Nawab Ali Abbas Khan

Nawab Ali Abbas Khan (born 26 December 1958) is a Bangladeshi politician and former Member of Parliament he is the current Nawab and Mutawalli of prithimpassa estate

Nawab, MP

Nawab Ali Abbas Khan
Khan in 2015
Member of Parliament of Maulvibazar-2
In office
29 December 2008  4 January 2014
Preceded byMM Shahin
Succeeded byAbdul Matin
In office
27 February 1991  11 June 1996
Preceded byNawab Ali Abbas Khan
Succeeded bySultan Md. Mansur Ahmed
In office
3 March 1988  26 February 1991
Preceded byA. N. M. Yusuf
Succeeded byNawab Ali Abbas Khan
Co Head of the House of Prithimpassa
Assumed office
22 July 1995
Preceded byAli Sarwar Khan
Ex Senior Vice President Jatiya Party
Personal details
Born (1958-12-26) 26 December 1958
NationalityBangladeshi
Political partyJatiya Party (Kazi Zafar Ahmed) 20 party alliance-BNP
FatherNawab Ali Safdar Khan
RelativesNawab Ali Haider Khan (grandfather)
ResidencePrithimpassa Nawab Bari
ProfessionAdvocate, Politician

Biography

Khan was born into the Prithimpassa Family on 26 December 1958. His father was Ali Safdar Khan who was titled Raja Shaheb, Ali Safdar was born at the Hazarduari Palace. Ali Abbas's brothers are Ali Mehadi Khan, Ali Naki Khan, Ali Taki Khan and Ali Hassan Khan. [1][2]

A member of the Jatiya Party (Ershad), he was elected as the Member of parliament from Maulvibazar-2 (Kulaura Upazila) three times, in 1988, 1991, and 2008.[2][3]

Career

Khan was the senior Vice president of Jatiya Party Central Committee. Now he is a presidium member of Jatiya Party and is involved in the BNP-20 party Alliance.

Activity

NAID held a reception for Chief guest Nawab Ali Abbas Khan MP, for Moulvibazar - 2 and Special guest Kevin Brennan MP, for Cardiff West, Julian Phillips, Honorary Consul for Finland in Wales and NAID Executives.[4]

gollark: Although outside of pure parsing ambiguity it does help distinguish people you're referring to in "real life".
gollark: Yes, sentences where it makes a difference are quite rare and also typically rather confusing anyway.
gollark: Also stuff like "Mr" and "Mrs".
gollark: Technically, the language as it can be spoken doesn't require it. However, the language as practically spoken involves them a lot, both as it's convention and because it can disambiguate slightly in certain odd sentences.
gollark: It is also possibly partly due to English bad.

References

  1. "Two arrestees remanded". The Daily Star. 25 February 2005.
  2. "Constituency 236". Bangladesh Parliament. Archived from the original on 2019-12-21. Retrieved 2018-09-04.
  3. Goswami, Rajat Kanti (28 December 2008). "7 old faces look stronger in Moulvibazar district". The Daily Star.
  4. http://www.naid.org.uk/News_21.html

4. http://www.parliament.gov.bd/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=895&Itemid=1209&lang=en

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