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Second retired general to join interim Bangladesh cabinet

A second retired military general was set to join Bangladesh's interim government on Friday, one of four new additions to the caretaker administration formed after last week's ouster of autocratic ex-premier Sheikh Hasina.

Sean GLEESON
16 August 2024, MVT 15:10
Nobel laureate and chief adviser of Bangladesh's new interim government, Muhammad Yunus greets the public after laying a wreath at the National Martyrs' Memorial in Dhaka on August 9, 2024. Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus led a solemn tribute to Bangladesh's fallen independence heroes on August 9 in the first act of his interim government, after a student-led uprising forced predecessor Sheikh Hasina into exile. Yunus, 84, was sworn in on Thursday night after returning home from Europe at the request of protest leaders, following the sudden end of Hasina's 15-year rule. (Photo by Indranil MUKHERJEE / AFP)
Sean GLEESON
16 August 2024, MVT 15:10

A second retired military general was set to join Bangladesh's interim government on Friday, one of four new additions to the caretaker administration formed after last week's ouster of autocratic ex-premier Sheikh Hasina.

Jahangir Alam Chowdhury, 71, and three others will join the "council of advisers", the de facto cabinet now running Bangladesh under the leadership of Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus.

Chowdhury was a three-star general and second-in-command of the army but retired from the forces in 2010 -- the year after Hasina, now 76, took office.

The pair had butted heads in the aftermath of a savage mutiny by troops against senior military officers that raised fears of a power struggle between the armed forces and the government.

Chowdhury and three others were scheduled to be sworn into office later on Friday, said a statement from the council of advisers.

The 2009 mutiny killed 74 people over two days, including 57 senior officers, some of whom were hacked to death or burnt alive before their bodies were dumped in sewers or shallow graves.

More than 150 soldiers were sentenced to death in 2013 for participating in the uprising, which began partly in anger that their pleas for better pay and treatment had been ignored.

Their trials were criticised for procedural irregularities and claims that the defendants were tortured while in custody, which Hasina's government denied.

Chowdhury was tasked with leading a "neutral" army probe into the mutiny soon after it occurred, competing with a rival investigation already set up by Hasina's administration.

He left the army a year later on his 57th birthday, the usual retirement age for officers of his rank at that time.

Also to be sworn in Friday were former cabinet secretary Ali Imam Majumder, Cambridge-educated economist Wahiduddin Mahmud, and professor and infrastructure expert Fouzul Kabir Khan.

Sworn in last week were rights activists, an Islamic cleric, a former central bank chief, and two student leaders of the protests that toppled Hasina.

Retired one-star army general Sakhawat Hossain was also tapped to run the home ministry.

Several of the cabinet's members are associated with the Bangladesh Nationalist Party, the main opposition to Hasina's Awami League.

Hasina's 15-year rule saw widespread human rights abuses, including the mass detention and extrajudicial killings of her political opponents.

Yunus, 84, returned from Europe eight days ago to head a temporary administration that faces the monumental challenge of steering democratic reforms.

On Thursday, his government said it had invited a United Nations' fact-finding team to probe "atrocities" committed during the final weeks of Hasina's rule.

More than 450 people were killed in the weeks of protests leading up to her August 5 ouster, most by police fire.

© Agence France-Presse

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