Six Reform Commissions' Tenure Extended
The government has extended the tenure of six reform commissions initially formed to advance reforms across various state sectors. The extension was formalized through a notification issued by the Cabinet Division on Thursday, January 2.
The following commissions will now have additional time to finalize and submit their reports:
- Public Administration Reform Commission
- Police Reform Commission
- Electoral System Reform Commission
- Anti-Corruption Commission Reform Commission
- Constitutional Reform Commission
- Judicial Reform Commission
The first five commissions—Public Administration, Police, Electoral System, Anti-Corruption, and Constitutional—have been granted an extension until January 15 to complete their work. The Judicial Reform Commission has been given a separate deadline of January 31.
Formed in early October, these commissions were initially tasked with submitting their reports within 90 days. Their original deadlines were as follows:
- Commissions for public administration, police, anti-corruption, and electoral system reform: January 2
- Constitutional Reform Commission: January 5
Over the past months, these commissions have engaged with stakeholders through websites, consultations, surveys, and written submissions to gather input and shape their recommendations. The feedback is being analyzed as they prepare their final reports.
The notification extending the commissions' tenure, signed by Cabinet Secretary Sheikh Abdur Rashid, took effect immediately.
Separately, a second set of commissions focusing on media, health, labour, women's issues, and local government reform was established on November 18. These commissions have been given until February 17 to submit their recommendations.
The Public Administration Reform Commission is chaired by Abdul Muid Chowdhury, Chairman of Biman Bangladesh Airlines. The Police Reform Commission is led by former Secretary Safar Raj Hossain. The Electoral System Reform Commission is headed by Dr Badiul Alam Majumdar, Secretary of Citizens for Good Governance (SUJAN) and an expert in elections and local governance. The Judicial Reform Commission is chaired by Shah Abul Naeem Mominur Rahman, a former Justice of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court.
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