Bangladesh created a 36-person national committee to honor the student uprising that happened last summer. The government announced the formation on Wednesday through an official statement. Chief Adviser Muhammad Yunus will lead the group as chairman. Liberation War Affairs Adviser Faruk-e-Azam takes the role of vice-chairman. Cultural Affairs Adviser Mostofa Sarwar Farooki serves as program coordinator.
The committee adds all other government advisers as regular members. National Consensus Commission officials join the group alongside military leaders from all three services. Senior government secretaries from key ministries complete the membership roster. Cabinet officials and foreign affairs representatives round out the diverse committee structure. Justice officials and administration leaders also participate as active members.
The celebration runs for 36 days starting July 1 and ending August 5. Officials designed the timeline to match the anniversary of last year's July uprising. Religious communities will start the commemoration with special prayers on July 1. Mosques, temples, churches and other worship places will hold memorial services. The prayers honor people who died during the student protests.
The committee plans events across the country during the celebration period. Government officials want citizens to remember the sacrifices made during the uprising. Students led protests that changed the political landscape last summer. The new committee ensures proper recognition of their efforts. Memorial activities will help preserve the historical significance of those important weeks.
The committee adds all other government advisers as regular members. National Consensus Commission officials join the group alongside military leaders from all three services. Senior government secretaries from key ministries complete the membership roster. Cabinet officials and foreign affairs representatives round out the diverse committee structure. Justice officials and administration leaders also participate as active members.
The celebration runs for 36 days starting July 1 and ending August 5. Officials designed the timeline to match the anniversary of last year's July uprising. Religious communities will start the commemoration with special prayers on July 1. Mosques, temples, churches and other worship places will hold memorial services. The prayers honor people who died during the student protests.
The committee plans events across the country during the celebration period. Government officials want citizens to remember the sacrifices made during the uprising. Students led protests that changed the political landscape last summer. The new committee ensures proper recognition of their efforts. Memorial activities will help preserve the historical significance of those important weeks.