Bangladesh Infantry Regiment

Summary

The Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (BIR) is an infantry regiment of the Bangladesh Army. It was raised in 2001 as the second infantry regiment after the East Bengal Regiment.[1] The regiment was raised initially by renaming some battalions of the East Bengal Regiment, before its own recruits were trained.[2] This regiment was the first new regiment raised by the Bangladesh Army in the 21st Century, and consequently is also known as the Regiment of the Millennium.

Bangladesh Infantry Regiment
বাংলাদেশ ইনফ্যান্ট্রি রেজিমেন্ট বীর
Insignia of the Bangladesh Infantry Regiment
Active21 April 2001-Present
Country Bangladesh
Branch Bangladesh Army
TypeInfantry
RoleGround combat
Size46 battalions ( 44 Infantry battalions and 2 Para Commando battalions)[citation needed]
Garrison/HQBangladesh Infantry Regimental Centre, Rajshahi Cantonment
Nickname(s)The BIR (Mighty)
Motto(s)
  • "Powerful, Fast, Superior"
Colours  (BCC–27)
MarchChal Chal Chal

Role edit

Its stated role is to seek out, close with and destroy the enemy, within a traditional infantry combat scenario, however, the regiment also provides aid to the civilian government when called upon and also contributes regularly to Bangladesh's peacekeeping commitments overseas. The regiment deployed eight battalions to Bangladesh's UN peacekeeping commitments:

  • MONUC
    • 2nd Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (2 BIR)
    • 7th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (7 BIR)
  • UNOCI
    • 11th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (11 BIR)
    • 18th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (18 BIR)
    • 19th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (19 BIR)
  • UNMIL
    • 12th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (12 BIR)
    • 13th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (13 BIR)
    • 14th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (14 BIR)
  • UNAMIS
    • 8th Bangladesh Infantry Regiment (8 BIR)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Play strong role in nation building, PM tells army". The Daily Star. 12 November 2014. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
  2. ^ "Choose most qualified army officials for promotion: PM". The Daily Star. 26 July 2015. Retrieved 13 December 2017.

External links edit