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Abdus Sattar (1925–1991) was an Indian politician from the Murshidabad district of West Bengal. He was active in regional electoral politics during the second half of the twentieth century, a period when Murshidabad's politics was shaped by the Indian National Congress, the Left Front, and a strong tradition of independent and locally rooted leaders representing the district's predominantly rural, agrarian, and Muslim-majority constituencies.
| Name | Abdus Sattar |
|---|---|
| Born | 1925 |
| Died | 1991 |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Region of activity | Murshidabad district, West Bengal |
| Profession | Politician |
Murshidabad, located in central West Bengal along the Bhagirathi river, has historically been one of the state's most politically distinctive districts. Its electorate, drawn from a mix of agricultural communities, weavers, and traders, has long supported leaders with strong local networks. Politicians of Abdus Sattar's generation came of age in the years immediately surrounding Indian independence in 1947 and the partition of Bengal, events that profoundly reshaped the district's demographics and political alignments.
Abdus Sattar's public life unfolded in the post-independence period, when West Bengal saw successive Congress-led ministries followed by the United Front governments of the late 1960s and the Left Front government that came to power in 1977. Politicians from Murshidabad during this era were typically associated either with the Indian National Congress, which retained strong support in the district even when the rest of West Bengal turned to the Left, or with regional and left-leaning parties.
As a representative of Murshidabad's political class in the latter half of the twentieth century, Abdus Sattar belonged to a cohort of district-level leaders whose work was tied to land, agrarian welfare, education, and minority representation. His lifespan (1925–1991) coincides with the formative decades of West Bengal's electoral democracy, from the first general elections of 1951–52 through the consolidation of the Left Front in the 1980s.