Mohammad Mithun elected new CWAB president
The election commissioner announced that Mithun got 154 votes, beating Salim Shahed
Mohammad Isam
04-Sep-2025
Mohammad Mithun has played 51 white-ball internationals for Bangladesh • Getty Images
Mohammad Mithun has become the new president of Cricketers' Welfare Association of Bangladesh (CWAB) after winning the players body's election, held in Dhaka on Thursday. Election commissioner Iftekhar Rahman announced that Mithun got 154 votes, beating Salim Shahed who was the interim CWAB convenor since May this year. Shahed got 34 votes.
"We will try to solve everything through negotiation," Mithun said shortly after the election results were announced. "If that's not possible, as I have come here to protect the rights of the cricketers, I have to speak for them. The BCB is our guardian. We can go to our guardian with whatever demands that we have. I hope the BCB sees those demands positively."
CWAB was established in 2004 but it hasn't had any elections in the 21 years of existence. Naimur Rahman, the former Bangladesh captain and Awami League MP, was the CWAB president for 11 years, alongside general secretary Debabrata Paul. The pair quit their posts earlier this year, before Shahed was made the interim head of an ad-hoc committee.
After many years, CWAB saw involvement from the country's top cricketers. Before Thursday's elections, the other positions in the executive body were filled uncontested.
Former batter Shahriar Hossain is the senior vice-president while Nurul Hasan is the vice president. Najmul Hossain Shanto, Shamsur Rahman, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Rumana Ahmed, Khaled Mashud Pilot, Imrul Kayes, Irfan Sukkur, and Akbar Ali are new executive committee members.
CWAB is an affiliate of the World Cricketers' Association (formerly known as FICA). It came under the spotlight when Bangladesh's top cricketers went on an indefinite strike in 2019, and one of their demands was CWAB's overhaul at the time. CWAB bosses Naimur and Paul promised elections, but it was never held in the following five years.
Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84