Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust was established in 1993 following a conference of Bangladesh Bar Council in 1992. In 2011,
Ain o Salish Kendra and Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust were able to successfully petition the courts to ban corporal punishment in educational institutions in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust filed a public interest legislation along with
Naripokkho,
Manusher Jonno Foundation, and BRAC Human Rights and Legal Aid Services challenging the legality and constitutionality of Bangladeshi law only identifying women as rape victims. In April 2022, the Canadian High Commission in Dhaka requested Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust and
Ain O Salish Kendra to provide legal aid to a 19 year old Canadian woman who was being prevented from her leaving Bangladesh by her family.
Sara Hossain and
ZI Khan Panna moved a petition on behalf of the two organization to the High Court Division which ordered the woman to stay with her parents while ordering the parents to return her communication devices during the trial period. Ain O Salish Kendra, Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust, and Nari Pakkho filed a petition challenging the use of character evidence to discredit the victim in rape cases. Bangladesh Legal Aid and Services Trust along with the law department of the University of Dhaka and the Death Penalty Project found 72 percent of those sentenced to death in Bangladesh were poor. == Board of Trustee ==