The Bangladesh Awami League (Bengali: বাংলাদেশ আওয়ামী লীগ, romanized: Bānglādēsh Awāmī Līg; deciphered from Urdu: Bangladesh People's League), regularly just called the Awami League or AL, is a significant ideological group in Bangladesh.
The All Pakistan Awami Muslim League was established in Dhaka, the capital of the Pakistani territory of East Bengal, in 1949 by Bengali patriots Abdul Hamid Khan Bhashani, Shawkat Ali, Yar Mohammad Khan, Shamsul Huq, and joined later Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy who proceeded to become Prime Minister of Pakistan. The Pakistan Awami Muslim League was built up as the Bengali option in contrast to the control of the Muslim League in Pakistan and over centralisation of the legislature. The gathering immediately increased enormous mainstream support in East Bengal, later named East Pakistan, and in the end drove the powers of Bengali patriotism in the battle against West Pakistan's military and political foundation.
The gathering under the authority of Sheik Mujibur Rahman, the establishing father of Bangladesh, drove the battle for freedom, first through huge populist and common defiance developments, for example, the Six Point Movement and 1971 Non-Cooperation Movement, and afterward during the Bangladesh Liberation War.
After the rise of free Bangladesh, the Awami League won the primary general decisions in 1973 yet was ousted in 1975 after the death of Sheik Mujibur Rahman. The gathering was constrained by ensuing military systems onto the political sidelines and a considerable lot of its senior heads and activists were executed and imprisoned. After the reclamation of majority rules system in 1990, the Awami League rose as one of the main players of Bangladeshi legislative issues.
Hussein Shaheed Suhrawardy, who had been the AIML-named head administrator of Bengal in 1937 and held a similar office after 1946 decisions, didn't consent to 'Muslim League' as the name of AIML in Pakistan. He started the idea that the perfect of political portrayal under strict character was not, at this point judicious after freedom and the association may be named as Pakistan League. Also, he guaranteed that Muslim League's target of battling to shape a country state had been accomplished along these lines political portrayal should keep concentrating on patriotism dependent on Pakistani sway. Suhrawardy's proposal was not acknowledged, accordingly, he went separate ways with the gathering to be restored as the Awami League in 1949. This was to serve the main stun to the nation's political structure. In 1953, the gathering's board meeting casted a ballot to drop "Muslim". In the approach the East Bengal Legislative Assembly Elections in 1954, the Awami League started to lead the pack in arrangements in shaping a container Bangla political coalition including the Krishak Praja Party, Nizam-e-Islam and Ganatantrik Dal. The collusion was named the Jukta Front or United Front and defined the Ekush Dafa, or 21-point Charter, to battle for building up rights in East Pakistan. The gathering likewise took the notable choice to embrace the conventional Bengali pontoon, which connoted the connection to provincial Bengal, as its political decision image.
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