Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Habibie had known Hasri Ainun in childhood, junior high school and in senior high school at SMA Kristen Dago (Dago Christian Senior High School), Bandung. The two married on 12 May 1962, returning to Germany shortly afterwards. [22] Habibie and his wife settled in Aachen for a short period before moving to Oberforstbach. In May 1963 they had a ...
Hasri Ainun Habibie (née Besari; 11 August 1937 – 22 May 2010) was an Indonesian physician and wife of former President B. J. Habibie. She served as First Lady of Indonesia from 1998 to 1999. Early life
Dr. Muhammad Afzal Hussain Qadri (1912–74), scientist (1999) Major Muhammad Akram Shaheed, Recipient, Nishan-e-Haider Award (2001) Muhammad Aly Rangoonwala, philanthropist (2002) Muhammad Yousaf Khan Khattak, Tehreek-e-Pakistan key Mujahid (2003) Captain Muhammad Sarwar Shaheed, Recipient of Nishan-e-Haider Award (2000)
National Database and Registration Authority (NADRA) was established on 10 March 2000, by merging Directorate General of Registration Pakistan, a department created under the 1973 Constitution, with the National Database Organisation (NDO), [7] [4] an attached department under the Ministry of Interior, Government of Pakistan created for the ...
Pakistan Muslim League (N) – 8 Farooq Leghari (1940–2010) 14 November 1993 2 December 1997 4 years, 18 days Pakistan People's Party: 1993 — Wasim Sajjad (born 1941) acting: 2 December 1997 1 January 1998 30 days Pakistan Muslim League (N) 9 Muhammad Rafiq Tarar (1929–2022) 1 January 1998 20 June 2001 3 years, 170 days Pakistan Muslim ...
Habib-ur-Rehman was born into Punjabi family of the Arain tribe, in Basi village not far from Sirhind-Fategarh in the Patiala State, Punjab, British India. [3] His father worked in the railways, and the family had to move to Gujranwala after the independence of Pakistan in 1947, where he was educated, earning three master's degrees in English literature, Urdu and Persian from the Govt. M.A.O ...
New criminal offences of adultery, fornication and types of blasphemy, and new punishments of whipping, amputation, and stoning to death, were added to Pakistani law. Interest payments for bank accounts were replaced by "profit and loss" payments. Zakat charitable donations became a 2.5% annual tax.
Habib Jalib was born as Habib Ahmad on 24 March 1928 in a village near Hoshiarpur, Punjab, British India. [1] He migrated to Pakistan after the partition of India. [1] [5] [6] Later he worked as a proofreader for Daily Imroze of Karachi. [1]