Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 15th July 2026, 5:39 PM
The central bank of Bangladesh has officially restructured the board of directors of Al-Arafah Islami Bank PLC, appointing 14 sponsor shareholders to its governing body. The decision, finalised on Wednesday, represents a definitive step towards returning the private Sharia-compliant lender to shareholder-led governance following a prolonged period of direct regulatory intervention.
Arif Hossain Khan, an executive director and official spokesperson for Bangladesh Bank, confirmed the transition. He noted that the newly appointed shareholder directors are slated to work alongside the existing independent directors to guide the financial institution’s strategic recovery and future operations.
The overhaul of Al-Arafah’s leadership comes on the heels of extensive structural reforms within the Bangladeshi banking sector. In August 2024, a major political transition prompted the interim administration to initiate sweeping regulatory interventions. To curb widespread financial irregularities and aggressive insider lending, the central bank dissolved the boards of 16 commercial banks, including Al-Arafah Islami Bank, which had been crippled by governance failures under previous regimes.
During the interim phase, the regulator placed Al-Arafah under the stewardship of a streamlined, five-member board consisting entirely of independent directors. This temporary measure successfully stabilised daily operations, protected depositor assets, and re-evaluated the bank’s balance sheet.
The decision to restore corporate control to the original owners reflects a notable stabilisation in the lender’s financial health. While the central bank continues to struggle with other restructured institutions where original sponsors remain untraceable, debt-ridden, or legally disqualified, Al-Arafah’s primary backers remained financially compliant and actively engaged, meeting all fit-and-proper regulatory criteria.
The newly expanded 19-member board integrates a variety of prominent business leaders from the national economy. Notably, the Chittagong-based industrial conglomerate KDS Group has solidified its influence, securing three representative seats through its various subsidiaries.
The comprehensive layout of the reshaped board, categorised by directorship type and corporate affiliation, is detailed below:
| Name of Director | Board Category | Affiliation / Representation |
| Khalilur Rahman | Sponsor Shareholder | Chairman, KDS Group |
| Mahbub Ahmed | Sponsor Shareholder | KDS Garments |
| Farid Uddin Ahmed | Sponsor Shareholder | KDS Textile |
| Sharif Uddin Taslim | Sponsor Shareholder | KY Steel Mills |
| Badiur Rahman | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Md. Enayet Ullah | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Selim Rahman | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Ahamedul Haq | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Md. Rafiqul Islam | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Mohammad Imadur Rahman | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Nazmul Ahsan Khaled | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Anwar Hossain | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Mohammad Abdus Salam | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Liaquat Ali Chowdhury | Sponsor Shareholder | Individual |
| Khaja Shahriar | Independent Director | Outgoing Interim Chairman |
| Md. Shahin Ul Islam | Independent Director | Individual |
| Md. Abdul Wadud | Independent Director | Individual |
| Dr M. Abu Yusuf | Independent Director | Individual |
| Mohammad Ashraful Hasan | Independent Director | Individual |
By retaining the five independent directors who steered the firm through its crisis management phase, Bangladesh Bank has structured a deliberate balance between corporate autonomy and rigorous oversight. These independent members are expected to safeguard compliance standards and protect stakeholder interests during the leadership transition.
The expanded board is scheduled to convene its inaugural meeting within the coming days. The new directors face the immediate task of electing a permanent chairman to spearhead commercial growth, restore market confidence, and navigate the shifting macroeconomic landscape of Bangladesh.
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