Reported by Suprovat Sydney: Members of the Bangladeshi diaspora in Sydney gathered on the night of 19 December 2025 Friday for a solemn prayer vigil and community meeting to mourn the assassination of Sharif Osman Hadi a prominent activist of Bangladesh’s student-led July Uprising and one of the country’s most recognisable emerging political voices. The event, organised by the NCP Diaspora Alliance Australia, was held at the LFC Club in Lakemba.
Speakers reflected on Hadi’s leadership through Inquilab Monch, where he championed the vision of an “Insafer Bangladesh” a just, fair, and accountable nation. He was remembered as a symbol of integrity, people’s rights, and democratic courage, standing apart from political dynasties and entrenched power structures. Participants described him as a student of political science, a university lecturer, a young father, and a determined reformist who openly challenged injustice and what he described as Indian hegemony in Bangladesh.
Hadi served as a lecturer in the Department of Business Studies at the University of Scholars, a private university in Dhaka. Beyond academia, he stepped decisively into politics, announcing his candidacy as an independent candidate for Dhaka-8 ahead of the 2026 Bangladeshi general election. He actively engaged with communities, held consultation meetings across neighbourhoods, and led grassroots activities, including a van rally in central Dhaka, where he strongly criticised corruption and pledged public accountability if elected.
The programme featured prayers, tributes, and reflections from community members, followed by a discussion centred on justice, accountability, and the safety of activists and July Uprising figures. Participants called for an independent, transparent, and credible investigation into Hadi’s killing and reaffirmed the importance of protecting democratic voices rather than silencing them.
Addressing the gathering, Convener Aslam Ahmad, Member Secretary Salwa Shams, and guest speaker Major (Retd.) Sk Mahadi spoke about Hadi’s political courage, the broader implications of his assassination, and the responsibility of the international community to stand in solidarity with Bangladesh’s youth as they continue their struggle for constitutional and democratic reform.
Alongside his public role, Hadi’s personal life added to the emotional weight of the evening. He was a young father, leaving behind an eight-month-old son, a grieving family, and a nation in shock. Speakers emphasised that his assassination was not only the loss of a passionate reformist, but also a devastating blow to the hopes of countless young Bangladeshis who saw in him a genuine representative of the people.
The event concluded with a strong expression of unity and determination, as attendees pledged to keep Sharif Osman Hadi’s legacy alive and to ensure that his voice continues to inspire movements for accountability, justice, and fairness in Bangladesh.