Syed Muazzem Ali (18 July 1944 – 30 December 2019) was a Bangladeshi foreign service officer and career diplomat.[1][2] In 2020, he was posthumously conferred the Padma Bhushan award, the third-highest civilian honour of India.[3] In 2022, he was awarded the Ekushey Padak, the second most important award for civilians in Bangladesh.[4]
Early life
Syed Muazzem Ali was born on 18 July 1944 into a Bengali MuslimSyed family of Khandakars from the Sylhet district, Assam Province in British Raj.[5] He traced his paternal descent from Shah Syed Ahmed Mutawakkil, a SufiPeer and a Syed of Taraf, though apparently unrelated to Taraf's ruling Syed dynasty.[6] Ali's father was Syed Mustafa Ali, a historian and a civil servant employed by the British Raj in Assam Province. The family's ancestral home is Khandakar Bari in Uttarsur Village of Bahubal Upazila of Habiganj District. His uncles were prominent in society, his uncle Syed Mujtaba Ali was a renowned linguist, his other uncle was Syed Murtaza Ali, a prominent writer.[7]
Ali was serving in the Pakistan Embassy in Washington D.C. when Bangladesh Liberation war started, and he defected to the Bangladeshi government in exile. He helped found the Bangladeshi embassy to the United States. He helped funnel resources from the United States and the United Nations to the reconstruction of Bangladesh. From 1975 to 1978, he served in the Bangladeshi embassy in Poland. He worked in the Permanent Mission to the United Nations in New York from 1982 to 1986 and for the Bangladeshi High Commissioner in India from 1986 to 1988.[8][9][10]
Ali was the consul in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia during the Gulf War. He would go on to serve as Bangladesh Ambassador to Bhutan, Iran, Lebanon, Turkmenistan, France, Syria, and Portugal. Ali was Bangladesh's permanent representative to the UNESCO, where (in cooperation with Tony Huq, former permanent representative to UNESCO and then UNESCO special adviser), he helped establish the International Mother Language Day on 21 February through the introduction of the draft resolution, the Language movement day. He then served as the foreign secretary of Bangladesh, where he worked to facilitate duty free for exports of least developed country to Europe.[8][11] In 2014, he was appointed High Commissioner of Bangladesh to India.[12]