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6-point movement was turning point in country's independence struggle: Quder
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Awami League (AL) General Secretary Obaidul Quader today recalled the consequences of the six-point demand and said those whohave no respect for this historic event, they never believe in the country's independence.
"The historic six-point demand is the turning point of the long struggle of the country's liberation war movement," he said. Quader, also Road Transport and Bridges Minister, made this remark to the journalists marking the historic six-point day after showing homage at the portrait of Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in front of Bangabandhu Bhaban in the city this morning. On June 7 in 1966, the Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman launched a massive movement against the misrule of the Pakistanis on the basis of the six-point demand, the Magna Carta of the Bangalees, seeking autonomy for the then East Pakistan. The six-point charter came in the wake of the war that broke out between India and Pakistan in 1965 when the people of East Bengal remained totally unprotected as there was no importance to the central government of Pakistan for protecting this region, he noted. Quader said the assassins of Bangabandhu didn't allow the observance of June 7 or March 7 after 1975. They, who were involved in the assassination of Bangabandhu and most of his family members on August 15 in 1975 and did not accept the country's independence, banned the historic days during their tenure, he added. "These evil forces not only had killed Bangabandhu but wanted to kill our spirit of the Liberation War and also the ideology of the independence as well and that's why 'Joy Bangla' and also these remarkable days like June 7 and March 7 were exiled along with Bangabandhu," he explained.
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