Sahara Khatun | |
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Born | Sahara Khatun March 1, 1943 Kurmitola, Dhaka |
Residence | Dhaka, Bangladesh |
Political party | Awami League |
Religion | Islam |
Spouse | Unknown |
Children | Unknown |
Website | |
Awami League |
Advocate Sahara Khatun MP (alternate spelling "Khatoon") is a Bangladeshi politician and the current Home Minister in the Government of Bangladesh, and the first woman to hold this position[1]. Khatun is a member of Parliament[2], and the former law secretary of the Awami League[3].
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Sahara Khatun was born in Kurmitola in Dhaka on March 01, 1943[4], to Abdul Aziz and Turjan Nesa. She completed BA and LLB degrees. She is the founding president of Bangladesh Awami Ainjibi Parishad and General Secretary of Bangladesh Mahila Samity, as well as a member of the International Women Lawyers' Association and the International Women's Alliance. She started her career as a lawyer, and rose to fight cases at the Supreme Court of Bangladesh.
Sahara Khatun has been involved in politics since her student life.[1] She is currently a parliament member[2] as well as Home Affairs Minister of the Bangladesh[1].
She entered the national political scene in 1991 when she contested in the 5th Parliamentary elections as an Awami League candidate, and was defeated by Khaleda Zia of BNP, who then went on to become the Prime Minister of Bangladesh.[1]
She came in the scene again upon the arrest of current Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Khatun was one of the forerunners to induce a legal as well as a political battle in Hasina's favour.[5] Khatun herself was charged with politically motivated crimes during the Caretaker Government's regime[6].
With the exposure received in the run-up for the Bangladesh general election, 2008, she was pitched as an Awami League candidate from the Dhaka-18 constituency. Sahara pledged to the people in her constituency that she would reconstruct the roads and improve the drainage system in the area.[4] She eventually won the election[1][2], and was then named the Minister of Home Affairs of the Government of Bangladesh[1]. She took office on January 6, 2009[7].
Her tenure as minister of home affairs has been marred by the following controversies.
During the 2009 BDR Mutiny, Khatun led the delegation[8] to negotiate with the mutineers, who were soldiers staging a mutiny against their officers of Bangladesh Rifles, the paramilitary force in charge of the borders. She went inside the campus of Bangladesh Rifles[8] to stimulate negotiation and to ask the mutineers to put their arms down.
The mutiny resulted in the death of 53 top officials of the army, and 3 family members.[9]
Since Bangladesh Rifles falls under the jurisdiction of the Home Ministry,[10] Sahara Khatun is largely blamed for the deaths by many civilians.[11][12] Some[13][14] even set up a conspiracy theory that the government was behind the massacre.
However, officially Sahara Khatun is applauded for her efforts in construing a negotiation, and being able to save about 40 officers who were still held hostage when the mutineers surrendered.[1]
Moreover, her Ministry came under scrutiny when the arrested mutineers kept having mysterious deaths while under custody before trials.[15][16]
Minister Khatun has been heavily criticized for the extrajudicial killings done by her forces, namely the Bangladesh Police and Rapid Action Battalion. According to Bangladeshi human rights group Odhikar, 127 citizens experienced extrajudicial killings in 2010 alone.[17]
Awami League in 2008 had promised in its election manifesto that it would stop all extrajudicial killings if brought to power,[18] and Human Rights Watch observed that Awami League had failed in its promise.[17]
Khatun in 2011 commented that there were no extrajudicial killings done during her tenure as Minister[17], which was a stark contrast to various human rights reports.
Khatun attracted criticism in August 2010 when she asked the Hindu-minorities to cut their religious festival Janmastami short, so that it wouldn't clash with the Muslim-majority observances of Ramadan, as they coincided during the same time period. She urged the Hindu community not to make loud noises during sunset, when Muslims would be having iftar.[19]
Her comments were considered discriminatory[19], since a limitation on minority celebrations were being imposed for the first time; Hindu festivals had previously coincided with Ramadan in Bangladesh.[19]