Chowdhuryâ¯Mohammadâ¯Shahriar Emon (19 September 1971 â 6 September 1996), popularly known as Salman Shah, was a Bangladeshi film actor and one of the most popular stars of Dhallywood in the 1990s. His untimely death at a young age remains a subject of controversy, multiple investigations, and widespread public interest.
Shah entered the Bangladeshi entertainment industry through television dramas and modelling before achieving film stardom.
He made his silver-screen debut in 1993 with the film Keyamot Theke Keyamot, directed by Sohanur Rahman Sohan, which was a box-office hit and catapulted him to popularity.
Between 1993 and his death in 1996, Shah starred in approximately 27 films, all of them were commercially successful.
His popularity arose from a combination of youthful charm, modern fashion sense, and a new style of romantic-hero portrayal which marked a departure from the prevailing hero archetype in Dhallywood.
His on-screen pairingsâÂÂespecially with actresses like ShabnurâÂÂbecame very popular with audiences, and his off-screen persona (personal life, marriage to Samira Haque in August 1992) further heightened his public profile.
Despite his commercial success, Salman ShahâÂÂs career was brief (about three years) and his personal circumstances (marital matters, public scrutiny, absence of children) would later take on relevance in investigations after his death.
On the morning of 6 September 1996, Shah was found dead in his flat at New Eskaton Garden (Dhaka). His body was discovered hanging from a ceiling fan, with rope marks around his neck and signs of asphyxiation.
His parents first took him to Holyâ¯Family Hospital, where further signs of distress were observed, before moving him to Dhaka Medical College Hospital, where doctors declared him dead on arrival.
Initially registered as an "unnatural death" by his father, Kamar Uddin Chowdhury, the case was later pressed by the family to be investigated as a possible murder.
His death shocked the nation and the Bangladeshi film industry, triggering widespread media attention and multiple investigations into the circumstances of his passing.
Investigators examining the apartment of Salman Shah at Newâ¯Eskatonâ¯Garden, Dhaka found that his body was hanging from a ceiling fan with visible rope marks around the neck and signs consistent with asphyxiation. The actor's parents observed his face and legs had turned blue, and rope marks were clearly visible when he was taken to Holy Family Hospital, Dhaka before being moved to Dhaka Medical College Hospital where he was declared dead on arrival.
A suicide note was reportedly recovered from the room and later examined by handwriting experts who concluded the writing was that of Shah, though his family disputes the authenticity of the note. Also found at the scene was a small bottle of sedative (JASOCANEâÂÂA 20â¯mg) and some wet clothes inside a luggage, leading to questions about the sequence of events and whether the scene was altered.
Investigators also noted that no major furniture displacement or visible signs of a struggle were recorded around the hanging location, yet the timing of the body being taken down and the delay in hospital transfer remained unexplained. Furthermore, witness testimony included claims that two women were rubbing oil on his hands and feet when his parents arrived, and that one relative told his mother to âÂÂget out of my houseâÂÂ, raising further suspicion about what took place at the scene.
These findings â hanging from fan, ropeâÂÂmarks, sedative bottle, wet luggage clothes, disputed note and lack of disturbance â have been cited by both sides of the case: those favouring the suicide conclusion point to absence of clear external injury or forced entry, while those advocating the homicide theory emphasise the anomalies, sceneâÂÂirregularities and disputed circumstances.
In July 1997, Rizvi Ahmed (alias Farhad) provided a confessional statement under Sectionâ¯164 alleging that Shah was murdered as part of a contract worth Tkâ¯12â¯lakh. According to his statement, Tkâ¯6â¯lakh was paid in advance and the remaining Tkâ¯6â¯lakh after the killing, reportedly arranged by SalmanâÂÂs mother-in-law, Latifa Haque Lucy.
Rizvi named multiple individuals he claimed were involved, including "Don" and "David", and alleged a staged murder scene: incapacitation via chloroform, dragging the actor into a dressing room, tying his legs, hanging the body from a ceiling fan, and applying oils and wet clothes to suggest suicide.
He further claimed that the gatekeeper allowed entry to the conspirators and that pressure was applied on the actorâÂÂs family to keep the matter quiet.
Rizvi later retracted his confession, and subsequent investigations by the Criminal Investigation Department and Police Bureau of Investigation did not find sufficient evidence of homicide.
Despite the retraction, Rizvi Ahmed's confession remains a significant element in the ongoing debate about the circumstances of Shah's death and is frequently cited by the actorâÂÂs family and in media reports alleging murder.
Shah's mother, Neela Chowdhury, has consistently asserted that her son was murdered and did not commit suicide. She and family members have repeatedly named several personsâÂÂincluding the actorâÂÂs ex-wife Samira HaqueâÂÂin allegations of conspiracy.
The Police Bureau of Investigation report submitted in February 2020 concluded that Shah committed suicide, citing multiple contributing factors including a romantic relationship with Shabnur, marital distress, prior suicide attempts, and family conflict.
The PBI stated that a suicide note was recovered and verified through handwriting experts.
Earlier investigations by the Criminal Investigation Department and judicial probes found no compelling evidence of homicide.
The death of Shah sent shockwaves across Bangladesh and triggered an unprecedented response from fans, the media, and the entertainment industry. Thousands of fans gathered at his funeral and memorial sites, expressing grief and demanding justice.
Media coverage of the case was extensive and often sensationalized, with debates centering on whether his death was a suicide or a murder. Newspapers and television channels ran investigative stories, interviews with family members, and discussions with legal and forensic experts.
Several individuals from the film industry publicly commented on his death:
Social and cultural commentary around his death also reflected broader issues, such as mental health, the pressures of stardom, and the need for protective measures for actors facing intense public scrutiny.
Over the years, anniversaries of his death have consistently been marked by fans paying tribute, media retrospectives, and renewed discussions on the unresolved aspects of his case.
As of late 2025, a murder case has been filed at Ramna Police Station naming 11 accused persons following a court order that directed the case be treated as murder.
Travel bans have been imposed on suspects including Samira Haque and actor Don to prevent them from leaving Bangladesh.
Immigration authorities have been alerted, and police investigations are ongoing.