Currency: 10 Bangladesh Taka (2000)
Period: People’s Republic of Bangladesh
Type: Standard Banknote
Obverse: At the Left is the Portrait of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman ( 17 March 1920 – 15 August 1975), shortened as Sheikh Mujib or Mujib. He was a Bangladeshi politician and statesman.
He is called the “Father of the Nation” in Bangladesh. He is considered to be the driving force behind the independence of Bangladesh.
He is popularly dubbed with the title of “Bangabandhu” (“Friend of Bengal”) by the people of Bangladesh.
At the right center is the Baitul Mokarram national mosque. It is also spelled as Baytul Mukarrom (Bengali: The Holy House) is the National Mosque of Bangladesh. Located at the center of Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh, the mosque was completed in 1968.
At the right is the transparent Water Lili at the see-through of the polymer Banknote.
Reverse: At the left is the Back Side of National Martyrs’ Memorial (Jatiyo Sriti Soudho). It is the national monument of Bangladesh, set up in the memory of those who died in the Bangladesh War of Independence of 1971, which brought independence and separated Bangladesh from Pakistan. The monument is located in Savar, about 35 km north-west of the capital, Dhaka.
At the center is the Jatiya Sangsad Bhaban or National Parliament House, (Jatiyô Sôngsôd Bhôbôn). It is the house of the Parliament of Bangladesh, located at Sher-e-Bangla Nagar in the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka.
Composition: Polymer
Size: 130*60 mm
Shape: Rectangular
Script language: Bengali


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