Mufleh R. Osmany (Bengali : মুফলেহ আর ওসমানী ) is a former foreign secretary of Bangladesh and diplomat.[ 1] He is the president of Anjuman Mufidul Islam .[ 2] He is a former Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Bangladesh to the United Nations and other Offices in Geneva.[ 3] He is a former High Commissioner of Bangladesh to Canada .[ 3] His cousin, Muhammad Ataul Ghani Osmani , was the first chief of staff of the Bangladesh Army.[ 4]
Osmany served as the principal of the Foreign Service Academy from 1983 to 1984.[ 5]
Osmany served as the Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Bangladesh to the United Nations and other Offices in Geneva in 1991 and 1992.[ 6] [ 7]
From 13 December 1993 to 9 February 1995, Osmany served as the foreign secretary of Bangladesh in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[ 8]
In 2006, Osmany edited Religious militancy and security in South Asia with Shaheen Afroze.[ 9] He was the chairman of the board of governors of Bangladesh Institute of International and Strategic Studies from 2003 to 2008.[ 10] [ 11] [ 12] He wrote Global War on Terror: Bangladesh Perspective with Mohammad Humayun Kabir in 2007.[ 13]
In 2008, Osmany edited the Whither national security, Bangladesh while working at Bangladesh Institute of International and Strategic Studies.[ 14] He also published Democracy, Governance, and Security Reforms in 2008.[ 15]
Osmany is an advisor of Ibrahim Cardiac Hospital and Research Institute.[ 16] He is a professor and the Dr. Rashid Chair at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology .[ 3] He is a member of Gulshan Society.[ 17]
^ Asia Pacific Defense Forum . Commander of the U.S. Pacific Command. 1994.
^ "About Us" . Anjuman Mufidul Islam . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ a b c "Mufleh R. Osmany | The University Press Limited" . www.uplbooks.com . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Muhammad Ataul Ghani Osmani (Bangabir) - youngest Major in British Indian Army, promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in newly formed Pakistan Army - biography of Muslim and Bengali" . Londoni . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Ministry of Foreign Affairs" . mofa.gov.bd . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Third review of the conference" (PDF) . docs-library.unoda.org . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ IWGIA Newsletter . International Work Group for Indigenous Affairs. 1992. p. 9.
^ "Ministry of Foreign Affairs" . mofa.gov.bd . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Religious militancy and security in South Asia / edited by Mufleh R. Osmany, Shaheen Afroze" . Islamic University of Technology Library . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Religious extremism, poverty, political culture barring democratisation in Bangladesh" . bdnews24.com . 18 January 2006. Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Local News on Bangladesh" . sdnbd.org . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Develop tools to combat extremism" . The Daily Star . 13 March 2008. Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Understanding Bangladesh's experience with militancy" . The Daily Star . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Whither national security, Bangladesh, 2007 /edited by Mufleh R. Osmany. – National Library" . www.nlb.gov.sg . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ Osmany, Mufleh R.; Afroze, Shaheen (2008). Democracy, Governance, and Security Reforms: Bangladesh Context . Academic Press and Publishers Library. ISBN 978-984-08-0228-9 .
^ "Welcome to Ibrahim Cardiac [Hospital & Research Institute]" . www.ibrahimcardiac.org.bd . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .
^ "Welcome" . Gulshan Society . Retrieved 6 January 2022 .