
Her
keen interest resulted in the signature by Bangladesh of the Statute
for the International Criminal Court (ICC) and ratification of the
Landmines Treaty, being the first country in South Asia to do so.
Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina’s
initiative resulted in the hosting of the first-ever conference of the
Asian parliamentarians devoted to peace and cooperation in Dhaka in
September 1999 which elected her as the first President of the
Association of Asian Parliaments for peace established at the
conference.
At present, as someone who has lost so much personally and has been a victim of oppression and denial of freedom, Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
stands out as a messenger of peace, democracy, development and human
rights. Her leadership of the eighth largest country of the world
manifests her concern for the people, seen again during the worst-ever
floods in Bangladesh in 1998.
§ Sheikh Hasina
is the recipient of the UNESCO Houphouet-Boigny Peace Prize for 1998
for her role in bringing peace in the Chittagong Hill Tracts region of
Bangladesh.
§ Sheikh Hasina
has been awarded the Mahatma Gandhi Award for 1998 (Oslo, Norway) for
her contribution towards promotion of communal understanding,
non-violence, religio
us harmony and growth of grassroots democracy in Bangladesh.
§
She has been awarded 1999 CERES Medal for contribution to the
agriculture development by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations, Rome.
§
She is the winner of the 1999 Pearl S. Buck Award for "your vision,
your courage and your achievements in political, economic and
humanitarian spheres capture the spirit of the award and of the woman
who inspired it."
§
She has been awarded honorary Doctor of Liberal Arts by the University
of Alberta Dundee in the United Kingdom in October 1997.
§ She has been conferred honorary Doctor of Laws by the Boston University in th
e United States and the Waseda University of Japan.
§
She has been conferred the degree of Desikottama (Doctor of Literature)
by the Visva-Bharati University, India founded by Nobel Laureate
Rabindranath Tagore.
§ She has been conferred honorary Doctor of Laws by the Australian National University in October 1999.
§ Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina has been conferred honorary Doctor of Laws by Dhaka University in December 1999.
§ She has been conferred honorary Doctor of Laws by the Catholic University of Brussels in February 2000.
§ Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina
has been conferred by the honorary Doctor of Humane Letters for her
contribution to world peace and development by the University of
Bridgeport, Connecticut in the United States on 5 September 2000.
Under her leadership her party Bangladesh Awami League
led grand alliance to win a landslide victory in the 9th Parliament
Election on December 29, 2008 with 262 seats out of 299 in the National
Parliament.
Sheikh Hasina took oath as Prime Minister of Bangladesh (2nd term) at a ceremony held at Banghabhaban on January 06, 2009.
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