Ahsan Adelur Rahman
Member of 11th Jatiya Sangsad
In office
30 December 2018  7 January 2024
Preceded byShawkat Chowdhury
Succeeded bySiddiqul Alam Siddiq
ConstituencyNilphamari-4
Personal details
Born1 January 1979 (1979-01) (age 45)[1]
Kishoreganj, Nilphamari Bangladesh
Political partyJatiya Party
Parents
RelativesHM Ershad, MH Lalu, GM Quader (uncles)
Ziauddin Ahmed Bablu (brother-in-law)
Saad Ershad, Hossain Mokbul Shahriar (cousins)

Ahsan Adelur Rahman (Bengali: আহসান আদেলুর রহমান), also simply known as Adel (Bengali: আদেল), is a Bangladeshi politician and the former member of parliament for Nilphamari-4. His maternal uncle is the former President of Bangladesh Hussain Muhammad Ershad.

Early life and education

Ahsan Adelur Rahman was born in 1979 to a Bengali Muslim family in Kishoreganj, Nilphamari. His father, Asadur Rahman was formerly the vice-chancellor of Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymensingh and the former member of parliament for the Nilphamari-4 constituency. His mother, Merina Rahman, has ancestral roots in Dinhata (present-day India) and is a politician. Ahsan Adelur Rahman's maternal grandfather, Maqbul Hossain, was a lawyer and served as a minister of the erstwhile Maharaja of Cooch Behar.[2]

He completed his Master of Business Administration degree from the Institute of Business Administration, University of Dhaka.

Career

Ahsan Adelur Rahman worked for the Dubai Islamic Bank in the United Arab Emirates. On 30 December 2018, he was elected to Parliament from Nilphamari-4 as a Jatiya Party candidate.[3][4] Adel filed nomination papers for Nilphamari-4 constituency on the nomination of Jatiya Party in the eleventh parliamentary elections held on 30 December 2018. Later he was declared the candidate of the grand alliance. Adel took a symbol of langol and won a landslide victory, obtaining two lakh 36 thousand 9 and 30 votes in the election.

References

  1. "Constituency 15_11th_En".
  2. গোলাম মোহাম্মদ কাদের (জি এম কাদের)- এর জীবন বৃত্তান্ত. gmquader.com. Retrieved 15 April 2019.
  3. "Jatiya Party MPs sworn in to parliament, Ershad to take oath later". bdnews24.com. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  4. "Unofficial results". New Age. Retrieved 6 April 2019.


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