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Siraj Sikder

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Siraj Sikder
সিরাজ সিকদার
Born(1944-10-27)27 October 1944
Died2 January 1975(1975-01-02) (aged 30)
Bangladesh
EducationB.Sc. Engineering
Alma materBangladesh University of Engineering and Technology
Known forNaxalite Communist Movement Revolutionary leader in Bangladesh
Political partyPurba Banglar Sarbahara Party

Siraj Sikder (27 October 1944 – 2 January 1975) was a Bangladeshi revolutionary politician.[1]

Early life

Sikder was born on 27 October 1944 at Bhedarganj in Shariatpur District, East Bengal.[1] After passing the matriculation examination from Barisal Zilla School in 1959, he was admitted into Barisal Brojomohun College in 1961 for I.Sc. He obtained an engineering degree from the East Pakistan University of Engineering and Technology (now BUET) in 1967.[1]

While he was a student he became a member of East Pakistan Student Union. In 1967, he was elected vice president of the central committee of Student Union and later that year he joined the C & B Department of the government as an engineer. Three months later he left his job to start a private company, named Engineering Limited in Teknaf.[1]

Political activity

On 8 January 1968, along with like-minded activists, Sikder formed a clandestine organisation named Purba Bangla Sramik Andolon (East Bengal Workers Movement EBWM) with an objective to lead a struggle against the revisionism of the existing "Communist" organizations and to form a revolutionary Communist Party. This initiative brought forward a thesis that East Bengal is a colony of Pakistan and that the principal contradiction in the society is between the bureaucratic bourgeoisie and feudalists of Pakistan on one hand, and the people of East Bengal on the other hand. Only the independence struggle to form an "independent, democratic, peaceful, non-aligned, progressive" People's Republic of East Bengal, free also from the oppression of US imperialism, Soviet social-imperialism and Indian Expansionism could lead the society forward towards socialism and communism. In late 1968, Sikder left the job to establish the Mao Tse Tung Research Center in Dhaka but it was later closed down by the Pakistani government. Sikder became a lecturer at the Technical Training College in Dhaka.[1]

In the meantime of war, at a liberated base area named Pearabagan at Bhimruly in Jhalokati District in the southern part of the country, on 3 June 1971, Sikder founded a new party named Purba Banglar Sarbahara Party (Proletarian Party of East Bengal) by ideology of Marxism and Mao Tsetung Thought (not "Maoism", during the 1960s the followers of Mao-line used to identify their ideology as Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tse-tung Thought). At the beginning of the war, he went to Barisal and he declared that as a free living space and making it his base attempted to initiate his revolution throughout other places. After the Independence of Bangladesh he turned against the Sheikh Mujib government.[2] On April 1973, he formed Purba Banglar Jatiya Mukti Front(East Bengal United Liberation Front) and declared war on Bangladesh Government.[1] The Sarbahara party under his leadership carried out attacks against police stations, money lenders and landlords.[3]

Death

In 1975, Sikder was arrested at Hali Shahr in Chittagong by the intelligence force of the government. He was killed in police custody on 2 January 1975 on his way from Dhaka Airport to the Rakkhi Bahini Camp at Savar.[4][1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Islam, Sirajul (2012). "Sikder, Siraj". In Islam, Sirajul; Khan, Muazzam H. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  2. ^ Jongman, Albert J. (1988-01-01). Political Terrorism: A New Guide To Actors, Authors, Concepts, Data Bases, Theories, And Literature. Transaction Publishers. p. 105. ISBN 9781412815666.
  3. ^ Riaz, Ali; Rahman, Mohammad Sajjadur (2016-01-29). Routledge Handbook of Contemporary Bangladesh. Routledge. p. 426. ISBN 9781317308775.
  4. ^ "NetNewsLedger - Thunder Bay News - January 2 - This Day in History". NetNewsLedger - Thunder Bay News. Retrieved 2016-04-12.