Discover Bengal · Unfolded
❦A. H. M. Qamaruzzaman
Home affairs leader in the Provisional Government
A key organizer of wartime governance behind the front lines.
Biography
Context

In the context of Mujibnagar government structure and wartime political leadership, 1971., A. H. M. Qamaruzzaman is recognized as Home affairs leader in the Provisional Government. A key organizer of wartime governance behind the front lines.
Contribution
He served as home affairs leader in the Provisional Government of Bangladesh, helping administer the wartime state and coordinate internal political authority during 1971.
Impact
His wartime administrative role strengthened the political backbone of the independence struggle and later became part of the memory of the Four National Leaders.
Timeline Placement
A. H. M. Qamaruzzaman appears in 4 linked timeline events, spanning 1971 - 3 November 1975.
First Appearance
1971
Latest Appearance
3 November 1975
Active Span
1971 - 3 November 1975
Linked Events
4
Legacy Summary
His wartime administrative role strengthened the political backbone of the independence struggle and later became part of the memory of the Four National Leaders. This influence is reflected across 4 connected events.
References
Key sources for understanding this figure
A History of Bangladesh
A synthetic history of Bangladesh from the long view through colonial encounters, East Pakistan, war, and independence.
Cited in: 3 events
Bangladesh: Era of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Important insider-political account of the 1972–1975 Mujib years, covering administration, constitution, emergency rule, BAKSAL, and political crisis.
Cited in: 2 events
Bangladesh: From Mujib to Ershad
A political study covering the road to the end of the Ershad regime and the transition out of military-backed rule.
Cited in: 2 events
Bangladesh: Quest for Freedom and Justice
Kamal Hossain's memoir traces liberation, constitution-making, democracy, and the justice question.
Cited in: 2 events
Fifty Years of Bangladesh
A multidisciplinary volume on the first five decades of Bangladesh's economy, politics, society, and culture.
Cited in: 2 events
The Blood Telegram
Detailed political history of U.S. policy, diplomatic cables, and the genocide context of 1971.
Cited in: 2 events
Related
Related Figures
Muhammad Mansur Ali
Mujibnagar minister and later prime minister
Tajuddin Ahmad
Prime Minister of the Provisional Government
Khandaker Mushtaq Ahmed
Awami League politician; wartime and post-independence cabinet figure; President after 15 August 1975
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman
Student Organizer and National Leader
Syed Nazrul Islam
Acting President of the Provisional Government
Abu Taher
Military officer and political actor
Related Events
Related Places
Appears In Events
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