1. Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed, is the Chief Advisor of the Caretaker Government of Bangladesh, is also considered the head of Government in Bangladesh.
Professor Dr. Iajuddin Ahmed is the current President of Bangladesh and has been in office since 2002. He is a tutelary head.
Mr. Iajuddin Ahmed was sworn in as the Chief Advisor of the Caretaker Government at 8.00 pm (Bangladesh standard time) on October 29, 2006 after the main political parties failed to agree on a candidate. He was supposed to serve in an interim capacity to oversee the forthcoming elections, planned for January 22, 2007, while remaining president.
On 11th January, 2007 Iajuddin Ahmed resigned from his position of the Chief Advisor of the Caretaker Government, bestowed the responsibility on Former Justice Fazlul Haque temporarily, abolished the board of advisors and announced a state of emergency from that day until further announcement.
The next day, Professor Dr. Iajuddin appointed Dr. Fakhruddin Ahmed to be the new chief advisor. In Bangladesh democracy has failed to bring peace to the people. The major political parties created anarchy in the country which led to the promulgation of state of emergency which has been accepted by the people.
2. King of Nepal is Mr. Gyanendra Bir Bikram Shah Dev (born July 7, 1947) is the reigning King of Nepal since June 4, 2001. He succeeded to the Nepali throne upon the death of his nephew Dipendra Bir Bikram Shah, who was King for only three days while he was in a coma, following a massacre of the preceding king (King Gyanendra's brother, Birendra) and other members of the royal family.
3. Mr. Rajiv Gandhi (Born: August 20, 1944; Died: May 21, 1991) was the Prime Minister of India when he sent the peace keeping force to Sri Lanka.
Rajiv's government suffered a major setback when its efforts to broker peace between the Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE rebels backfired. As per the peace accords signed in 1987, the LTTE would disarm to the Indian Peace Keeping Force which was sent to Sri Lanka. But distrust and a few incidents of conflict broke out into open fighting between the LTTE militants and Indian soldiers. Over a thousand Indian soldiers were killed, and at last Rajiv Gandhi had to pull out Indian forces from Sri Lanka. It was a failure of Rajiv's diplomacy.
While campaigning for elections in Sriperumbudur, Tamil Nadu, Rajiv Gandhi was assassinated on May 21, 1991 by a suicide bomber belonging to LTTE.