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Monday, August 16, 2004

 

Abul Fateh


AFM Abul Fateh (born May 16, 1924) is the Bangladesh diplomat and statesman who became that country's first Foreign Secretary when it gained its independence in 1971and its highest ranked / most senior foreign service officer.

Contents

  • 1 Biography
    • 1.1 Early years and education
    • 1.2 Early career as Pakistani diplomat
    • 1.3 Early career as Bangladeshi diplomat and statesman
    • 1.4 Later career as Bangladeshi diplomat
    • 1.5 Retirement
  • 2 Historical assessment
  • 3 Honours
  • 4 Quotations about Abul Fateh
  • 5 References/External Links
  • 6 See also

Biography

Early years and education

Abul Fateh was born in Kishorganj on 16 May 1924 in a landowning family, to Abdul Gafur and Zohra Khatun; he passed his Matriculation exams from Ramkrishna High English School in Kishorganj in 1941. After passing his Intermediate exams from Ananda Mohan College in Mymensingh in 1943, he undertook higher studies in English Literature at Dhaka University (BA Honours in 1946 and MA in 1947) where he also excelled in sport, for a time captaining the cricket team and becoming the table-tennis champion .

Abul Fateh is fluent in English, French, Arabic, Bengali, Hindi and Urdu and has a good knowledge of other South Asian Subcontinental languages.

Early career as Pakistani diplomat

While teaching English Literature at Brindaban College in Sylhet, he took the first Foreign Service exams of Pakistan (1948), before teaching English Literature for a few months at Michael Madhusudhan Datta College in Jessore. He joined the first batch of Pakistan Foreign Service trainees in 1949, moving to Karachi. Soon after he left for training in London, which included taking a special course at the London School of Economics, before he moved in 1950 to Paris to complete his training. Returning briefly to Karachi, he was sent back (1951) to Paris as Third Secretary in the Pakistan Embassy.

A further posting as Third Secretary followed in Calcutta (1953-1956). During this time he married, at Rangpur on 5 January 1956, Mahfuza Banu of Dhubri, Assam daughter of Shahabuddin Ahmed, a respected lawyer and Mashudaa Banu a well known social campaigner. Now promoted to Second Secretary, he served in the Pakistan Embassy in Washington, D.C. from 1956 to 1960, during which time he and his wife had their two sons.

He was a Director attached to the Foreign Ministry in Karachi from 1960 to 1963, during which time he went for a year and a half (1962-1963) to Geneva as a Fellow of the Graduate Institute of International Studies (Institut Universitaire des Hautes Etudes Internationales) under a Carnegie fellowship.

Further foreign postings followed. He was First Secretary (and latterly acting chief of mission) in Prague from 1965 to 1966, Counsellor in New Delhi from 1966 to 1967, and Deputy High Commissioner in Calcutta from 1968 to 1970. He received his first posting as Ambassador, at the Pakistan Embassy in Baghdad, in 1970.

Early career as Bangladeshi diplomat and statesman

After the Pakistani military crackdown in March 1971, he received a request from a former university dormitory mate, Syed Nazrul Islam, now Acting President in the Bangladesh government-in-exile, to join the liberation struggle. He responded promptly and positively.

At about the same time, in July 1971, Fateh received a summons from the Pakistan Foreign Ministry to attend a conference in Tehran of regional Pakistani ambassadors. He chose to take his official car ostensibly to drive to Tehran but, as he and his driver approached the Iran-Iraq border, he feigned chest pains and ordered the driver to return him home, where he arrived that evening. Saying that he would take a plane the next day, he dismissed the driver. That night, he fled with his wife and sons across the border into Kuwait, from where they took a plane to London.

The announcement of Fateh's defection to the Bangladesh cause marked the first time a full ambassador had joined the fledgling Bangladesh diplomatic service. The news was received with fury by the military regime in Islamabad, which meanwhile had discovered that on the afternoon just before his supposed departure for Tehran, he had cleared out the Pakistan Embassy bank account in Baghdad to the benefit of the Bangladesh government. The military regime’s requests to extradite him from London were rebuffed by the British Government.

These events were chronicled in a 2003 National Geographic Television documentary, Running for Freedom.

The Mujibnagar government made him ambassador-at-large, followed in August 1971 by the concurrent position of Adviser to the Acting President, a position he was to resign in January 1972 after the return to Bangladesh of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. He had a leading role, as the Bangladesh movement’s seniormost diplomat, in a delegation under Justice Abu Sayed Choudhury which went to the United Nations in New York to lobby for the Bangladesh cause. He was one of the first high officials to reach Dhaka after its liberation, and was quartered with other senior officials in Bangabhaban until January 1972. Already the effective head of the incipient foreign service, he became Foreign Secretary at the end of 1971. The book The Bangladesh Liberation War, Mujibnagar Government Documents 1971 edited by Sukumar Biswas (Dhaka: Mowla Brothers, 2005) further documents Fateh's work in support of the war.

Later career as Bangladeshi diplomat

He then took up the position of Bangladesh’s first Ambassador in Paris (1972-1976). The early part of this posting involved extensive travel in Africa to persuade African governments to recognise the independence of Bangladesh. In 1973 he represented Bangladesh at a Commonwealth conference for Youth Ministers in Lusaka. In 1975 he went to Morocco and, at a time of a shortage in supply of phosphates, managed to secure a substantial phosphate shipment for Bangladesh.

In mid-1975 he was selected to be High Commissioner in the UK, which post he took up in early 1976. His two years in London (1976-1977) saw him Chairing the Commonwealth Conference on Human Ecology and Development and the Bangladesh government approved his recommendation that dual citizenship be permitted. Many people from Bangladesh were settled in the UK, whose remittances into Bangladesh were an important source of foreign exchange. He pointed out that to oblige them to forgo Bangladesh citizenship if they took up the benefits of British nationality was not conducive to the continued maintenance of their ties to the mother country.

His last post was as Ambassador in Algiers (1977-1982). He represented the Bangladesh government at conferences on Namibia in Algiers of the United Nations (1980) and the Non Aligned Conference (1981).

Retirement

Retiring in 1982, he lived with his wife in Dhaka for ten years before they settled in London to be near their sons.

Historical assessment

By all accounts a modest, quiet and unassuming man, in retirement Abul Fateh appears to have turned down opportunities in business, politics and academia which might have raised his profile further. Instead he served out his term as a professional, career diplomat with distinction.

With hindsight he may now be regarded as a distinguished statesman who made an important, non-partisan contribution to the development of democratic values in Bangladesh. It is probably worth remembering that as Bangladesh has perpetually rated as one of the world’s most corrupt societies, Fateh’s reputation for integrity is not to be underestimated.

In his initial career in Pakistan Fateh would no doubt have been hampered both as a Bengali and as one who had married an Indian (Assamese) - nevertheless he rose to Director level in Pakistan's Foreign Diplomatic Service and became an Ambassador relatively quickly given the times.

Fateh played a significant role at the time of the Bangladesh Independence War in 1971.

Honours

  • Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, Silver Jubilee Medal, 1975.

Quotations about Abul Fateh

  • Especially intriguing is the move, an abortive one, by the Pakistani authorities to have A.F.M Abul Fateh, a Bengali serving as Pakistan’s ambassador abroad, extradited to Islamabad once he switches allegiance to the Mujibnagar government. [1]
— Syed Badrul Ahsan , New Age newspaper, Dhaka

References/External Links

  • Government of Bangladesh, Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Foreign Secretaries.
  • National Geographic TV documentary 2003
  • "Documenting a government-in-exile", February 2005 review of book Bangladesh Liberation War: Mujibnagar Government Documents 1971

See also

  • Bangladesh
  • History of Bangladesh
  • Bangladesh Liberation War
  • List of Bangladeshis
  • WikiProject Bangladesh - People
Preceded by:
None
Foreign Secretary of Bangladesh
1971–1972
Succeeded by:
Mr. S.A. Karim


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