Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sir Malik Ghulam Muhammad [a] (20 April 1895 – 29 August 1956) was a Pakistani politician and economist who served as the third governor-general of Pakistan from 1951 to 1955. Educated at the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), he joined the Indian Civil Service as a chartered accountant at the Indian Railway Accounts Service before being ...
family tree: Umm Kulthum bint Ali granddaughter: Zaynab bint Ali granddaughter: Safiyya tenth wife: Abu Bakr father-in-law family tree: Sawda second wife: Umar father-in-law family tree: Umm Salama sixth wife: Juwayriya eighth wife: Maymuna eleventh wife: Aisha third wife Family tree: Zaynab bint Khuzayma fifth wife: Hafsa fourth wife: Zaynab ...
Mian Muhammad Azhar (Governor of Punjab, 1990-1993, Mayor of Lahore 1987-1991; Hammad Azhar (Previous Finance Minister of Pakistan); Mian Family of Baghbanpura. Justice Mian Shah Din, (1868–1918), Elected President of the All-India Muslim League(March 1908), Member of the Simla Deputation in 1906, First Muslim Judge in British India, Poet and Writer.
[3] [4] The then governor-general of Pakistan, Muhammad Ali Jinnah, took advice from the Founding Fathers of the nation and appointed Liaquat Ali Khan to establish and lead his administration on 15 August 1947. [5] Before the presidential system in 1960, seven prime ministers had served between 1947 until martial law in 1958. In 1971, the ...
Ghulam Mohammad (Arabic: غلام محمد), also spelled Ghulam Mohammed, Ghulam Muhammad, Ghulam Muhammed, Gholam Mohammad, Gulam Mohammad etc., is a male Muslim given name popular in Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan. It may refer to:
Sir Malik Ghulam Muhammad: Preceded by: Liaquat Ali Khan: Succeeded by: Mohammad Ali Bogra: 2nd Governor-General of Pakistan; In office 14 September 1948 – 17 October 1951: Monarch: George VI: Prime Minister: Liaquat Ali Khan: Preceded by: Muhammad Ali Jinnah: Succeeded by: Malik Ghulam Muhammad: Chief Minister of East Bengal; In office 15 ...
Ghulam Muhammad Malik (also called G.M. Malik) is a Pakistani former military officer who commanded the 10 Corps, Rawalpindi of the Pakistan Army. [1] 10 Corps was responsible for defending the entire Line of Control between Pakistan administered Kashmir and the Indian-administered Kashmir. He retired from the army in 1995, and has since headed ...
The One Unit policy was passed on 30 September 1955 by the new Prime Minister Chaudhry Muhammad Ali. Mirza dismissed Malik Ghulam to take over his post on 6 October 1955 (just one day before his acting capacity ended), supported by the Constituent Assembly's legislators (as Ghulam Muhammad was seen as despotic).