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Quazi Golam Dastgir : ウィキペディア英語版
Quazi Golam Dastgir

Quazi Golam Dastgir (23 September 1932 – 17 October 2008) was a Bangladesh army officer and diplomat who belonged to a coterie of immigrant elites from the Indian state of West Bengal. Following a distinguished career in the Pakistan Army, he opted to join the defense services of Bangladesh after the country's independence in 1971. Quickly rising to the then top rank of Major General in the Bangladesh Army, ahead of all his military academy course mates, from 1975 to 1977, he served as the "Zonal Martial Law Administrator" (the equivalent of a State Governor in the military-backed government headed by President Abu Sadat Mohammed Sayem) for Dhaka Division. This included the nation's capital and was unequivocally the most important of the four provinces in Bangladesh. He commanded two of the five independent brigades that comprised the Bangladesh Army up to the mid-1970s, and served as chief of the border forces, holding the office of Director General of Bangladesh Rifles. He was one of the three Major Generals in the Bangladesh Army following the promulgation of martial law in 1975. In 1977, the service of Dastgir was transferred to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and he went on to serve four terms as Ambassador of Bangladesh until his retirement in 1991.
==Early Life (1932 – 1950)==

Dastgir was born on 23 September 1932 in Calcutta, British India. His father was a direct descendant of the last Mughal Chief Justice of Bengal and had a sizeable estate in Orhgram (the site of a British aerodrome during World War II) in Burdwan and his mother belonged to the royal house of Salar in Murshidabad, West Bengal. He studied in Calcutta Model School and graduated from St. Xavier's College. He subsequently graduated from Peshawar University.
In 1950, he accompanied his family as immigrants to Dhaka, East Pakistan (later Bangladesh) and was selected for the 4th army pre-cadet training school in Quetta. He was then admitted to the 7th Batch Pakistan Military Academy (PMA) in Kakul and on 14 February 1953 was commissioned as a Permanent Regular Officer with the Pakistan Army service number PA-4484 in the infantry corps of the Pakistan Army in the First Battalion (called the "Senior Tigers") of the East Bengal Regiment with the rank of Second Lieutenant after placing fifth in the graduating batch of 74 cadets.

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