Shakil Ahmed (general)

For other uses, see Shakil Ahmed and Shakeel Ahmed.
Major General
Shakil Ahmed
Chief of Bangladesh Rifles
President Zillur Rahman
Personal details
Alma mater
Military Training

Bangladesh Bangladesh Military Academy, Chittagong
United States Fort Sill, US Army

Occupation General of the bangladesh army
Religion Islam
Military service
Allegiance  Bangladesh
Years of service 1976–2009 (33 Years)
Rank Major General

Major General Shakil Ahmed was a two-star general of the Bangladesh Army and head of Border Guard Bangladesh. He was commissioned in the Regiment of Artillery in 1976. He is a graduate from the Armed Forces Staff College, Malaysia. A former Distinguished Allied Graduate from Field Artillery Officers Advanced Course at Fort Sill, Oklahoma by the US Army, he has been a Directing Staff at Defence Services Command and Staff College in Mirpur, Dhaka. He was also an instructor at Artillery School and commanded a Field Artillery Brigade. Later he became a Sector Commander of Bangladesh Rifles.

Career

He has twice commanded field artillery regiments of which one was active service in counter insurgency role. He was an Assistant Defence Attaché at Bangladesh High Commission in London; a staff officer at Prime Minister's Office, the Armed Forces Division; and a Chief Operations Staff Officer of the Field Artillery Brigade. Brigadier General Shakil Ahmed graduated from National Defence College of Bangladesh in 2002 and promoted to the rank of Major General.

He was the Chief (Director General) of the national paramilitary force Bangladesh Rifles from 19 Feb 2006 To 25 Feb 2009.[1] General Ahmed started Operation Daal bhat, an operation to sell grocery items at low cost. For the first time in 19 years, the salaries of the soldiers were proposed to be increased by the chief. He was killed along with his wife in the 2009 Bangladesh Rifles revolt.[2]

Death

The soldiers of the Bangladesh Rifles had grievances over their salaries, living conditions and greater opportunities for deployment in UN Peacekeeping Missions. A day before the event on 25 February 2009, the disgruntled soldiers met General Ahmed and some of his commanders and urged them to raise their grievances with Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina at or after the function. Some even asked that Ahmed should do so in his speech.

Events

On 25 February, during the daily morning parade when Ahmed was taking the salute. A soldier with a gun (stolen from the secured official stock) tried shooting the General. The soldier then hesitated and due to nervousness fainted on the spot. General Ahmed asked his officers to get some water so that the soldier would wake up, without knowing what the soldier's were about to attempt. Meanwhile, some of the mutineers shouted out loud "Wake up" and every soldier inside responded to the code which initiated the mutiny and left the Darbar hall ignoring commands from their senior officers to stay put. After a few minutes later the soldiers started shooting at Darbar hall from outside the premises. General Shakil asked for over his private cellphone.[3] When the army officer's inside Darbar hall felt the military forces will not be moving inside pilkhana anytime soon despite repeated calls for help, the Chief's officers arranged a planned for an escape which was aimed at evacuating the Chief and other senior officers. However, the General's response was different from the plan put forward by the subordinate officers, according to a number of surviving witnesses General Shakil Ahmed said I will not abandon my officers here, we must know why the soldiers are going for a mutiny despite everything we have done for them and as army officers stationed here it's our duty to prevent such mutiny and those of you who fear death remember it will come eventually and if we die today, remember we die serving the nation. Finally the mutineers stopped shooting from outside and asked the officers inside to stand in a straight line and exit the Darbar hall claiming that they won't shoot. The General ordered his men to walk behind him . The army officers followed behind the chief. General Shakil walked down the stage as asked by the soldiers and then suddenly four soldiers jumped out and fired four bullets at the officers. The chief who stood front was hit by the bullets. Autopsy results showed that he was shot 6 times from close range.[4] The chief according to some surviving officers died on the spot. As their chief was killed some army officers tried to stop and resist the mutineers from shooting. The other officers escaped from the Darbar hall. Since the Darbar hall laws allowed no weapon to be carried inside . All the officers were unarmed which eventually led to 57 army officer deaths.[5] His official bungalow in Peekhana was ransacked. His wife was raped and killed in the Mutiny.[6]

Legacy

General shakil Ahmed and his wife Nazneen Shakil Shipu,[7] along with other murdered officers of the force were buried with full military honours at a state funeral on 2 March 2009, 4 days after the bodies were found. General Shakil Ahmed's only son Rakin Ahmed and daughter Aqeela Raidah Ahmed had survived the Carnage.[8]

See also

References

  1. "LIST OF FORMER DIRECTOR GENERALS". www.bgb.gov.bd. Border Guard Bangladesh. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  2. Staff Correspondent. "BDR chief killed in hail of bullets". archive.thedailystar.net. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  3. "Army officials lined up, killed". Priyo News. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  4. Staff Correspondent. "Maj Gen Shakil Ahmed was shot six times". archive.thedailystar.net. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  5. Betrayal and slaughter- BDR chief, wife killed
  6. Wade, Matt. "More than 1000 charged over mutiny". smh.com.au. The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  7. "Body of DG's wife identified, toll reaches 77". bdnews24.com. bdnews24. Retrieved 6 January 2016.
  8. BDR Massacre
Preceded by
Major General Jahangir Alam Chowdhury
Chief of Bangladesh Rifles
June 2006
Succeeded by
Major General Anwar Hossain
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 08, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.