LIAQUAT ALI KHAN

Biography of Liaquat Ali Khan :- 

Name : Liaquat Ali Khan
Bith Date : October 1, 1896
Death Date : June 7, 1951
Place of Birth : Karnal, India
Nationality : Indian
Gender : Male
Occupations : prime minister




Liaquat Ali Khan (1896-1951) was the main PM of Pakistan. He assumed an essential part in the transactions prompting the making of Pakistan and afterward in the solidification of the new state. 

On Oct. 1, 1896, Liaquat Ali Khan was conceived at Karnal in Punjab, India. His family were rich landowners who later moved to the United Provinces. He was taught at Aligarh and Oxford University. Subsequent to qualifying as an attorney in England in 1922, he came back to India. 

Liaquat was chosen to the Legislative Council of the United Provinces in 1926, where he served for the following 14 years. Amid this period he was dynamic in the issues of the Muslim League, and in 1937 he turned into its secretary. Amiable and ready to blend effortlessly with all classes, he was a valuable counterpoise to the severe Mohammad Ali Jinnah, with whom he worked nearly in working up the Muslim League as a powerful political association after 1937. Liaquat was chosen to the Central Legislative Assembly in 1940, where, as representative pioneer of the Muslim League party, he reinforced the Muslim interest for a different country. 

In 1946, when autonomy for India was being consulted with the British, Liaquat was delegated fund serve in the meantime government. His "poor man's financial plan," which put overwhelming charges on the rich and undermined to explore the exercises of the immense industrialists, was viewed as an assault on the Indian National Congress, which the industrialists financed. 

After parcel on Aug. 15, 1947, Liaquat wound up plainly PM of Pakistan. In spite of the fact that at first he was subordinate to Jinnah, the senator general, after Jinnah's demise in 1948 he rose as the most capable figure in the country. Two noteworthy issues were utilized by his adversaries, notwithstanding, to undermine the steadiness of his administration. One was relations with India, which had been disenchanted by the battle over Kashmir. Open war appeared a probability in 1950, however Liaquat's trip to Delhi, where he consented to an arrangement with Jawaharlal Nehru promising collaboration between the two nations, reduced a portion of the strain. This activity was wildly condemned by aggressor bunches in Pakistan as an admission to India. 

The other issue was the request by universal Moslems to proclaim Pakistan an Islamic state, with all laws fitting in with the Koran. Liaquat, who was a liberal democrat, with solid duties regarding modernization, contradicted this request as reactionary. His trade off, as acknowledged by the lawmakers, was that Pakistan was a state where "Moslems would be empowered to lead their lives ... as per the lessons of Islam." He was not ready to end the developing factionalism, nonetheless, and an enthusiast killed him on Oct. 16, 1951. 

Additionally Reading : 


A short record of Liaquat's profession is given in S. M. Ikram, Modern Muslim India and the Birth of Pakistan (1950; 2d ed. 1965). His addresses are gathered in M. Rafique Afzal, ed., Speeches and Statements of Quaid-i-Millat Liaquat Ali Khan, 1941-51 (1967).

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