In 1874, the current Sylhet Division, which included
Karimganj District, was entirely known as the 'Sylhet district'. On 16 February 1874, Sylhet was separated from mainland Bengal to be made a part of the
non-regulation Chief Commissioner's Province of Assam (Northeast Frontier Province) in order to facilitate Assam's commercial development. The people of Sylhet submitted a memorandum to the Viceroy protesting the inclusion in Assam. The protests subsided when the Viceroy,
Lord Northbrook, visited Sylhet to reassure the people that education and justice would be administered from Bengal, and when the people in Sylhet saw the opportunity of employment in tea estates in Assam and a market for their produce. In 1905, Sylhet district rejoined Bengal as a part of the new
Surma Valley Division of
Eastern Bengal and Assam. In 1912, the then Sylhet district was once again moved to the newly created
Assam Province alongside the other districts of the Surma Valley Division. Historically, the entire Sylhet region was a single district within the
Surma Valley and Hill Districts Division as part of the Assam Province. During the partition of India in 1947, a plebiscite was held to determine whether the Sylhet region would remain in India or join East Pakistan.
Abdul Matlib Mazumdar led a delegation advocating for the region to remain with India. However, due to demands from the Muslim League and support from Assam's political leaders at the time, the plebiscite resulted in Sylhet's transfer to Pakistan by a narrow margin. Allegations of electoral fraud and irregularities were raised, but the results stood. However, the district's
Karimganj subdivision was given to India by Cyril Radcliffe, after apparently being pleaded by a delegation led by Abdul Matlib Mazumdar. The four other subdivisions (
North Sylhet,
South Sylhet,
Habiganj and
Sunamganj) joined the
Dominion of Pakistan; subsequently forming
East Bengal's 'Sylhet district' in the Chittagong division. Following the
independence of Bangladesh in 1971, Sylhet became part of the new nation. In 1984, the four subdivisions of Sylhet District were upgraded to districts as part of
Chief Martial Law Administrator Hussain Muhammad Ershad's decentralisation programme. The four districts remained part of
Chittagong Division until 1995, when they formed the new Sylhet Division. The Sylhet Division has a "friendship link" with the city of
St Albans, in the United Kingdom. The link was established in 1988 when the
St Albans District Council supported a housing project in Sylhet as part of the International Year of Shelter for the Homeless. Sylhet was chosen because it is the area of origin for the largest ethnic minority group in St Albans. Sylhet also has many "friendship links" with other cities in the United Kingdom, as the majority of the half-million
British Bangladeshis have origins in Sylhet. This includes places such as
Rochdale,
Oldham, London, and many more places. ==Economy==