Politics
a year ago

Awami League observes Sheikh Hasina’s 43rd homecoming day

Published :

Updated :

Ruling Awami League and various like-minded organisations have organised different programmes to observe 43rd homecoming day of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on Wednesday.

Special doa and prayers will be offered at mosques, temples, churches and pagodas to mark the day. A delegation of the ruling Awami League will exchange greetings with Sheikh Hasina at Ganabhaban on the day, reports BSS.

A discussion will be held at Bangabandhu International conference centre at 3.30pm on Wednesday. Awami League presidium member Engineer Mosharraf Hossen will chair it.

On May 17 in 1981, Sheikh Hasina returned to the country after a long exile.

Boarding on an aircraft of the Indian Airlines, Sheikh Hasina reached the then Kurmitola Airport in Dhaka from the Indian capital of New Delhi via Kolkata at 4.30pm on that day.

Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman was brutally killed along with most of his family members on August 15 in 1975 and his two daughters-- Sheikh Hasina and Sheikh Rehana --- luckily escaped the carnage as they stayed abroad.

In a national council session of the Awami League on February 14, 15 and 16 in 1981, Sheikh Hasina was elected as party president in her absence and then she returned to the country on May 17.

"I have returned to the country not to become a leader of the Awami League, rather to participate in the struggle for freedom by staying beside the people," said the AL president in a heart touching reception accorded by nearly 1.5 million people at the airport at that time.

She added: "I want to stay beside you as your sister, as your daughter, and as a worker of Awami League, who believes in the ideals of Bangabandhu."

After electing as a chair of the ruling Awami League, the country has established the people’s right to vote and access to food , re-establishment of democracy and end of autocracy in the forty-two years long political life led by Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Share this news