Modi, other South Asian leaders to join golden jubilee celebrations

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Bangladesh is set to stage a grand celebration to mark the golden jubilee of its 1971 independence, drawing five heads of state and government from South Asia region, including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
“Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and four heads of state and government from Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bhutan and the Maldives will be among the distinguished foreign guests to join the celebrations under separate schedules,” Bangladesh government’s principal information officer Surath Kumar Sarkar told BSS.
He added that the foreign heads of state and government would join separately some identical programmes as part of the celebrations while Modi’s visit would be an extended one which would take him to three places outside Dhaka, including Bangabandhu shrine in Tungipara.
Sarkar said the foreign state and government heads would arrive and depart Bangladesh on different dates in the third week of March while Modi is set to join the main Independence Day celebrations on March 26.
Bangladesh’s golden jubilee celebrations coincide with the birth centenary celebrations of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman which would take the foreign dignitaries to Bangabandhu Museum.
The museum was actually the private residence of the country’s founder where he was killed in a 1975 coup along with most of his family members while his elder daughter incumbent Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and Bangabandhu’s younger daughter Sheikh Rehana incidentally survived the carnage.
They were on a brief tour in Germany at the time of the putsch which also killed the Bangladesh founder’s 10-year child Sheikh Russell.
According to the schedule, all the foreign leaders would visit National Memorial in Savar to pay homage to the independence martyrs, watch special military parades, join state banquets and visit the Bangabandhu Museum.
“But the Indian premier is also set to visit Bangabandhu shrine at (his village home) in Tungipara and two Hindu temples outside Dhaka – one in Gopalganj and the other in Satkhira,” Sarkar said.
The temples are places of worships, particularly of the Hindu Matua community, a large part of them being residents of India’s West Bengal state.
Maldivian President Ibrahim Mohamed will be the first top foreign dignitary to arrive on a three-day Bangladesh tour on March 17 who will be followed by Sri Lankan’s premier Mahinda Rajapaksa to arrive on a two-day tour from March 19.
Nepalese President Bidya Devi Bhandari will be in Dhaka on a two-day tour from March 22, Bhutanese premier Lotay Tshering will be in Dhaka on March 24 and 25.
Modi will arrive on March 26 and depart Bangladesh on the next day.
Foreign Minister AK Abdul Momen earlier said Bangladesh originally planned grand celebrations of the 50 years of independence and Bangabandhu’s birth centenary but the coronavirus pandemic forced the country to revise the plan on health grounds.

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