President, PM, Bhutanese King pay homage to Liberation War martyrs

President Mohammed Shahabuddin and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina paid rich tributes to the Liberation War martyrs by placing wreaths at the National Martyrs’ Memorial in Savar, on the outskirts of the capital, early Tuesday, marking the 54th Independence and National Day.

Besides, the visiting Bhutanese King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, who is now on a four-day official visit to Bangladesh at the special invitation of Bangladesh President Shahabuddin and Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina on the 54th Independence Day celebrations, also paid respect to the Liberation War heroes by placing wreath at 5:57 am, reports BSS.

As part of marking the day, the President first placed the wreath at the altar of the memorial at about 5:56 am, followed by the Prime Minister and the Bhutanese King.

Bhutan was the first country to recognize Bangladesh as an Independent state on December 6, 1971. After long 11 years, Wangchuck along with his wife came to Dhaka to attend the Independence Day function of Bangladesh.

Earlier, the king and queen visited Bangladesh in 2013.

After laying the wreaths, the President, the Premier and the King stood in
solemn silence for some time as a mark of profound respect to the memories of
the martyrs of the Great War of Liberation in 1971.

A smartly turned-out contingent drawn from Bangladesh Army, Navy and Air Force presented a state salute at that time while the bugles played the last post.

The Head of the State, the Head of the Government and the Bhutanese King and Queen Jetsun Pema also signed the visitors’ book kept on the memorial premises.

Flanked by her party leaders, Sheikh Hasina, also the President of the Bangladesh Awami League, paid glowing tributes to the Liberation War martyrs by placing another wreath at the National Memorial on behalf of her party.

Representative of parliament Speaker, chief justice, ministers, advisers, senior politicians, leaders of AL-led 14-party alliance, members of parliament, valiant freedom fighters, chiefs of the three services, diplomats, representatives of different development partners and high civil and military officials, among others, were present there.
Every year, the March 26 brings the most tragic reminiscence of the history’s blackest episode that heralded a nine-month bloody ordeal from the night of March 25, 1971, achieving the long-cherished independence on December 16 the same year at the cost of a sea of blood.

In the wake of the military crackdown by the then Pakistan occupation force, Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman proclaimed the Independence of Bangladesh through the then EPR (East Pakistan Rifles) wireless at 00-30 hours on March 26 (the night following March 25) in 1971 at his historic Road-32 residence at Dhanmondi here.

The day is very auspicious and precious to the Bengali Nation

Posted In :

Tags :

> By The Same Authors

Spanish PM says Musk ‘stirs up hatred’

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said Wednesday that X owner and Donald Trump ally Elon Musk “openly attacks our institutions” and “stirs up hatred,” reports AFP. Musk, who is set

Khaleda Zia admitted to The London Clinic

BNP Chairperson Khaleda Zia has been admitted to The London Clinic on Wednesday for advanced medical treatment. She arrived at the clinic at around 5 PM (Bangladesh time) after completing

Trial of BDR Mutiny case on Thursday

The trial of BDR (Bangladesh Rifles) Mutiny cases will begin on Thursday (January 9). The trial will be held at a makeshift court inside the Dhaka Central Jail in Keraniganj.

> By The Same Authors

Consensus Commission’s first meeting begins

The meeting of the Consensus Commission, chaired by Chief Adviser Prof Muhammad Yunus, began with political parties at the Foreign Service Academy on Saturday afternoon.   Leaders from various political

Shab-e-Barat tonight

The holy Shab-e-Barat observes across the country on Friday night with due religious fervour and devotion.   Muslims consider Shab-e-Barat as one of the three most sacred nights and believe

Trump rules out US role in Bangladesh issue

US President Donald Trump has ruled out any involvement of the United States in Bangladesh’s ongoing issues.   “I’ll leave Bangladesh to PM Modi (Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi),” he