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The neutrality of this article is disputed. Please see the discussion on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until the dispute is resolved. (September 2010)
General Yahya Khan
آغا محمد یحیی خان
General AM Yahya Khan
3rd President of Pakistan
In office
25 March 1969 – 20 December 1971
Prime Minister
Nurul Amin
Preceded by
Ayub Khan
Succeeded by
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
Born
4 February 1917(1917-02-04)
Chakwal, British Raj
Died
10 August 1980(1980-08-10) (aged 63)
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
Alma mater
Indian Military Academy
Religion
Islam
Military service
Allegiance
Pakistan
Service/branch
Pakistan Army
Years of service
1939–1971 (PA - 98)
Rank
General
Unit
10th Battalion The Baloch Regiment)
Commands
111th Independent Brigade
Deputy Chief of General Staff (DCGS)
Chief of General Staff (CGS)
14th Infantry Division, Dhaka
15th Infantry Division, Sialkot
7th Infantry Division, Peshawar
Deputy Commander-in-Chief
Commander-in-Chief of Pakistan Army
Battles/wars
World War II
Indo-Pakistani War of 1965
Indo-Pakistan War of 1971
Awards
Hilal-e-Pakistan
Hilal-e-Jurat
Sitara-e-Pakistan
General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan Qizilbash, H.Pk, HJ, S.Pk, psc (Urdu: آغا محمد یحیی خان; February 4, 1917 – August 10, 1980) was the third President of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971, following the resignation of Ayub Khan. He had one son, Ali Yahya and one daughter, Yasmeen Khan.1
Contents
1 Early life
2 Army career
2.1 Career before becoming commander-in-chief
2.2 As commander-in-chief
3 President of Pakistan
4 The last days of Pakistani East Bengal
4.1 The US Role
4.2 Fall from Power
5 Death
6 Personal life
7 References
8 External links
Early life
Yahya Khan was born in Chakwal, Punjab, Pakistan,23 in 1917 and traces his ancestry to Persia by way of antiquarian knowledge.2 His Shia family descended from the elite soldier (Qizilbash) class of Nader Shah, the Persian ruler who invaded North and North-Western India in the 18th century.4 However, according to a number of sources, including Time magazine, Yahya Khan was an ethnic Pashtun (Pathan).56
Four Pashtuns have accupied the important senior army post of Chief of Staff since 1958 — Ayub Khan, Yahya Khan...7
—Mehtab Ali Shah
Few Pakistanis knew anything about Yahya Khan when he was vaulted into the presidency two years ago. The stocky, bushy-browed Pathan had been army chief of staff since 1966.8
—Time Magazine
Army career
Yahya Khan, H.Pk, HJ, S.Pk, psc joined the British Army, and served in World War II as an officer in the 4th Infantry Division (India). He served in Iraq, Italy, and North Africa.
Yahya Khan was commissioned from Indian Military Academy Dehra Dun on 15 July 1939. An infantry officer from the 4/10 Baluch Regiment, Yahya saw action during World War II in North Africa where he was captured by the Axis Forces in June 1942 and interned in a prisoner of war camp in Italy from where he escaped in the third attempt.
Career before becoming commander-in-chief
Insecure politics, illegal orders
PAKISTANI politics has been revolving around slogans — more so today than ever before. The thinking of political leaders whether elected or converts from the military has not penetrated the spring of human needs and aspirations.
Yahya Khan
Yahya Khan on WN Network delivers the latest Videos and Editable pages for News & Events, including Entertainment, Music, Sports, Science and more, ...
In 1947 he was instrumental in not letting the Indian officers shift books from the famous library of the British Indian Staff College at Quetta, where Yahya was posted as the only Muslim instructor at the time of partition of India.9
Yahya became a brigadier at the age of 34 and commanded the 105 Independent Brigade, which was deployed on the ceasefire line in Kashmir in 1951-52. Later Yahya, as Deputy Chief of General Staff, was selected to head the army's planning board set up by Ayub to modernise the Pakistan Army in 1954-57. Yahya also performed the duties of Chief of General Staff from 1958 to 1962 from where he went on to command an infantry division from 1962 to 1965.
Upon the formation of Pakistan, Khan helped set up an officer's school in Quetta, and commanded an infantry division during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. Immediately after the 1965 war Major General Yahya Khan who had commanded the 7th Division in Operation Grand Slam was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General, appointed Deputy Army Commander in Chief and Commander in Chief designate in March 1966. At promotion, Yahya Khan superseded two of his seniors, Lt Gen Altaf Qadir and Lt Gen Bakhtiar Rana.10
As commander-in-chief
Yahya energetically started reorganising the Pakistan Army in 1965. The post 1965 situation saw major organisational as well as technical changes in the Pakistan Army. Till 1965 it was thought that divisions could function effectively while getting orders directly from the army's GHQ. This idea failed miserably in the 1965 war and the need to have intermediate corps headquarters in between the GHQ and the fighting combat divisions was recognised as a foremost operational necessity after the 1965 war. In 1965 war the Pakistan Army had only one corps headquarter (i.e. the 1st Corps Headquarters).
Soon after the war had started the U.S. had imposed an embargo on military aid on both India and Pakistan. This embargo did not affect the Indian Army but produced major changes in the Pakistan Army's technical composition. US Secretary of State Dean Rusk well summed it up when he said, "Well if you are going to fight, go ahead and fight, but we're not going to pay for it".11
Pakistan now turned to China for military aid and the Chinese tank T-59 started replacing the US M-47/48 tanks as the Pakistan Army's MBT (Main Battle Tank) from 1966. 80 tanks, the first batch of T-59s, a low-grade version of the Russian T-54/55 series were delivered to Pakistan in 1965-66. The first batch was displayed in the Joint Services Day Parade on 23 March 1966. The 1965 War had proved that Pakistan Army's tank infantry ratio was lopsided and more infantry was required. Three more infantry divisions (9, 16 and 17 Divisions) largely equipped with Chinese equipment and popularly referred to by the rank and file as "The China Divisions" were raised by the beginning of 1968. Two more corps headquarters i.e. 2nd Corps Headquarters (Jhelum-Ravi Corridor) and 4th Corps Headquarters (Ravi-Sutlej Corridor) were raised.
President of Pakistan
Court directs DPO to recover girl `abducted` by police
PESHAWAR, April 5: The Peshawar High Court on Tuesday directed the district police officer (DPO) of Karak to recover a teenaged girl allegedly taken away by the local police and later handed over to an army official.
Yahya Khan - New World Encyclopedia
Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan (February 4, 1917 – August 10, 1980) was the President of Pakistan from 1969 to 1971, following the resignation of Ayub ...
Ayub Khan was President of Pakistan for most of the 1960s, but by the end of the decade, popular resentment had boiled over against him. Pakistan had fallen into a state of disarray, and he handed over power to Yahya Khan, who immediately imposed martial law. Once Ayub handed over power to Yahya Khan on 25 March 1969 Yahya inherited a two-decade constitutional problem of inter-provincial ethnic rivalry between the Punjabi-Pashtun-Mohajir dominated West Pakistan province and the ethnically Bengali Muslim East Pakistan province. In addition Yahya also inherited an 11 year old problem of transforming an essentially one man ruled country to a democratic country, which was the ideological basis of the anti-Ayub movement of 1968-69. As an Army Chief Yahya had all the capabilities, qualifications and potential. But Yahya inherited an extremely complex problem and was forced to perform the multiple roles of caretaker head of the country, drafter of a provisional constitution, resolving the One Unit question, satisfying the frustrations and the sense of exploitation and discrimination successively created in the East Wing by a series of government policies since 1948. All these were complex problems and the seeds of Pakistan Army's defeat and humiliation in December 1971 lay in the fact that Yahya Khan blundered unwittingly into the thankless task of fixing the problems of Pakistan's political and administrative system which had been accumulating for 20 years and had their actual origins in the pre-1947 British policies towards the Bengali Muslims.
The American author Ziring observed that, "Yahya Khan has been widely portrayed as a ruthless uncompromising insensitive and grossly inept leader...While Yahya cannot escape responsibility for these tragic events, it is also on record that he did not act alone...All the major actors of the period were creatures of a historic legacy and a psycho-political milieu which did not lend itself to accommodation and compromise, to bargaining and a reasonable settlement. Nurtured on conspiracy theories, they were all conditioned to act in a manner that neglected agreeable solutions and promoted violent judgements".12
Yahya Khan attempted to solve Pakistan's constitutional and inter-provincial/regional rivalry problems once he took over power from Ayub Khan in March 1969. The tragedy of the whole affair was the fact that all actions that Yahya took, although correct in principle, were too late in timing, and served only to further intensify the political polarisation between the East and West wings.
He dissolved the one unit restoring the pre-1955 provinces of West Pakistan
Promised free direct, one man, one vote, fair elections on adult franchise, a basic human right which had been denied to the Pakistani people since the pre-independence 1946 elections by political inefficiency, double play and intrigue, by civilian governments, from 1947 to 1958 and by Ayub's one man rule from 1958 to 1969.
Missing person cases: Officers not below Lt-Col rank asked to file affidavits
PESHAWAR, March 29: The high court on Tuesday directed the Ministry of Defence that in cases of missing persons the affidavits of security agencies should be submitted by an officer not below the rank of a lieutenant colonel.
Yahya Khan
Yahya Khan was born in Chakwal, Pakistan, in 1917. Even if he is generally seen as a Pashtun, he was born in an ethnic Qizilbash family of Persian ...
However dissolution of one unit did not lead to the positive results that it might have led to in case "One Unit" was dissolved earlier. Yahya also made an attempt to accommodate the East Pakistanis by abolishing the principle of parity, thereby hoping that greater share in the assembly would redress their wounded ethnic regional pride and ensure the integrity of Pakistan. Instead of satisfying the Bengalis it intensified their separatism, since they felt that the west wing had politically suppressed them since 1958. Thus the rise of anti West Wing sentiment in the East Wing.
The last days of Pakistani East Bengal
Yahya announced in his broadcast to the nation on 28 July 1969, his firm intention to redress Bengali grievances, the first major step in this direction being, the doubling of Bengali quota in the defence services.13 Within a year he had set up a framework for elections that were held in December 1970. In East Pakistan, the Awami League (led by Mujibur Rahman) held almost all of the seats, but none in West Pakistan. In West Pakistan, the Pakistan Peoples Party (led by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto) won the lion's share of the seats, but none in East Pakistan. Though AL had 162 seats in the National Assembly against 88 of PPP, this led to a situation where Bhutto would have to give up power and allow Sheikh Mujib to be the Prime Minister of Pakistan. The situation also increased agitation, especially in East Pakistan as it became apparent that Sheikh Mujib was being denied of his legitimate claim to be the Prime Minister of Pakistan.
As Awami League violence paralyzed state machinery in East Pakistan, Yahya Khan ordered a crack down to restore the writ of the government. "Operation Searchlight" began on 25 March 1971 and soon restored order. (During Operation Searchlight, Pakistani soldiers killed hundreds of Bangladeshis at night while they were asleep. The Pakistani army specifically targeted Bangladeshi students, professors, police, and Hindus. Order was not restored, as this article claims.) However, the gulf between the two wings now was too wide to be bridged. Agitation now transformed into a vicious insurgency as Bengali elements of Pakistani armed Forces and Police mutinied and fled to India from where they launched hit and run operations.
The total number of people killed in East Pakistan is not known with any degree of accuracy. Bangladeshi authorities claim that 3 million people were killed,14 while the Hamoodur Rahman Commission, an official Pakistan Government investigation, put the figure as low as 26,000 civilian casualties.15 The international media and reference books in English have also published figures which vary greatly from 200,000 to 2,000,000 for Bangladesh as a whole.14 A further eight to ten million people fled the country to seek safety in India.16
Bangladesh marks 40th anniversary of forgotten genocide
Forty years ago, citizens of eastern Pakistan declared their independence from Islamabad in the west. Their plight to create the state of Bangladesh cost as many as three million lives and left lingering scars.
Yahya Khan
After completing his studies from the Punjab University, Yahya Khan joined the Indian Military Academy at Dehra Dun. He was commissioned in the Indian Army in 1938. ...
The Office of the Historian of the United States Department of State held a two-day conference in late June 2005 on U.S. policy in South Asia between 1961 and 1972.17 Bangladeshi speakers at the conference stated that the official Bangladeshi figure of civilian deaths was close to 300,000, which was wrongly translated from Bengali into English as three million. Ambassador Shamsher M. Chowdhury acknowledged that Bangladesh alone cannot correct this mistake and suggested Pakistan and Bangladesh should form a joint commission to investigate the 1971 disaster and prepare a report.18 A 2008 study in the British Medical Journal concluded that 269,000 civilians were killed by all sides in the war.19
Khan arrested Sheikh Mujibur Rahman upon Bhutto's insistence and appointed Brigadier Rahimuddin Khan (later General) to preside over a special tribunal dealing with Mujib's case. Rahimuddin awarded Mujib the death sentence,citation needed and President Yahya put the verdict into abeyance. Yahya's crackdown, however, had led to a Bangladesh Liberation War within Pakistan, and eventually drew India into what would extend into the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971. The end result was the establishment of Bangladesh as an independent republic. Khan subsequently apologized for his mistakes and voluntarily stepped down.
The US Role
As President, Khan helped to establish the communication channel between the United States and the People's Republic of China, which would be used to set up the Nixon trip in 1972.20
Pakistan was perceived in the United States as an integral bulwark against Communism in the Cold War. The United States cautiously supported Pakistan during 1971.21 India, with a heavily Socialistic economy, signed a formal alliance with the Soviet Union in August 1971. Both Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger felt that the atrocities committed by Pakistan in Bangladesh were greatly exaggerated for propaganda purposes. Moreover, noting that India was using the violence committed by all sides during this Pakistani civil war as a pretext for a possible military intervention, they suspected that India had aggressive intentions.22
Kissinger would work to prevent sectarian conflicts in Yemen and Lebanon from devolving into regional wars under Presidents Nixon and Ford. With the Soviet Union already covertly engaged in neighboring Afghanistan, the Nixon administration used Pakistan to try and deter further Soviet encroachment in the region.23 The Awami League, the dominant political force in Bangladesh, was an explicitly Socialist party aligned with Moscow.
Nixon relayed messages to Yahya, urging him to restrain Pakistani forces.24 His objective was to prevent a war and safeguard Pakistan's interests, though he feared an Indian invasion of West Pakistan that would lead to Indian domination of the sub-continent and strengthen the position of the Soviet Union.25 Similarly, Yahya Khan feared that an independent Bangladesh could lead to the disintegration of Pakistan. Indian military support for Bengali guerillas led to war between India and Pakistan.26
Political party launched
Former Nawab Salahuddin Abbasi of Bahawalpur yesterday launched a political party - Bahawalpur Awami Party -to seek provincial status for Bahawalpur.
Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan killer file
Short biography and background notes on Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan.
Nixon met with Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and did not believe her assertion that she would not invade Pakistan;27 he did not trust her and once referred to her as an "old witch".28 Kissinger maintained that Nixon made specific proposals to Gandhi on a solution for the crisis, some of which she heard for the first time; for example, mutual withdrawal of troops from the Indo-East Pakistan borders. Nixon also expressed a wish to fix a time limit with Yahya for political accommodation in East Pakistan. Nixon asserted that India could count on US endeavors to ease the crisis within a short time. But, both Kissinger and Gandhi aide Jayakar maintained, Gandhi did not respond to these proposals. Kissinger noted that she "listened to what was in fact one of Nixon's better presentations with aloof indifference" but "took up none of the points." Jayakar pointed out that Gandhi listened to Nixon "without a single comment, creating an impregnable space so that no real contact was possible." She also refrained from assuring that India would follow Pakistan's suit if it withdrew from India's borders. As a result, the main agenda was "dropped altogether."29 On December 3, Yahya preemptively attacked the Indian Air Force and Gandhi retaliated, pushing into East Pakistan.30 Nixon issued a statement blaming Pakistan for starting the conflict and blaming India for escalating it30 because he favored a cease-fire.31 The United States was secretly encouraging the shipment of military equipment from Iran, Turkey, and Jordan to Pakistan, reimbursing those countries32 despite Congressional objections.33 The US used the threat of an aid cut-off to force Pakistan to back down, while its continued military aid to Islamabad prevented India from launching incursions deeper into the country. A cease fire was reached on December 16, leading to the creation of the independent state of Bangladesh.34 Sheikh Mujib led the newly established People's Republic of Bangladesh as a one-party, dictatorial state.
The US remained hostile to the Mujib regime, and considered Mujib himself to be a demagogue. His government's threat to prosecute US supported Pakistani War Criminals led the US to withhold food aid and ultimately exacerbated the famine in Bangladesh from March to December 1974, leading to the death of more than one million people. During this famine, the United States also objected to Bangladesh's exports of jute to Cuba, another factor in withholding aid. By the time Mujib agreed to end support for Cuba, and the US began shipments of food to Bangladesh, it was 'too late for famine victims'.35 The US claims, Mujib's regime committed widespread human rights violations and tortured and executed thousands of dissidents. Nixon and Kissinger argued that these atrocities were far worse than anything Pakistan had committed in Bangladesh.22
Fall from Power
Nikahnama issue Court warns govt of contempt
PESHAWAR, April 13: The high court on Wednesday directed the provincial government to implement forthwith a court judgment delivered over a year ago regarding making necessary changes in nikahnama (marriage certificate) for simplifying provisions about dower and dowry.
HOME PAGE
Yahya Khan as president. Yahya Khan established a semimilitary state, he also introduced changes that led to the return of parliamentary democracy. ...
Later overwhelming public anger over Pakistan's defeat by Bangladesh and the division of Pakistan into two parts boiled into street demonstrations throughout Pakistan, rumours of an impending coup d'état by younger army officers against the government of President Mohammed Agha Yahya Khan swept the country. Yahya became the highest-ranking casualty of the war: to forestall further unrest, on December 20, 1971 he handed over power to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, age 43, the ambitious leader of West Pakistan's powerful People's Party.
Shortly after Yahya stepped down, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto reversed Rahimuddin Khan's verdict, released Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and saw him off to London. Pakistani President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, in a supreme irony, ordered the house arrest of his predecessor, Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan, the man who imprisoned Mujib in the first place. Both actions produced headlines round the world.
Death
Yahya Khan died in August 1980, in Rawalpindi.
Personal life
He was known as a heavy drinker, with a preference for whiskey. Khan's close close friend and mistress during his reign was Akleem Akhtar, otherwise known as General Rani (General's Queen).36
References
^ Ahmed, Munir. "خان کی کہانی ان کے بیٹے علی یحٰیی کی زبانی" (in Urdu). جنرل محمد یحٰیی خان: شخصیت و سیاسی کردار. Lahore, Pakistan: آصف جاوید برائے نگارشات پبلشرز. p. 240.
^ a b The Nazimate of Chakwal September 30, 2005 by Ayaz Amir DAWN
^ Current Biography (1986) By H.W. Wilson Company H. W. Wilson Co.
^ Encyclopedia Britannica, Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan
^ South Asia: a short history (1990) By Hugh Tinker page 248
^ Democracy, security, and development in India. By Raju G. C. Thomas.
^ The foreign policy of Pakistan: ethnic impacts on diplomacy, 1971-1994. By Mehtab Ali Shah.
^ Time magazine - Good Soldier Yahya Khan
^ Nikhat Ekbal, Great Muslims of undivided India (Delhi, Kalpaz Publications, 2009), 122.
^ Brig A.R. Siddiqui. "Army's top slot: the seniority factor" Dawn, 25 April 2004
^ Dennis Kux, India and the United States: Estranged Democracies (Washington, DC: National Defense University Press, 1992), 239.
^ Lawrence Ziring: Pakistan in the twentieth century: a political history. Karachi, Oxford, New York, Delhi: Oxford University Press. 1997. 648 pp. ISBN 0-19-577815-2
^ Chaudhry, G.W., "The Last Days of United Pakistan", C. Hurst and Company, London, 1974
^ a b White, Matthew, Death Tolls for the Major Wars and Atrocities of the Twentieth Century
^ Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report, chapter 2, paragraph 33
^ Rummel, Rudolph J., "Statistics of Democide: Genocide and Mass Murder Since 1900", ISBN 3-8258-4010-7, Chapter 8, Table 8.2 Pakistan Genocide in Bangladesh Estimates, Sources, and Calcualtions: lowest estimate 2 million claimed by Pakistan (reported by Aziz, Qutubuddin. Blood and tears Karachi: United Press of Pakistan, 1974. pp. 74,226), all the other sources used by Rummel suggest a figure of between 8 and 10 million with one (Johnson, B. L. C. Bangladesh. New York: Barnes & Noble, 1975. pp. 73,75) that "could have been" 12 million.
^ "Conference Agenda". State.gov. The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs. Archived from the original on April 9, 2008. http://web.archive.org/web/20080409154649/http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ho/46059.htm.
^ Anwar Iqbal Sheikh Mujib wanted a confederation: US papers, The Dawn, 7 July 2005, this article was also published in the in Financial Express, 16 December 2005 under the byline US State Department's declassified documents
^ "269,000 people died in Bangladesh war, says new study". Times Of India. 2008-06-20. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/World/269000_died_in_Bangladesh_war/articleshow/3147513.cms. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ Kissinger's Secret Trip to China
^ Mosleh Uddin. "Personal Prejudice Makes Foreign Policy". Asiaticsociety.org.bd. http://www.asiaticsociety.org.bd/journals/Dec_2008/contents/ABMMoslehuddin.htm. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ a b "RICHARD NIXON TAPES: Henry Kissinger on Indians & Vietnam Bombings". YouTube. 1971-12-26. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2QLCKkMvz8w. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ "The Rise and Rise of Robert Gates by Roger Morris | ZNet Article". ZCommunications. http://www.zcommunications.org/the-rise-and-rise-of-robert-gates-by-roger-morris. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 751.
^ "The Kissinger Tilt". Time. January 17, 1972. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,877618-2,00.html. Retrieved September 30, 2008.
^ "World: Pakistan: The Ravaging of Golden Bengal". TIME. 1971-08-02. http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,878408,00.html. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 752
^ Chowdhury, Debasish Roy (June 23, 2005). "'Indians are bastards anyway'". Asia Times. http://www.atimes.com/atimes/south_asia/gf23df04.html. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
^ Jayakar, Indira Gandhi, p. 232; Kissinger, White House Years, pp. 878 & 881-82.
^ a b Black, Conrad (2007), p. 753.
^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 755.
^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 756.
^ Gandhi, Sajit (December 16, 2002). "The Tilt: The U.S. and the South Asian Crisis of 1971". National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 79. National Security Archive. http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB79/. Retrieved January 15, 2009.
^ Black, Conrad (2007), p. 757.
^ "Opinion: Devinder Sharma - Famine as commerce". Indiatogether.org. http://www.indiatogether.org/agriculture/opinions/dsharma/faminecommerce.htm. Retrieved 2011-03-28.
^ "Fakhar-e-Alam: Actor, VJ and Singer". Pakistan Herald. Gibralter Information Technologies. http://pakistanherald.com/Profile/Fakhar-e-Alam-797.
External links
Official profile at Pakistan Army website
Good Soldier Yahya Khan----TIME
YAHYA KHAN AND BANGLADESH
Chronicles Of Pakistan
Henry Kissinger and PM China discussed Yahya Khan and 1971 loss
Yahya Khan Is Arrested In Pakistan----Washington Post
[1]----Spiegel Online
Military offices
Preceded by
Habibullah Khan Khattak
Chief of General Staff
1957–1962
Succeeded by
Sher Bahadur
Preceded by
Musa Khan
Chief of Army Staff
1966–1971
Succeeded by
Gul Hassan Khan
Political offices
Preceded by
Ayub Khan
President of Pakistan
1969–1971
Succeeded by
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
Preceded by
Mian Arshad Hussain
Minister of Foreign Affairs
1969–1971
Preceded by
Afzal Rahman Khan
Minister of Defence
1969–1971
v · d · ePresidents of Pakistan (List)
Senators` plea turned down
ISLAMABAD, March 29: Senators on Tuesday asked the young doctors working in the capital`s public hospitals to call off their strike, assuring them that the government would look into their demands, but they refused.
Yahya Khan Biography, Pictures, Videos, Relationships - FamousWhy
Yahya Khan (Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan) was born on Wednesday, April 04, 1917 in Chakwal and he was a famous head of state from Pakistan of Shia Muslim religion
I.Mirza · A.Khan · Y.Khan · Z.A.Bhutto · F.I.Chaudhry · Z. ul-Haq · G.I.Khan · W.Sajjad (Acting) · F.Leghari · W.Sajjad (Acting) · M.R.Tarar · P.Musharraf · M.M.Soomro (Acting) · Zardari
Italics indicate military rulers
v · d · eMartial Law Administrators of Pakistan
Chief Martial Law Administrators
Gen Ayub Khan · Gen Yahya Khan · Zulfikar Ali Bhutto · Gen Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq · Gen Pervez Musharraf (unstyled)
Punjab
Lt Gen Attiqur Rahman · Lt Gen Ghulam Jilani Khan
Balochistan
Lt Gen Rahimuddin Khan · Lt Gen F.S. Khan Lodhi · Lt Gen K.K. Afridi
Sindh
Lt Gen Rakhman Gul · Lt Gen S.M. Abbasi
North-West Frontier Province
Lt Gen Khwaja Mohammad Azhar Khan · Lt Gen Fazle Haq · Lt Gen Jahan Dad Khan
v · d · e
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971
History
Partition of India · History of Pakistan · Indo-Pakistani Wars · War of 1947 · War of 1965 · Operation Searchlight · Bangladesh Liberation War · Mukti Bahini · Research and Analysis Wing · Operation Jackpot · Indo-Soviet Treaty · Razakars · Mitro Bahini · Surrender of East Pakistan · Simla Agreement
Conflict
Battle of Dhalai · Battle of Atgram · Battle of Garibpur · Boyra incidence · Operation Chengiz Khan · Battle of Longewala · Battle of Hilli · Meghna Heli Bridge · Tangail Airdrop · Battle of Basantar · PNS Ghazi · Operation Trident · Air Operations · Naval Operations · INS Khukri · US Taskforce 74 · more
Leaders
India
Indira Gandhi · Sam Manekshaw · P.C. Lal · K.P. Candeth · J.S. Aurora · Gopal Gurunath Bewoor · JFR Jacob · Sagat Singh · M.L. Thapan · T.N. Raina · Sartaj Singh · N.C. Rawlley · K.K. Singh · Kuldip Singh Chandpuri · Kulwant Singh Pannu
Pakistan
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto · Yahya Khan · Abdul Hamid Khan · A.A.K. Niazi · Mohammad Sharif · A.O. Mitha · Gul Hassan Khan · Rao Farman Ali · Sahabzada Yaqub Khan · Tikka Khan
Bangladesh
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman · Tajuddin Ahmed · Muhammad Mansur Ali · A.H.M. Qamaruzzaman · M. A. G. Osmani · Ziaur Rahman · Khaled Mosharraf
Highest
awards
Param Vir Chakra
L/Nk. Albert Ekka† · Fl. Off. N.J.S. Sekhon† · 2nd Lt. Arun Khetarpal† · Maj. Hoshiar Singh
Nishan-E-Haider
Maj. Muhammad Akram† · Plt. Off. Rashid Minhas† · Maj. Shabbir Sharif† · J/Swr. Muhammad Hussain† · L/Nk. Muhammad Mahfuz†
Bir Sreshtho
Forty-winking through the past
FORTY years ago, the nation marked its last Pakistan Day as a two-winged entity. Within days the last vestiges of the country constituted less than a quarter century earlier had been drowned in a bloodbath.
Yahya_khan encyclopedia topics | Reference.com
Yahya Khan was born in Chakwal in 1917 to an ethnic Shia Muslim ... Yahya Khan attempted to solve Pakistan's constitutional and inter-provincial/regional ...
Eng. Off. Ruhul Amin† · Flt. Lt. Matiur Rahman†
Persondata
Name
Khan, Yahya
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth
4 February 1917
Place of birth
Chakwal, British Raj (now Pakistan)
Date of death
10 August 1980
Place of death
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
Police dues
It has been mostly observed that the families of martyred police personnel or retired police personnel are not paid their pension or any other dues on time.
Yahya Khan - Biography - The Biographicon
Yahya Khan was born in Peshawar in 1917 to a very rich and privileged family of ethnic Qizilbash Royal Persians who could trace their family links ...
Eng. Off. Ruhul Amin† · Flt. Lt. Matiur Rahman†
Persondata
Name
Khan, Yahya
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth
4 February 1917
Place of birth
Chakwal, British Raj (now Pakistan)
Date of death
10 August 1980
Place of death
Rawalpindi, Pakistan
PIA training centre becomes IATA authorised centre
KARACHI: The PIA Training Centre (PTC) is now an Authorized International Air Transport Association (IATA) Training Centre. Thus it becomes the first IATA Authorized Training Centre in South Asia, a PIA spokesman said here on Thursday.



















