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Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed

Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed (13 May 1905 – 11 February 1977) was an Indian lawyer and politician who served as the fifth president of India from 1974 to 1977.

Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed
5th President of India
In office
24 August 1974 – 11 February 1977
Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi
Vice PresidentB. D. Jatti
Gopal Swarup Pathak
Preceded byV. V. Giri
Succeeded byB. D. Jatti
(acting)
Minister of Food and Agriculture
In office
27 June 1970 – 3 July 1974
Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi
Preceded byJagjivan Ram[1]
Succeeded byC. Subramaniam[2]
Minister of Industrial Development, Internal Trade and Company Affairs
In office
13 March 1967 – 27 June 1970
Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi
Preceded byDamodaram Sanjivayya
Succeeded byDinesh Singh[3]
Minister of Education
In office
13 November 1966 – 12 March 1967
Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi
Preceded byM. C. Chagla
Succeeded byTriguna Sen
Minister of Irrigation and Power
In office
29 January 1966 – 13 November 1966
Prime MinisterIndira Gandhi
Preceded byK. L. Rao[4]
Succeeded byK. L. Rao
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
In office
3 April 1966 – 25 February 1967
ConstituencyAssam
In office
3 April 1954 – 25 March 1957
ConstituencyAssam
Member of Parliament, Lok Sabha
In office
1967-1974
Preceded byRenuka Devi Barkataki
Succeeded byIsmail Hossain Khan
ConstituencyBarpeta
Member of the Assam Legislative Assembly
In office
1937–1946
Prime MinisterMuhammed Saadulah
Succeeded byMoulvi Abdul Hai
ConstituencyKamrup (North)
Personal details
Born(1905-05-13)13 May 1905
Delhi, British India
(present-day India)
Died11 February 1977(1977-02-11) (aged 71)
New Delhi, India
Political partyIndian National Congress
Spouse
(m. 1945)
Children3
Alma mater
Profession

Born in Delhi, Ahmed studied in Delhi and Cambridge and was called to the bar from the Inner Temple, London in 1928. Returning to India, he practiced law in Lahore and then in Guwahati where he went on to become the Advocate General of Assam in 1946. Beginning a long association with the Indian National Congress in the 1930s, Ahmed was finance minister of Assam in the Gopinath Bordoloi ministry in 1939 and again from 1957 to 1966 under Bimala Prasad Chaliha. He was made a cabinet minister by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1966 and was in charge of ministries including Power, Irrigation, Industries and Agriculture until 1974 when he was elected president of India.

As president, Ahmed imposed the Emergency in August 1975 and gave his assent to numerous ordinances and constitutional amendments that severely restricted civil liberties and allowed Indira Gandhi to rule by decree. Lampooned in an iconic cartoon by Abu Abraham, Ahmed’s legacy is tarnished by his support for the Emergency and he has been described as a rubber stamp president.

Ahmed died in February 1977, was accorded a state funeral and is buried in a masjid near Parliament House in New Delhi. Ahmed, who was the second Muslim to become the president of India, was also the second president to die in office. Ahmed was succeeded by B. D. Jatti as acting president and by Neelam Sanjiva Reddy as the sixth president of India in 1977.

Early life and family

Ahmed’s grandfather, Kaliluddin Ali Ahmed, was an Islamic scholar and his father, Col. Zalnur Ali was a doctor who belonged to the Indian Medical Service and is thought to be the first medical graduate from Assam. Ahmed’s mother, Sahibzadi Ruqaiyya Sultan, was a daughter of the Nawab of Loharu. Ahmed was born in Hauz Qazi, Delhi on 13 May 1905 and was one of ten children, including five sons, of Colonel Ali.[5][6][7][8][9] In 2018 it emerged that several of Ahmed's relatives were left out of the National Register of Citizens for Assam as they could not produce documents to prove their antecedents.[10][11]

Education and legal career

Ahmed attended Government High Schools in Gonda, United Provinces and in Delhi and attended St. Stephen's College, Delhi during 1921–22, before leaving for England where he passed his history tripos from St Catharine's College, Cambridge in 1927.[12][13][14] He was called to the Bar from the Inner Temple, London in 1928.[15][16] He returned to India the same year and practiced law at the Lahore High Court before moving to Guwahati in 1930 where he worked initially as a junior lawyer under Nabin Chandra Bardoloi.[17][18] At Guwahati, Ahmed, who became the Advocate General for the state, was the founding president of the Bar Association of the Assam High Court after its formation in 1948.[19][20][21]

Role in the Indian National Congress

Ahmed joined the Indian National Congress as a primary member in 1931 and was a member of the Assam Pradesh Congress Committee, the Working Committee of the Assam Pradesh Congress Committee and the All India Congress Committee from 1936 onwards, except for short breaks. He was a member of the Working Committee of the All India Congress Committee in 1946–47 and again from 1964 to 1974 during which period he was also a member of the Parliamentary Board of the party.[22][23][24]

Electoral career in pre-Independence India

Ahmed was elected to the legislative assembly of Assam in the provincial elections of 1937 which were held in accordance with the Government of India Act, 1935.[25] He was one of three Muslim ministers in the Congress government headed by Gopinath Bordoloi, serving as Minister for Finance, Revenue and Labour from 20 September 1938 to 16 November 1939.[26][27][28] In his budget for 1939–40, Ahmed introduced several new taxes including an agricultural income tax, taxes on amusements and betting and a tax on sale of goods in an effort to eliminate the state’s revenue deficit. The tax on agricultural income imposed a levy on the profits of the tea industry, a part of which was to be used for the welfare of workers in the tea plantations.[29][30] This, and the pro-labour stance he took during the strike in the Assam Oil Company, was deemed inimical to British commercial interests in Assam but won much public support for the Bordoloi Ministry.[31]

Congress Ministries across India resigned in protest against the Viceroy Lord Linlithgow's action of declaring India a belligerent in the Second World War without consulting them. In 1940, Ahmed was arrested and imprisoned for a year when he performed a satyagraha on Gandhi’s behest.[32] After the launch of the Quit India Movement, Ahmed along with several other leaders of the Assam Provincial Congress Committee was arrested on 9 August 1942. He was detained as a security prisoner for a further three years at the jail in Jorhat.[33][34][35]

Ahmed was opposed to the Muslim League’s demand for Pakistan and to the Partition of India along communal lines.[36] However, in the elections of 1946, while the Congress won the majority of seats to form a government in Assam under Gopinath Bordoloi, Ahmed was defeated in the North Kamrup constituency by the Muslim League’s Moulvi Abdul Hye. Although the Congress Party under Gopinath Bordoloi spent much money and effort to secure Ahmed’s victory, he won only 844 votes against the 7,265 votes polled by Hye.[37] Ahmed was thereafter appointed the Advocate General of Assam, a post he held until 1952.[38][39]

Career in independent India

Although he was offered a seat in the legislative assembly elections of 1952, Ahmed refused to contest the elections due to disagreements with the leadership of the Congress party and the Chief Minister Bishnuram Medhi.[40] In April 1954, he was elected to the Rajya Sabha and was its member until he resigned in March 1957.[41][42] He contested and won the 1957 Assam Legislative Assembly election from Jania winning 66.13% of the votes cast and was re-elected to the seat in the 1962 Assam Legislative Assembly election improving his majority by winning 84.56% of the votes.[43][44] Under the governments headed by Chief Minister Bimala Prasad Chaliha, Ahmed served as Minister of Finance, Law, Community Development, Panchayats and Local Self Government during 1957-1962 and was the Minister of Finance, Law, Community Development and Panchayats during 1962-66.[45][46][47]

Ahmed facilitated the entry of Muhammed Saadulah, the Muslim League leader who preceded Gopinath Bordoloi as Assam's Prime Minister, into the Congress Party in 1951.[48][49] Ahmed played a role in frustrating Chief Minister Chaliha’s attempts at enforcing the Prevention of Infiltrators Plan which, based on the National Register of Citizens, 1951, sought to identify and deport illegal migrants to Assam.[50] He argued that if the Congress Party were to continue with this plan, it would lead to its loss of support among Muslims in Assam and across the rest of India.[51] He has been accused of thus allowing the steady influx of Muslims from East Pakistan who became a votebank for the Congress Party.[52][53] Salman Khurshid has identified this strategy, which he attributes to Ahmed, as one of the factors that led to the Nellie Massacre.[54]

Union Minister

Minister of Irrigation and Power

In January 1966, while serving as Assam's Finance Minister, Ahmed was appointed the Union Minister for Irrigation and Power in Indira Gandhi’s first cabinet as one of a handful of ministers she brought to Shastri's cabinet which remained largely unchanged under her.[55][56][57][58] In April of that year, he was elected to the Rajya Sabha for a second time.[59][60][61]

Minister of Education

He was shifted to the Ministry of Education, succeeding M.C. Chagla, and served as the Union Minister for Education between 13 November 1966 and 12 March 1967.[62][63][64] In his brief period in that Ministry, Ahmed voiced concerns over the reduced allocations made to the Ministry and its likely impacts on educational reconstruction programs and oversaw the Amending Bill of 1966 to the Banaras Hindu University Act.[65][66]

Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs

Ahmed was made the Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs on 13 March 1967.[67] In the parliamentary elections of 1967 Ahmed was elected to the Lok Sabha from the Barpeta constituency in Assam winning over 60% of the votes.[68] It was during Ahmed's tenure as Minister of Industrial Development that his ministry, through the Directorate General of Technical Development, issued a letter of intent to Sanjay Gandhi to manufacture 50,000 Maruti cars annually even though Gandhi lacked the technical expertise and the capital required for establishing such a venture.[69]

In 1969, Ahmed introduced a bill in Parliament seeking to ban corporate funding to political parties. The bill, which sought to amend the Companies Act, 1956, aimed to curb the influence of large businesses on the political establishment as also to hamstring the centre-right Swatantra Party by preventing its access to funding. The ban, introduced without establishing an alternative financing mechanism, resulted in the abolishment of the key legal source of election funds for parties and the proliferation of illegal practices in campaign funding.[70][71][72]

In September 1969, Ahmed was sent to Rabat, Morocco as head of the Indian delegation at the Islamic Summit held there. However, upon his arrival in Morocco the Indian delegation was barred from attending the summit on the objections of the Pakistani delegation led by General Ayub Khan. The incident proved to be a diplomatic fiasco for India and led to a vote of censure in Parliament, which was defeated by the Government with the help of the communist and regional parties as the Congress Party's own strength in Parliament had reduced following the August split in the party.[a][76][77][78]

Minister for Food and Agriculture

Ahmed was appointed Minister for Food and Agriculture on 27 June 1970, serving in that office till 3 July 1974.[79][80] He was re-elected from the Barpeta constituency in the general election of 1971, winning over 72% of the votes polled.[81] In May 1971, he was also made the minister in charge of wakf under the Muslim Wakfs Act, 1954.[82] In 1971 the Central Land Reforms Committee was constituted with Ahmed as its chairman with the aim of helping the state governments undertake comprehensive land reform.[83] The recommendations of the committee included fixing land ceilings at the level of the family, restrictively defining the family to include only a husband, wife and their minor children, and fixing ceilings between 10 and 18 acres of land for different types of land. Its recommendations paved the way for introduction of agricultural land ceilings in state legislations and the realization of 2.7 million hectares of excess land of which 53% was subsequently redistributed among people from the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.[84]

As minister, Ahmed supported the creation of food and fertilizer buffer stocks to meet shortfalls in production as also various crop research programmes and the increased availability of power to the agricultural sector.[85] The nationalization of wholesale trade in wheat by the government of India was implemented under Ahmed in 1973. Although it was aimed at preventing market distortions and ensuring stability of prices, the policy proved disastrous, leading to lower procurements and the running down of buffer stocks forcing the import of over 60 lakh tonnes of grain at high prices. Consequently, the proposals to extend it to the trade in rice and for the wheat crop of April 1974 were abandoned.[86][87]

President of India (1974–1977)

Election as president

In July 1974, Ahmed was chosen by Indira Gandhi and the Congress Party as their candidate to be the next President of India. In doing so, they overlooked the then Vice President, Gopal Swarup Pathak, who had been elected to that post in 1969 with the support of the Congress Party.[88][89] Polling for the 1974 Indian presidential election was held on 17 August in a direct contest between the Congress Party’s Ahmed and the opposition candidate Tridib Chaudhuri, a Lok Sabha MP from the Revolutionary Socialist Party. Ahmed won 765,587 or 80.18% of the 954,783 votes cast against Chaudhuri’s 189,196 and he was declared elected on 20 August.[90][91][92]

Ahmed was sworn in as the fifth president of India on 24 August 1974, becoming the second Muslim to hold that office and the first person to be directed elevated to the presidency from the Union Cabinet.[93][94] He was also the first president to be elected after the amendments to the Presidential and Vice-Presidential Elections Act, 1952 that imposed a security deposit of 2,500 (US$31) and made it mandatory for every candidate in a presidential election to be supported by ten proposing and ten seconding legislators. Ahmed’s election was challenged unsuccessfully before India's Supreme Court by Charu Lal Sahu, an advocate-on-record.[95][96][97][98]

Promulgation of the Emergency

Ahmed imposed a national emergency under Article 352 of India’s Constitution late in the night of 25 June 1975 on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The legality of its imposition – on the ground that "a grave emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by internal disturbances." – was questionable as there were no reports to that effect from the Intelligence Bureau, the Home Ministry or from any or the governors of the states nor had the proposal for its promulgation been considered by the Union Council of Ministers. Although the constitutional impropriety was pointed out to him, Ahmed raised no questions and chose to sign the order imposing the emergency, a draft of which was brought to him by the Prime Minister’s personal secretary, R. K. Dhawan.[b][100][101][102][103]

In the early hours of the next day, electricity supply was cut off to newspaper offices in Delhi and the main leaders of opposition parties placed under arrest. The Cabinet met at 7AM on 26 June, where it was informed by the prime minister of the imposition of emergency the previous night. Prime Minister Gandhi subsequently addressed the nation on All India Radio announcing the Emergency, beginning with the words "The President has proclaimed an emergency. This is nothing to panic about."[104][105][106][107] The Emergency which lasted until 21 March 1977 saw the suppression of civil liberties, the arrest of opposition politicians and clampdown on political parties, the suspension of fundamental rights guaranteed by the Indian Constitution and the muzzling of the media, and has been described as a period of darkness for India’s democracy.[108][109][110][111]

Ordinances and Constitutional Amendments

The two-thirds majority enjoyed by the Congress Party in India’s Parliament allowed it to undertake several wide-ranging constitutional amendments. The Prime Minister also instructed Ahmed to issue ordinances, sidestepping Parliament and allowing for rule by decree.[c][114][115] In August 1975, the thirty-eighth and thirty-ninth Constitutional Amendment Bills passed by Parliament received presidential assent. The 38th Amendment precluded the Emergency and the ordinances passed during this period from judicial review whereas the 39th Amendment barred the courts from adjudicating election petitions filed against the president, the vice president, the prime minister and the speaker of the Lok Sabha and rendered any pending proceedings before the courts null and void.[116][117][118]

Ordinances issued in 1975 included one abolishing bonded labour, the Equal Remuneration Ordinance which provided for equal pay for equal work or work of similar nature, the amendment to the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act, 1974 allowing detention of offenders for a period of two years, the amendment to the Import and Export (Controls) Act increasing the severity of penalties for offences relating to the misuse of import licences and imported goods among scores of other ordinances issued during the year.[119][120][121][122][123] In December 1975, while President Ahmed was on a state visit to Egypt and Sudan, the government dispatched a special courier carrying three executive ordinances preventing the publication of material deemed objectionable by the government, abolishing the Press Council of India and lifting immunities on media’s coverage of Parliament. These were promptly signed in Cairo by the President.[124] The first session of Parliament in 1976 therefore had to consider and replace with acts the numerous ordinances issued since the proclamation of Emergency in June 1975.[125]

In January 1976, President’s rule was declared in Tamil Nadu after Ahmed by ordinance dismissed its government, headed by Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi, and dissolved the state’s legislative assembly.[126] By two ordinances issued in March 1976, the responsibility of maintaining government accounts were taken away from the Comptroller and Auditor General of India and vested with the accounts offices of individual government departments, while making the Comptroller and Auditor General responsible for the audit of these accounts.[127] In June 1976, an ordinance extended by a year the validity of provisions allowing the government to detain any person for up to one year without disclosing the grounds for detention to the detainee under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act.[128] In December 1976 the Forty-second Constitutional Amendment Bill received President Ahmed's assent. The bill passed by both houses of Parliament in November amended as many as 53 articles of the Constitution and the Preamble, besides introducing a new section containing the Fundamental Duties of citizens. Furthermore, it sought to severely circumscribe the powers of the Supreme Court, to transfer several responsibilities hitherto entrusted with the state governments to the Central government thus weakening India's federal structure and extended the tenure of the Lok Sabha to six years.[129][130][131][132]

Support for the Emergency

As president, he publicly spoke in favour of the imposition of Emergency throughout this period. In his address to the nation on Independence Day, 1975 he assured citizens that the Emergency was a "passing phase" and its imposition was necessary to save India from chaos and disruption. He also cautioned that liberty should not "degenerate into licence" and exhorted the nation to focus on increasing production.[133] Elsewhere, he reiterated that the "Emergency is a passing phase but the era of permissive politics and national degeneration is over and we will never allow that phase to be repeated again" and that the indiscipline and disorder brought about by reactionary forces had slowed down India’s development.[134][135] Addressing the nation on Republic Day, 1976, Ahmed said that the Emergency had helped India’s economy and brought about "national discipline at all levels".[136] On the Independence Day in 1976, he stated that the Emergency would not be used to switch over from the parliamentary to a presidential system of government or to accumulate more power than was permitted under the Constitution and that it had been issued instead “to bring about such economic, social and political changes as have become relevant and necessary in the interests of the people of India”.[137]

In private, Ahmed appeared to have misgivings about the Emergency. This was revealed in an embassy cable (disseminated by Wikileaks) sent from the United States Embassy in Delhi in August 1976 which suggested an estrangement between Ahmed and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. The cable noted Ahmed’s growing concern that Indira and Sanjay Gandhi were "pushing too hard on the political and Constitutional system of India" and reported that he had rebuffed her suggestion to replace the Vice-President, B.D. Jatti with her former defence minister, Swaran Singh.[138] Indira Gandhi’s proposal to replace her entire cabinet with younger ministers was also cautioned against by Ahmed who warned her that that this would jeopardize the unity of the Congress Party. The cable went on to note that Ahmed was "uncomfortable with some of Mrs. Gandhi's actions and certainly with those of her son" and that Indira Gandhi had apologized to Ahmed on behalf of Sanjay Gandhi for his rude remarks when the President declined to give a statement for the inaugural issue of his magazine, Surya.[139][140]

Abu Abraham's cartoon and the rubber stamp presidency

On 10 December 1975, a cartoon by Abu Abraham, which escaped the notice of the government censors, appeared in the Indian Express.[141][142] The cartoon showed Ahmed, semi-naked and in a bathtub filled to its brim, handing over a paper he has signed to an outstretched hand of a person clothed in a formal suit and shirt. The speech balloon reads: “If there are any more ordinances, just ask them to wait.”[143][144][145] The cartoon which lampooned Ahmed’s pliability in signing ordinances put before him became an iconic image of the Emergency.[146][147][148][149][150][151] The cartoon irreparably damaged Ahmed’s image and legacy, and he is widely regarded as a rubber stamp President, who was willing to sign ordinances and the proclamation of Emergency put to him without questioning the government or asking it to be reconsidered.[d][153][154][155][156][157][158] Subsequent Presidents of India who have been thought of as pliant and meekly submitting to the government of the day have been compared to Ahmed’s rubber stamp presidency.[159][160][161]

State visits

President Ahmed made state visits to Indonesia,[162] Hungary, Yugoslavia, Egypt, Sudan, Iran and Malaysia during his term in office.[163] His visit to Saudi Arabia in March 1975 to attend the funeral of King Faisal was the first time an Indian President was personally present at the funeral of another head of state and the first visit by a senior Indian leader after Jawaharlal Nehru's visit in 1956.[164][165][166][167] He was conferred with an honorary degree of Doctor of Law by the University of Pristina, Kosovo during his visit to Yugoslavia.[168] During his state visit to Sudan in December 1975, Ahmed visited Juba in South Sudan, where he addressed the Regional Peoples' Assembly, in one of the earliest visits by an Indian dignitary to South Sudan.[169]

Interest in sports

Ahmed was a keen sportsman throughout his life and was an active golfer during his presidency.[170][171] He was a centre-half in field hockey and played for the Combined Universities Hockey Team in Cambridge.[172] For many years he was president of Assam’s State Football and Cricket Associations and served as the Vice-Chairman of the Assam Council of Sports and was later President of the All-India Lawn Tennis Federation.[173] Ahmed is credited with reviving the Shillong Golf Club and resurrecting the mini golf course at the Rashtrapati Bhavan.[174] Ahmed introduced the President’s Polo Cup as an open tournament in 1975 when he was the patron-in-chief of the Indian Polo Association. Discontinued in 2005, it has since 2013 been held as the President's Polo Cup Exhibition Match.[175][176]

Death and burial

On 10 February 1977, Ahmed who was on a three nation visit to Malaysia, Philippines and Burma flew back to New Delhi from Kuala Lumpur. He had been forced to curtail his official engagements in Malaysia due to ill health and was reportedly too weak to even attend a guard of honour arranged for him at the Kuala Lumpur airport.[177][178] In the morning of 11 February, Ahmed, who had previously suffered heart attacks in 1966 and 1970 and whose health was described as being uncertain, was found lying unconscious in his bath in the Rashtrapati Bhavan.[179][180] He was attended to by doctors but was declared dead at 8:52 a.m. having succumbed to a heart attack. He was India’s second president to die in office.[181][182][183][184][excessive citations] Vice President B. D. Jatti was sworn in as the acting president within a few hours and thirteen days of national mourning declared with flags flying at half-mast.[185]

Ahmed’s body lay in state in the Durbar Hall of the Rashtrapati Bhavan where common citizens, politicians, ministers and constitutional functionaries from various parties paid their respects to him.[186][187] He was accorded a state funeral and buried in the grounds of the Jama Masjid near Parliament House on 13 February.[188][189][190][191][excessive citations] Among the foreign dignitaries who attended his funeral were Lillian Carter, the mother of President Jimmy Carter, Prince Michael of Kent and Mikhail Georgadze [ru] representing the Soviet Union.[192][193][194] Ahmed’s death came amidst the campaigning for the General Elections of 1977 which were announced after Ahmed, on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, had dissolved Parliament in January.[195][196] In his address to the nation on Republic Day, 1977 Ahmed had called for an election campaign free of bitterness and rancor.[197] Although his death brought a lull to the campaign, it was decided that the polls would be held in March 1977 as planned.[198][199][200][201][excessive citations]

Tomb

 
Grave of Ahmed

Ahmed’s tomb was designed by the architect Habib Rahman and is situated in the garden of a mosque near Parliament House. Rahman was also the architect for the tomb of Dr. Zakir Hussain who was the first Muslim and the first President to die in office.[202][203] The tomb is open to the sky and features thin framed marble jalis which are clamped with the help of internal pins onto structural elements made of steel.[204] The tomb is a post-modern interpretation of traditional Islamic forms, an abstraction of the silhouette of the Taj Mahal, and its open linear forms make it an elegant and austere building and one of Delhi’s most remarkable pieces of modern architectural heritage.[205][206][207][208]

Family

Ahmed was married to Begum Abida Ahmed and had two sons and a daughter with her. Begum is credited with having overhauled the presidential kitchen and ensuring Awadhi cuisine was included in its repertoire, as well as redecorating the rooms and upholstery of the Rashtrapati Bhavan.[209][210][211] In the 1980s, she went on to become a two-term MP of the Indian National Congress from Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh.[212] The elder of their sons, Parvez Ahmed, is a doctor who contested the General Elections of 2014 in the Barpeta constituency as a candidate of the Trinamool Congress party.[213][214][215] Their other son, Badar Durrez Ahmed, served as a judge of the Delhi High Court and retired as Chief Justice of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court.[216][217]

Commemoration

 
Commemorative stamp issued by India Post featuring Ahmed

Salute To The President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed is a 1977 short documentary film directed by J. S. Bandekar and produced by the Films Division of India on the life and career of Ahmed.[218] A commemorative postage stamp was issued by India Post in 1977.[219][220] The Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Medical College in Barpeta, Assam has been named after him, as was the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Committee, which works to promote Urdu, Arabic and Persian languages and the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Teachers Training College in Darbhanga, Bihar.[221][222][223]

The Indian Council of Agricultural Research has since 1977 given out the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Award for scientists doing research in tribal and remote areas. The award carries a citation and a purse of 2 lakh (US$2,500).[224] In 2013, Ahmed was posthumously conferred the Bangladesh Liberation War Honour by the Government of Bangladesh in recognition of his role in helping Bangladesh win its independence.[225]

Notes

  1. ^ The Summit, held at Rabat from 22–24 September 1969, was convened in response to an arson attack at the Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem by an Australian national on 21 August 1969. Although the criteria for invitation to the summit, i.e., having a Muslim majority population or a Muslim head of state, were not met by India, a unanimous invitation was extended to the Government of India to send an official delegation at the inaugural plenary session on 23 September. India was represented by its Ambassador to Morocco pending the arrival of the official delegation. The next day, after the Indian delegation led by Ahmed had arrived, it was informed that news of the Ahmedabad riots had caused consternation among the attendees and had led to objections to India’s participation from the Pakistani delegation which threatened to boycott proceedings if India were allowed to attend. It was therefore suggested that India either attend the conference as an observer or voluntarily withdraw from it. Both these suggestions were rejected by the Indian delegation. Pakistan’s stonewalling has been attributed to protests that broke out in that country when news of India’s participation became known and political opposition which threatened to jeopardize Ayub Khan’s continuation in power. The Rabat Declaration referred to the Indian delegation as representatives of the Muslim community of India and omitted any reference to the Government of India. In retaliation to the treatment meted out to it, the Government of India recalled its ambassador to Morocco and its Charge d'affaires in Jordan and the External Affairs Minister, Dinesh Singh, met the Israeli Foreign Minister, Abba Eban, in New York in the first such high level meeting between India and Israel in many years. The Summit led to the formation of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation.[73][74][75]
  2. ^ As it originally stood, Article 352 of the Indian Constitution empowered the President to impose a national Emergency on his satisfaction that the security of India or any part of it is threatened by war, external aggression or internal disturbance. Article 74 of the Constitution as it then stood, provided for "a Council of Ministers with the Prime Minister at the head to aid and advise the President". In this case, the Union Council of Ministers had not met and advised the proclamation of Emergency to the President. The expression "internal disturbance" was changed to "armed rebellion" by the forty-fourth Constitutional Amendment Act which also added in Section 74 that the President "may require the Council of Ministers to reconsider such advice, either generally or otherwise, and the President shall act in accordance with the advice tendered after such reconsideration."[99]
  3. ^ As per Article 123 of the Indian Constitution, the President of India can issue ordinances when Parliament is not in session if he is satisfied that circumstances exist which require immediate action to be taken. An ordinance so issued must be approved by Parliament within six weeks of its reassembling failing which it ceases to operate. Analogous constitutional provisions exist for governors of states and Administrators of Union Territories having legislatures. By the 38th Constitutional Amendment Act, which received President Ahmed’s assent, the President’s satisfaction regarding the exigent circumstances warranting the issue of ordinance was made non-justiciable thus taking it out of the purview of judicial review. The 44th Constitutional Amendment revoked this change.[112][113]
  4. ^ The cartoon is often misattributed as Ahmed signing the proclamation of Emergency. However, the cartoon itself appeared only in December 1977 by which time the Emergency had been in force for six months and a slew of ordinances had since been signed by the President which is referenced in the text of the cartoon. It also ended up coupling President Ahmed with the bathtub in popular memory.[152]

References

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Further reading

  • Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, by M. A. Naidu, 1975
  • Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, by Attar Chand. Pub. Homeland, 1975.
  • Janak Raj Jai (2003). "Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed". Presidents of India, 1950–2003. Daya Books. p. 101. ISBN 81-87498-65-X.
  • Speeches of President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Govt. of India, 1980.
  • My eleven years with Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed, by F. A. A. Rehmaney. S. Chand, 1979.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by President of India
1974–1977
Succeeded by

fakhruddin, ahmed, 1905, february, 1977, indian, lawyer, politician, served, fifth, president, india, from, 1974, 1977, president, indiain, office, august, 1974, february, 1977prime, ministerindira, gandhivice, presidentb, jattigopal, swarup, pathakpreceded, g. Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed 13 May 1905 11 February 1977 was an Indian lawyer and politician who served as the fifth president of India from 1974 to 1977 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed5th President of IndiaIn office 24 August 1974 11 February 1977Prime MinisterIndira GandhiVice PresidentB D JattiGopal Swarup PathakPreceded byV V GiriSucceeded byB D Jatti acting Minister of Food and AgricultureIn office 27 June 1970 3 July 1974Prime MinisterIndira GandhiPreceded byJagjivan Ram 1 Succeeded byC Subramaniam 2 Minister of Industrial Development Internal Trade and Company AffairsIn office 13 March 1967 27 June 1970Prime MinisterIndira GandhiPreceded byDamodaram SanjivayyaSucceeded byDinesh Singh 3 Minister of EducationIn office 13 November 1966 12 March 1967Prime MinisterIndira GandhiPreceded byM C ChaglaSucceeded byTriguna SenMinister of Irrigation and PowerIn office 29 January 1966 13 November 1966Prime MinisterIndira GandhiPreceded byK L Rao 4 Succeeded byK L RaoMember of Parliament Rajya SabhaIn office 3 April 1966 25 February 1967ConstituencyAssamIn office 3 April 1954 25 March 1957ConstituencyAssamMember of Parliament Lok SabhaIn office 1967 1974Preceded byRenuka Devi BarkatakiSucceeded byIsmail Hossain KhanConstituencyBarpetaMember of the Assam Legislative AssemblyIn office 1937 1946Prime MinisterMuhammed SaadulahSucceeded byMoulvi Abdul HaiConstituencyKamrup North Personal detailsBorn 1905 05 13 13 May 1905Delhi British India present day India Died11 February 1977 1977 02 11 aged 71 New Delhi IndiaPolitical partyIndian National CongressSpouseBegum Abida Ahmed m 1945 wbr Children3Alma materSt Stephen s College DelhiUniversity of CambridgeInner TempleProfessionLawyerpoliticianBorn in Delhi Ahmed studied in Delhi and Cambridge and was called to the bar from the Inner Temple London in 1928 Returning to India he practiced law in Lahore and then in Guwahati where he went on to become the Advocate General of Assam in 1946 Beginning a long association with the Indian National Congress in the 1930s Ahmed was finance minister of Assam in the Gopinath Bordoloi ministry in 1939 and again from 1957 to 1966 under Bimala Prasad Chaliha He was made a cabinet minister by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in 1966 and was in charge of ministries including Power Irrigation Industries and Agriculture until 1974 when he was elected president of India As president Ahmed imposed the Emergency in August 1975 and gave his assent to numerous ordinances and constitutional amendments that severely restricted civil liberties and allowed Indira Gandhi to rule by decree Lampooned in an iconic cartoon by Abu Abraham Ahmed s legacy is tarnished by his support for the Emergency and he has been described as a rubber stamp president Ahmed died in February 1977 was accorded a state funeral and is buried in a masjid near Parliament House in New Delhi Ahmed who was the second Muslim to become the president of India was also the second president to die in office Ahmed was succeeded by B D Jatti as acting president and by Neelam Sanjiva Reddy as the sixth president of India in 1977 Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Education and legal career 3 Role in the Indian National Congress 4 Electoral career in pre Independence India 5 Career in independent India 6 Union Minister 6 1 Minister of Irrigation and Power 6 2 Minister of Education 6 3 Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs 6 4 Minister for Food and Agriculture 7 President of India 1974 1977 7 1 Election as president 7 2 Promulgation of the Emergency 7 3 Ordinances and Constitutional Amendments 7 4 Support for the Emergency 7 5 Abu Abraham s cartoon and the rubber stamp presidency 7 6 State visits 7 7 Interest in sports 8 Death and burial 8 1 Tomb 9 Family 10 Commemoration 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksEarly life and family EditAhmed s grandfather Kaliluddin Ali Ahmed was an Islamic scholar and his father Col Zalnur Ali was a doctor who belonged to the Indian Medical Service and is thought to be the first medical graduate from Assam Ahmed s mother Sahibzadi Ruqaiyya Sultan was a daughter of the Nawab of Loharu Ahmed was born in Hauz Qazi Delhi on 13 May 1905 and was one of ten children including five sons of Colonel Ali 5 6 7 8 9 In 2018 it emerged that several of Ahmed s relatives were left out of the National Register of Citizens for Assam as they could not produce documents to prove their antecedents 10 11 Education and legal career EditAhmed attended Government High Schools in Gonda United Provinces and in Delhi and attended St Stephen s College Delhi during 1921 22 before leaving for England where he passed his history tripos from St Catharine s College Cambridge in 1927 12 13 14 He was called to the Bar from the Inner Temple London in 1928 15 16 He returned to India the same year and practiced law at the Lahore High Court before moving to Guwahati in 1930 where he worked initially as a junior lawyer under Nabin Chandra Bardoloi 17 18 At Guwahati Ahmed who became the Advocate General for the state was the founding president of the Bar Association of the Assam High Court after its formation in 1948 19 20 21 Role in the Indian National Congress EditAhmed joined the Indian National Congress as a primary member in 1931 and was a member of the Assam Pradesh Congress Committee the Working Committee of the Assam Pradesh Congress Committee and the All India Congress Committee from 1936 onwards except for short breaks He was a member of the Working Committee of the All India Congress Committee in 1946 47 and again from 1964 to 1974 during which period he was also a member of the Parliamentary Board of the party 22 23 24 Electoral career in pre Independence India EditAhmed was elected to the legislative assembly of Assam in the provincial elections of 1937 which were held in accordance with the Government of India Act 1935 25 He was one of three Muslim ministers in the Congress government headed by Gopinath Bordoloi serving as Minister for Finance Revenue and Labour from 20 September 1938 to 16 November 1939 26 27 28 In his budget for 1939 40 Ahmed introduced several new taxes including an agricultural income tax taxes on amusements and betting and a tax on sale of goods in an effort to eliminate the state s revenue deficit The tax on agricultural income imposed a levy on the profits of the tea industry a part of which was to be used for the welfare of workers in the tea plantations 29 30 This and the pro labour stance he took during the strike in the Assam Oil Company was deemed inimical to British commercial interests in Assam but won much public support for the Bordoloi Ministry 31 Congress Ministries across India resigned in protest against the Viceroy Lord Linlithgow s action of declaring India a belligerent in the Second World War without consulting them In 1940 Ahmed was arrested and imprisoned for a year when he performed a satyagraha on Gandhi s behest 32 After the launch of the Quit India Movement Ahmed along with several other leaders of the Assam Provincial Congress Committee was arrested on 9 August 1942 He was detained as a security prisoner for a further three years at the jail in Jorhat 33 34 35 Ahmed was opposed to the Muslim League s demand for Pakistan and to the Partition of India along communal lines 36 However in the elections of 1946 while the Congress won the majority of seats to form a government in Assam under Gopinath Bordoloi Ahmed was defeated in the North Kamrup constituency by the Muslim League s Moulvi Abdul Hye Although the Congress Party under Gopinath Bordoloi spent much money and effort to secure Ahmed s victory he won only 844 votes against the 7 265 votes polled by Hye 37 Ahmed was thereafter appointed the Advocate General of Assam a post he held until 1952 38 39 Career in independent India EditAlthough he was offered a seat in the legislative assembly elections of 1952 Ahmed refused to contest the elections due to disagreements with the leadership of the Congress party and the Chief Minister Bishnuram Medhi 40 In April 1954 he was elected to the Rajya Sabha and was its member until he resigned in March 1957 41 42 He contested and won the 1957 Assam Legislative Assembly election from Jania winning 66 13 of the votes cast and was re elected to the seat in the 1962 Assam Legislative Assembly election improving his majority by winning 84 56 of the votes 43 44 Under the governments headed by Chief Minister Bimala Prasad Chaliha Ahmed served as Minister of Finance Law Community Development Panchayats and Local Self Government during 1957 1962 and was the Minister of Finance Law Community Development and Panchayats during 1962 66 45 46 47 Ahmed facilitated the entry of Muhammed Saadulah the Muslim League leader who preceded Gopinath Bordoloi as Assam s Prime Minister into the Congress Party in 1951 48 49 Ahmed played a role in frustrating Chief Minister Chaliha s attempts at enforcing the Prevention of Infiltrators Plan which based on the National Register of Citizens 1951 sought to identify and deport illegal migrants to Assam 50 He argued that if the Congress Party were to continue with this plan it would lead to its loss of support among Muslims in Assam and across the rest of India 51 He has been accused of thus allowing the steady influx of Muslims from East Pakistan who became a votebank for the Congress Party 52 53 Salman Khurshid has identified this strategy which he attributes to Ahmed as one of the factors that led to the Nellie Massacre 54 Union Minister EditMinister of Irrigation and Power Edit In January 1966 while serving as Assam s Finance Minister Ahmed was appointed the Union Minister for Irrigation and Power in Indira Gandhi s first cabinet as one of a handful of ministers she brought to Shastri s cabinet which remained largely unchanged under her 55 56 57 58 In April of that year he was elected to the Rajya Sabha for a second time 59 60 61 Minister of Education Edit He was shifted to the Ministry of Education succeeding M C Chagla and served as the Union Minister for Education between 13 November 1966 and 12 March 1967 62 63 64 In his brief period in that Ministry Ahmed voiced concerns over the reduced allocations made to the Ministry and its likely impacts on educational reconstruction programs and oversaw the Amending Bill of 1966 to the Banaras Hindu University Act 65 66 Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs Edit Ahmed was made the Minister of Industrial Development and Company Affairs on 13 March 1967 67 In the parliamentary elections of 1967 Ahmed was elected to the Lok Sabha from the Barpeta constituency in Assam winning over 60 of the votes 68 It was during Ahmed s tenure as Minister of Industrial Development that his ministry through the Directorate General of Technical Development issued a letter of intent to Sanjay Gandhi to manufacture 50 000 Maruti cars annually even though Gandhi lacked the technical expertise and the capital required for establishing such a venture 69 In 1969 Ahmed introduced a bill in Parliament seeking to ban corporate funding to political parties The bill which sought to amend the Companies Act 1956 aimed to curb the influence of large businesses on the political establishment as also to hamstring the centre right Swatantra Party by preventing its access to funding The ban introduced without establishing an alternative financing mechanism resulted in the abolishment of the key legal source of election funds for parties and the proliferation of illegal practices in campaign funding 70 71 72 In September 1969 Ahmed was sent to Rabat Morocco as head of the Indian delegation at the Islamic Summit held there However upon his arrival in Morocco the Indian delegation was barred from attending the summit on the objections of the Pakistani delegation led by General Ayub Khan The incident proved to be a diplomatic fiasco for India and led to a vote of censure in Parliament which was defeated by the Government with the help of the communist and regional parties as the Congress Party s own strength in Parliament had reduced following the August split in the party a 76 77 78 Minister for Food and Agriculture Edit Ahmed was appointed Minister for Food and Agriculture on 27 June 1970 serving in that office till 3 July 1974 79 80 He was re elected from the Barpeta constituency in the general election of 1971 winning over 72 of the votes polled 81 In May 1971 he was also made the minister in charge of wakf under the Muslim Wakfs Act 1954 82 In 1971 the Central Land Reforms Committee was constituted with Ahmed as its chairman with the aim of helping the state governments undertake comprehensive land reform 83 The recommendations of the committee included fixing land ceilings at the level of the family restrictively defining the family to include only a husband wife and their minor children and fixing ceilings between 10 and 18 acres of land for different types of land Its recommendations paved the way for introduction of agricultural land ceilings in state legislations and the realization of 2 7 million hectares of excess land of which 53 was subsequently redistributed among people from the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes 84 As minister Ahmed supported the creation of food and fertilizer buffer stocks to meet shortfalls in production as also various crop research programmes and the increased availability of power to the agricultural sector 85 The nationalization of wholesale trade in wheat by the government of India was implemented under Ahmed in 1973 Although it was aimed at preventing market distortions and ensuring stability of prices the policy proved disastrous leading to lower procurements and the running down of buffer stocks forcing the import of over 60 lakh tonnes of grain at high prices Consequently the proposals to extend it to the trade in rice and for the wheat crop of April 1974 were abandoned 86 87 President of India 1974 1977 EditElection as president Edit In July 1974 Ahmed was chosen by Indira Gandhi and the Congress Party as their candidate to be the next President of India In doing so they overlooked the then Vice President Gopal Swarup Pathak who had been elected to that post in 1969 with the support of the Congress Party 88 89 Polling for the 1974 Indian presidential election was held on 17 August in a direct contest between the Congress Party s Ahmed and the opposition candidate Tridib Chaudhuri a Lok Sabha MP from the Revolutionary Socialist Party Ahmed won 765 587 or 80 18 of the 954 783 votes cast against Chaudhuri s 189 196 and he was declared elected on 20 August 90 91 92 Ahmed was sworn in as the fifth president of India on 24 August 1974 becoming the second Muslim to hold that office and the first person to be directed elevated to the presidency from the Union Cabinet 93 94 He was also the first president to be elected after the amendments to the Presidential and Vice Presidential Elections Act 1952 that imposed a security deposit of 2 500 US 31 and made it mandatory for every candidate in a presidential election to be supported by ten proposing and ten seconding legislators Ahmed s election was challenged unsuccessfully before India s Supreme Court by Charu Lal Sahu an advocate on record 95 96 97 98 Promulgation of the Emergency Edit Ahmed imposed a national emergency under Article 352 of India s Constitution late in the night of 25 June 1975 on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi The legality of its imposition on the ground that a grave emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by internal disturbances was questionable as there were no reports to that effect from the Intelligence Bureau the Home Ministry or from any or the governors of the states nor had the proposal for its promulgation been considered by the Union Council of Ministers Although the constitutional impropriety was pointed out to him Ahmed raised no questions and chose to sign the order imposing the emergency a draft of which was brought to him by the Prime Minister s personal secretary R K Dhawan b 100 101 102 103 In the early hours of the next day electricity supply was cut off to newspaper offices in Delhi and the main leaders of opposition parties placed under arrest The Cabinet met at 7AM on 26 June where it was informed by the prime minister of the imposition of emergency the previous night Prime Minister Gandhi subsequently addressed the nation on All India Radio announcing the Emergency beginning with the words The President has proclaimed an emergency This is nothing to panic about 104 105 106 107 The Emergency which lasted until 21 March 1977 saw the suppression of civil liberties the arrest of opposition politicians and clampdown on political parties the suspension of fundamental rights guaranteed by the Indian Constitution and the muzzling of the media and has been described as a period of darkness for India s democracy 108 109 110 111 Ordinances and Constitutional Amendments Edit The two thirds majority enjoyed by the Congress Party in India s Parliament allowed it to undertake several wide ranging constitutional amendments The Prime Minister also instructed Ahmed to issue ordinances sidestepping Parliament and allowing for rule by decree c 114 115 In August 1975 the thirty eighth and thirty ninth Constitutional Amendment Bills passed by Parliament received presidential assent The 38th Amendment precluded the Emergency and the ordinances passed during this period from judicial review whereas the 39th Amendment barred the courts from adjudicating election petitions filed against the president the vice president the prime minister and the speaker of the Lok Sabha and rendered any pending proceedings before the courts null and void 116 117 118 Ordinances issued in 1975 included one abolishing bonded labour the Equal Remuneration Ordinance which provided for equal pay for equal work or work of similar nature the amendment to the Conservation of Foreign Exchange and Prevention of Smuggling Activities Act 1974 allowing detention of offenders for a period of two years the amendment to the Import and Export Controls Act increasing the severity of penalties for offences relating to the misuse of import licences and imported goods among scores of other ordinances issued during the year 119 120 121 122 123 In December 1975 while President Ahmed was on a state visit to Egypt and Sudan the government dispatched a special courier carrying three executive ordinances preventing the publication of material deemed objectionable by the government abolishing the Press Council of India and lifting immunities on media s coverage of Parliament These were promptly signed in Cairo by the President 124 The first session of Parliament in 1976 therefore had to consider and replace with acts the numerous ordinances issued since the proclamation of Emergency in June 1975 125 In January 1976 President s rule was declared in Tamil Nadu after Ahmed by ordinance dismissed its government headed by Chief Minister M Karunanidhi and dissolved the state s legislative assembly 126 By two ordinances issued in March 1976 the responsibility of maintaining government accounts were taken away from the Comptroller and Auditor General of India and vested with the accounts offices of individual government departments while making the Comptroller and Auditor General responsible for the audit of these accounts 127 In June 1976 an ordinance extended by a year the validity of provisions allowing the government to detain any person for up to one year without disclosing the grounds for detention to the detainee under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act 128 In December 1976 the Forty second Constitutional Amendment Bill received President Ahmed s assent The bill passed by both houses of Parliament in November amended as many as 53 articles of the Constitution and the Preamble besides introducing a new section containing the Fundamental Duties of citizens Furthermore it sought to severely circumscribe the powers of the Supreme Court to transfer several responsibilities hitherto entrusted with the state governments to the Central government thus weakening India s federal structure and extended the tenure of the Lok Sabha to six years 129 130 131 132 Support for the Emergency Edit As president he publicly spoke in favour of the imposition of Emergency throughout this period In his address to the nation on Independence Day 1975 he assured citizens that the Emergency was a passing phase and its imposition was necessary to save India from chaos and disruption He also cautioned that liberty should not degenerate into licence and exhorted the nation to focus on increasing production 133 Elsewhere he reiterated that the Emergency is a passing phase but the era of permissive politics and national degeneration is over and we will never allow that phase to be repeated again and that the indiscipline and disorder brought about by reactionary forces had slowed down India s development 134 135 Addressing the nation on Republic Day 1976 Ahmed said that the Emergency had helped India s economy and brought about national discipline at all levels 136 On the Independence Day in 1976 he stated that the Emergency would not be used to switch over from the parliamentary to a presidential system of government or to accumulate more power than was permitted under the Constitution and that it had been issued instead to bring about such economic social and political changes as have become relevant and necessary in the interests of the people of India 137 In private Ahmed appeared to have misgivings about the Emergency This was revealed in an embassy cable disseminated by Wikileaks sent from the United States Embassy in Delhi in August 1976 which suggested an estrangement between Ahmed and Prime Minister Indira Gandhi The cable noted Ahmed s growing concern that Indira and Sanjay Gandhi were pushing too hard on the political and Constitutional system of India and reported that he had rebuffed her suggestion to replace the Vice President B D Jatti with her former defence minister Swaran Singh 138 Indira Gandhi s proposal to replace her entire cabinet with younger ministers was also cautioned against by Ahmed who warned her that that this would jeopardize the unity of the Congress Party The cable went on to note that Ahmed was uncomfortable with some of Mrs Gandhi s actions and certainly with those of her son and that Indira Gandhi had apologized to Ahmed on behalf of Sanjay Gandhi for his rude remarks when the President declined to give a statement for the inaugural issue of his magazine Surya 139 140 Abu Abraham s cartoon and the rubber stamp presidency Edit On 10 December 1975 a cartoon by Abu Abraham which escaped the notice of the government censors appeared in the Indian Express 141 142 The cartoon showed Ahmed semi naked and in a bathtub filled to its brim handing over a paper he has signed to an outstretched hand of a person clothed in a formal suit and shirt The speech balloon reads If there are any more ordinances just ask them to wait 143 144 145 The cartoon which lampooned Ahmed s pliability in signing ordinances put before him became an iconic image of the Emergency 146 147 148 149 150 151 The cartoon irreparably damaged Ahmed s image and legacy and he is widely regarded as a rubber stamp President who was willing to sign ordinances and the proclamation of Emergency put to him without questioning the government or asking it to be reconsidered d 153 154 155 156 157 158 Subsequent Presidents of India who have been thought of as pliant and meekly submitting to the government of the day have been compared to Ahmed s rubber stamp presidency 159 160 161 State visits Edit President Ahmed made state visits to Indonesia 162 Hungary Yugoslavia Egypt Sudan Iran and Malaysia during his term in office 163 His visit to Saudi Arabia in March 1975 to attend the funeral of King Faisal was the first time an Indian President was personally present at the funeral of another head of state and the first visit by a senior Indian leader after Jawaharlal Nehru s visit in 1956 164 165 166 167 He was conferred with an honorary degree of Doctor of Law by the University of Pristina Kosovo during his visit to Yugoslavia 168 During his state visit to Sudan in December 1975 Ahmed visited Juba in South Sudan where he addressed the Regional Peoples Assembly in one of the earliest visits by an Indian dignitary to South Sudan 169 Interest in sports Edit Ahmed was a keen sportsman throughout his life and was an active golfer during his presidency 170 171 He was a centre half in field hockey and played for the Combined Universities Hockey Team in Cambridge 172 For many years he was president of Assam s State Football and Cricket Associations and served as the Vice Chairman of the Assam Council of Sports and was later President of the All India Lawn Tennis Federation 173 Ahmed is credited with reviving the Shillong Golf Club and resurrecting the mini golf course at the Rashtrapati Bhavan 174 Ahmed introduced the President s Polo Cup as an open tournament in 1975 when he was the patron in chief of the Indian Polo Association Discontinued in 2005 it has since 2013 been held as the President s Polo Cup Exhibition Match 175 176 Death and burial EditSee also Death and state funeral of Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed On 10 February 1977 Ahmed who was on a three nation visit to Malaysia Philippines and Burma flew back to New Delhi from Kuala Lumpur He had been forced to curtail his official engagements in Malaysia due to ill health and was reportedly too weak to even attend a guard of honour arranged for him at the Kuala Lumpur airport 177 178 In the morning of 11 February Ahmed who had previously suffered heart attacks in 1966 and 1970 and whose health was described as being uncertain was found lying unconscious in his bath in the Rashtrapati Bhavan 179 180 He was attended to by doctors but was declared dead at 8 52 a m having succumbed to a heart attack He was India s second president to die in office 181 182 183 184 excessive citations Vice President B D Jatti was sworn in as the acting president within a few hours and thirteen days of national mourning declared with flags flying at half mast 185 Ahmed s body lay in state in the Durbar Hall of the Rashtrapati Bhavan where common citizens politicians ministers and constitutional functionaries from various parties paid their respects to him 186 187 He was accorded a state funeral and buried in the grounds of the Jama Masjid near Parliament House on 13 February 188 189 190 191 excessive citations Among the foreign dignitaries who attended his funeral were Lillian Carter the mother of President Jimmy Carter Prince Michael of Kent and Mikhail Georgadze ru representing the Soviet Union 192 193 194 Ahmed s death came amidst the campaigning for the General Elections of 1977 which were announced after Ahmed on the advice of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi had dissolved Parliament in January 195 196 In his address to the nation on Republic Day 1977 Ahmed had called for an election campaign free of bitterness and rancor 197 Although his death brought a lull to the campaign it was decided that the polls would be held in March 1977 as planned 198 199 200 201 excessive citations Tomb Edit Grave of Ahmed Ahmed s tomb was designed by the architect Habib Rahman and is situated in the garden of a mosque near Parliament House Rahman was also the architect for the tomb of Dr Zakir Hussain who was the first Muslim and the first President to die in office 202 203 The tomb is open to the sky and features thin framed marble jalis which are clamped with the help of internal pins onto structural elements made of steel 204 The tomb is a post modern interpretation of traditional Islamic forms an abstraction of the silhouette of the Taj Mahal and its open linear forms make it an elegant and austere building and one of Delhi s most remarkable pieces of modern architectural heritage 205 206 207 208 Family EditAhmed was married to Begum Abida Ahmed and had two sons and a daughter with her Begum is credited with having overhauled the presidential kitchen and ensuring Awadhi cuisine was included in its repertoire as well as redecorating the rooms and upholstery of the Rashtrapati Bhavan 209 210 211 In the 1980s she went on to become a two term MP of the Indian National Congress from Bareilly Uttar Pradesh 212 The elder of their sons Parvez Ahmed is a doctor who contested the General Elections of 2014 in the Barpeta constituency as a candidate of the Trinamool Congress party 213 214 215 Their other son Badar Durrez Ahmed served as a judge of the Delhi High Court and retired as Chief Justice of the Jammu and Kashmir High Court 216 217 Commemoration Edit Commemorative stamp issued by India Post featuring Ahmed Salute To The President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed is a 1977 short documentary film directed by J S Bandekar and produced by the Films Division of India on the life and career of Ahmed 218 A commemorative postage stamp was issued by India Post in 1977 219 220 The Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Medical College in Barpeta Assam has been named after him as was the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Committee which works to promote Urdu Arabic and Persian languages and the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Teachers Training College in Darbhanga Bihar 221 222 223 The Indian Council of Agricultural Research has since 1977 given out the Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Award for scientists doing research in tribal and remote areas The award carries a citation and a purse of 2 lakh US 2 500 224 In 2013 Ahmed was posthumously conferred the Bangladesh Liberation War Honour by the Government of Bangladesh in recognition of his role in helping Bangladesh win its independence 225 Notes Edit The Summit held at Rabat from 22 24 September 1969 was convened in response to an arson attack at the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem by an Australian national on 21 August 1969 Although the criteria for invitation to the summit i e having a Muslim majority population or a Muslim head of state were not met by India a unanimous invitation was extended to the Government of India to send an official delegation at the inaugural plenary session on 23 September India was represented by its Ambassador to Morocco pending the arrival of the official delegation The next day after the Indian delegation led by Ahmed had arrived it was informed that news of the Ahmedabad riots had caused consternation among the attendees and had led to objections to India s participation from the Pakistani delegation which threatened to boycott proceedings if India were allowed to attend It was therefore suggested that India either attend the conference as an observer or voluntarily withdraw from it Both these suggestions were rejected by the Indian delegation Pakistan s stonewalling has been attributed to protests that broke out in that country when news of India s participation became known and political opposition which threatened to jeopardize Ayub Khan s continuation in power The Rabat Declaration referred to the Indian delegation as representatives of the Muslim community of India and omitted any reference to the Government of India In retaliation to the treatment meted out to it the Government of India recalled its ambassador to Morocco and its Charge d affaires in Jordan and the External Affairs Minister Dinesh Singh met the Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban in New York in the first such high level meeting between India and Israel in many years The Summit led to the formation of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation 73 74 75 As it originally stood Article 352 of the Indian Constitution empowered the President to impose a national Emergency on his satisfaction that the security of India or any part of it is threatened by war external aggression or internal disturbance Article 74 of the Constitution as it then stood provided for a Council of Ministers with the Prime Minister at the head to aid and advise the President In this case the Union Council of Ministers had not met and advised the proclamation of Emergency to the President The expression internal disturbance was changed to armed rebellion by the forty fourth Constitutional Amendment Act which also added in Section 74 that the President may require the Council of Ministers to reconsider such advice either generally or otherwise and the President shall act in accordance with the advice tendered after such reconsideration 99 As per Article 123 of the Indian Constitution the President of India can issue ordinances when Parliament is not in session if he is satisfied that circumstances exist which require immediate action to be taken An ordinance so issued must be approved by Parliament within six weeks of its reassembling failing which it ceases to operate Analogous constitutional provisions exist for governors of states and Administrators of Union Territories having legislatures By the 38th Constitutional Amendment Act which received President Ahmed s assent the President s satisfaction regarding the exigent circumstances warranting the issue of ordinance was made non justiciable thus taking it out of the purview of judicial review The 44th Constitutional Amendment revoked this change 112 113 The cartoon is often misattributed as Ahmed signing the proclamation of Emergency However the cartoon itself appeared only in December 1977 by which time the Emergency had been in force for six months and a slew of ordinances had since been signed by the President which is referenced in the text of the cartoon It also ended up coupling President Ahmed with the bathtub in popular memory 152 References Edit No 55 1 1 70 CF PDF Cabinet Secretariat Retrieved 4 October 2022 55 1 1 74 CF 03 07 1974 PDF Cabinet Secretariat Retrieved 4 October 2022 No 55 1 1 70 CF PDF Cabinet Secretariat Retrieved 4 October 2022 55 4 CF 66 i 11 01 1966 PDF Cabinet Secretariat Retrieved 4 October 2022 Ekbal Nikhat 2009 Great Muslims of undivided India Gyan Publishing House pp 98 99 ISBN 978 81 7835 756 0 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed The Asian Age Online Bangladesh The Asian Age 13 May 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2022 How Ziauddin Ali Ahmed nephew of India s 5th President was kept out of Assam s NRC COUNTERVIEW ORG 2 August 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Committee Assam India Legislature Legislative Assembly Land Settlement Implementation Advisory 1971 Enquiry Report on the Allegations Brought by Shri Govinda Kalita M L A Before the House on 19th and 20th May 1971 Regarding Settlement of Lands in and Around Gauhati and Other Allied Matters Assembly Secretariat Assam p 56 Retrieved 2 September 2022 Parveen Shabnam SOCIO POLITICAL AWAKENING OF THE MUSLIMS OF ASSAM 1871 TO 1980 PDF Aligarh Muslim University Retrieved 2 September 2022 Saikia Arunabh 21 July 2018 Why relatives of former president Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed are not on Assam s final NRC draft Scroll in Retrieved 4 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vs Shri Fakruddin Ali Ahmed amp Ors Retrieved 2 September 2022 AK Aditya 17 July 2017 PresidentialElection The Man Who Sued the President s of India Bar and Bench Indian Legal news Retrieved 2 September 2022 How India s Presidents were elected from Rajendra Prasad to Pranab Mukherjee The Indian Express 20 July 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2022 The Constitution Forty fourth Amendment Act 1978 www india gov in National Portal of India Retrieved 4 September 2022 Noorani A G 5 December 2005 Constitutional Questions and Citizens Rights An Omnibus comprising Constitutional Questions in India The President Parliament and the States and Citizens Rights Judges and State Accountability Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 908778 5 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Kapoor Coomi 15 June 2016 The Emergency A Personal History Penguin UK ISBN 978 93 5214 119 7 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Prakash Gyan 6 July 2021 Emergency Chronicles Indira Gandhi and Democracy s Turning Point Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 21736 9 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Kapoor Coomi 25 June 2020 Ruler alone is not accountable everyone who succumbs to authority is no less guilty The Indian Express Retrieved 3 September 2022 Speech and Proclamation The New York Times 27 June 1975 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Jaffrelot Christophe and Anil Pratinav 7 February 2021 India s First Dictatorship The Emergency 1975 1977 HarperCollins ISBN 978 93 90351 53 4 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Roychowdhury Ardrija 25 June 2018 Four reasons why Indira Gandhi declared Emergency The Indian Express Retrieved 3 September 2022 On this day Indira Gandhi declared Emergency all you need to know Firstpost 25 June 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 When trains ran on time www downtoearth org in Down to Earth Retrieved 3 September 2022 When the pillars of democracy were shaken The Indian Express 25 June 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Do not forget the dark period of Emergency PM Modi in 90th Mann ki Baat address India Today 26 June 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 On This Day in 1975 A State of Emergency was Declared in India News18 25 June 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Ordinance making powers of the Executive in India PRS Legislative Research Retrieved 4 September 2022 Ordinances promulgated during different Lok Sabhas PRS Legislative Research Retrieved 4 September 2022 REMEMBERING THE EMERGENCY The Goan EveryDay 24 June 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Presidential Election 2022 A look at all the presidents India has seen since 1950 Moneycontrol 18 July 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Ananth V Krishna 2008 India Since Independence Making Sense of Indian Politics Pearson Education India p 159 ISBN 978 81 317 4282 2 Retrieved 3 September 2022 THE CONSTITUTION THIRTY EIGHTH AMENDMENT ACT 1975 Legislative Department Ministry of Law and Justice GoI legislative gov in Ministry of Law amp Justice Government of India Retrieved 3 September 2022 THE CONSTITUTION THIRTY NINTH AMENDMENT ACT 1975 Legislative Department Ministry of Law and Justice GoI legislative gov in Ministry of Law amp Justice Government of India Retrieved 3 September 2022 Edmonton Journal 25 Oct 1975 page 8 Newspapers com 25 October 1975 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Saxena Meenakshi 1983 Children Voyage Into Problem Space Abhinav Publications p 48 ISBN 978 81 7017 181 2 Retrieved 3 September 2022 EQUAL REMUNERATION ACT 1976 PDF Ministry of Labour and Employment Government of India Retrieved 3 September 2022 December 15 Forty Years Ago The Indian Express 15 December 2015 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Translations on South and East Asia Joint Publications Research Service 1975 p 40 Retrieved 3 September 2022 New Delhi Acts to Extend Hold Over Nation s Censored Press The New York Times 9 December 1975 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Busy new year for Parliament India Today 31 December 1975 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Marthandam Nambi 29 February 1976 President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed dismisses DMK ministry places Tamil Nadu under President s Rule India Today Sharma Urmila Sharma S K 2006 Public Administration Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 418 ISBN 978 81 7156 737 9 Retrieved 3 September 2022 June 17 1976 Forty Years Ago MISA extended The Indian Express 17 June 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Quota Bill cleared house in two days here s how long some other Constitution amendments have taken The Indian Express 11 January 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Chapter Nine CONSTITUTION AS A LIVING DOCUMENT PDF NCERT p 210 Retrieved 4 September 2022 42nd Amendment Was it India s or Indira s Constitution CCRD Centre for Constitutional Research and Development 14 July 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Before Insisting on Duties the Modi Govt Better Realise Full Citizenship Rights The Wire 22 August 2022 Retrieved 4 September 2022 August 15 Forty Years Ago Emergency On Independence Day The Indian Express 15 August 2015 Retrieved 3 September 2022 President Speaks The Indian Express 12 September 2015 October 30 Forty Years Ago President On Press The Indian Express 30 October 2015 Retrieved 3 September 2022 January 26 1976 Forty Years Ago Republic Day Address The Indian Express 26 January 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2022 August 15 1976 Forty Years Ago President speaks The Indian Express 15 August 2016 Retrieved 3 September 2022 President Fakruddin Ahmed resented Indira Sanjay s family planning policy WikiLeaks India News Times of India The Times of India 10 April 2013 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Wikileaks cables When ex president Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed forced Indira Gandhi to apologise Indian Express archive indianexpress com Retrieved 3 September 2022 President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Was Wary of the Emergency The New Indian Express 1 June 2015 Retrieved 3 September 2022 At wit s end When the cartoon is turned into a target democracy becomes a joke The Indian Express 15 May 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Unnithan Sandeep 30 December 2019 Cutting etch India Today Retrieved 4 September 2022 Importance of India s 14th President Ram Nath Kovind www thehindubusinessline com 20 July 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2022 No ifs no buts no Buta Hindustan Times 25 January 2006 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Mukhopadhyay Nilanjan 30 November 2019 Can Kovind live up to his true role as Prez Deccan Chronicle Retrieved 4 September 2022 Unnithan Sandeep 16 December 2002 Political cartoonist Abu Abraham passes away India Today Retrieved 4 September 2022 So Much to Laugh At But The Wire 5 July 2015 Retrieved 4 September 2022 The Sunday Tribune Spectrum www tribuneindia com 9 March 2008 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Gupta Shekhar 7 September 2011 We the thieving people The Indian Express Retrieved 4 September 2022 Mehta Alok 28 April 2021 Power Press and Politics Half a Century of Journalism and Politics Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 93 89867 73 2 Retrieved 4 September 2022 ED s rescue mission for marooned netas amp the President who signed laws from his bathtub MSN Retrieved 4 September 2022 Conscious Coupling People place or things that form a permanent association India Legal 23 October 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Gupta Shekhar 31 December 2005 The Ordinance Factory ThePrint Retrieved 4 September 2022 Khanduri Ritu Gairola 2 October 2014 Caricaturing Culture in India Cartoons and History in the Modern World Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 04332 9 Retrieved 4 September 2022 1975 A coup against liberty The Sunday Guardian Live Retrieved 4 September 2022 12 June 1975 The Day That Changed India Shook Indira Open The Magazine 13 June 2022 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Significance of Droupadi Murmu India s first tribal President taking oath gulfnews com 25 July 2022 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Chandru K 7 November 2017 Tamil Nadu cartoonist s arrest reflects a weak state government running scared of dissent Scroll in Retrieved 4 September 2022 Article 370 President Kovind acted like Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed during Emergency says Ramachandra Guha India Today 5 August 2019 Retrieved 4 September 2022 I will not be a rubber stamp President Pratibha Patil DNA India 19 November 2013 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Pranab Mukherjee won t be a rubber stamp Analysts The Economic Times 23 July 2012 Retrieved 4 September 2022 President to visit Indonesia PDF archive pib gov in Press Information Bureau Retrieved 3 September 2022 State Visits of Shri Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed PDF President s Secretariat New Delhi Retrieved 3 September 2022 Premier s visit will add new dimension to Saudi India links Arab News 2 April 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Grolleau Couton Magali The impact of Indo Pakistani Conflict on Indo Saudi relations 1947 1974 PDF Retrieved 3 September 2022 King Faisal assassinated Socialist India Indian National Congress All India Congress Committee 10 2 30 1974 Retrieved 3 September 2022 India Saudi Arabia Bilateral Relations www eoiriyadh gov in Embassy of India Riyadh Saudi Arabia Retrieved 3 September 2022 NR1409 mib gov in Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India Retrieved 4 September 2022 India South Sudan Relations PDF Ministry of External Affairs New Delhi Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Presidential Retreats of India Publications Division Ministry of Information amp Broadcasting Government of India 2015 p 236 ISBN 978 81 230 2075 4 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Mansingh Surjit 9 May 2006 Historical Dictionary of India Scarecrow Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 8108 6502 0 Retrieved 4 September 2022 The Presidential Retreats of India Publications Division Ministry of Information amp Broadcasting Government of India 2015 p 236 ISBN 978 81 230 2075 4 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Sportsmen and sports lovers mourn President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed s death India Today 15 March 1977 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Sportsmen and sports lovers mourn President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed s death India Today 15 March 1977 Retrieved 4 September 2022 The President s Polo Cup Rashtrapati Bhavan Retrieved 4 September 2022 How successive Indian presidents patronised sports and became champions too The Indian Express 30 May 2021 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Chicago Tribune 11 Feb 1977 page 15 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 Data India Press Institute of India 1977 p 83 Retrieved 2 September 2022 FM AMEMBASSY NEW DELHI TO SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 3370 The National Archives Retrieved 2 September 2022 From the archives of the Hindustan Times February 12 Hindustan Times 12 February 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Bhatnagar Gaurav Vivek 15 June 2022 Presidential Poll As BJP Enjoys an Upper Hand Opposition in Search of a Strong Candidate The Wire Retrieved 2 September 2022 Chicago Tribune 11 Feb 1977 page 15 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Orlando Sentinel 11 Feb 1977 page 48 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed passes away India Today 28 February 1977 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Borders William 12 February 1977 India Mourns Death of President The New York Times Retrieved 3 September 2022 Manitowoc Herald Times 10 Feb 1978 page 21 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Bellingham Herald 11 Feb 1977 page 2 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 February 13 1977 Forty Years Ago President s burial The Indian Express 13 February 2017 Retrieved 3 September 2022 India President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Buried With Full State Honours In Grounds Of Small New Delhi Mosque www britishpathe com British Pathe Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Orlando Sentinel 11 Feb 1977 page 48 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Pantagraph 14 Feb 1977 page Page 1 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 Transcript Telegram 12 Feb 1977 page 3 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Tampa Tribune 14 Feb 1977 page 4 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Gazette 11 Feb 1977 page 8 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 MRS GANDHI EASING CRISIS RULE DECIDES ON MARCH ELECTION The New York Times 19 January 1977 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Why Did Indira Gandhi Call for Elections in January 1977 Open The Magazine 23 January 2022 Retrieved 4 September 2022 January 26 1977 Forty Years Ago President s Speech The Indian Express 26 January 2017 Retrieved 4 September 2022 Valley News 19 Jan 1977 page 11 Newspapers com Retrieved 4 September 2022 Wichita Falls Times 11 Feb 1977 page 28 Newspapers com Retrieved 4 September 2022 Wausau Daily Herald 11 Feb 1977 page 4 Newspapers com Retrieved 4 September 2022 The Central New Jersey Home News 19 Jan 1977 page 2 Newspapers com Retrieved 4 September 2022 Whose building is it anyway Hindustan Times 16 September 2008 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Rajendra Prasad and Zakir Husain The tale of India s longest and shortest serving presidents Firstpost 18 July 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Rahman Ram The tomb for President Ahmed Retrieved 3 September 2022 Kapparath Madhu 7 May 2017 Delhi s Modern Architectural Heritage Page 8 Forbes India Retrieved 3 September 2022 Lang Jon T 2002 A Concise History of Modern Architecture in India Orient Blackswan pp 53 123 ISBN 978 81 7824 017 6 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Habib Rahman Articles bauhaus imaginista www bauhaus imaginista org Retrieved 3 September 2022 Sengupta Ranjana 1 January 2008 Delhi Metropolitan Penguin UK ISBN 978 93 86057 80 8 Retrieved 3 September 2022 All the Presidents Meals What is served at the First Table The Indian Express 16 September 2021 Retrieved 3 September 2022 From samosas to Lahori fish nothing will taste the same without Atal Bihari Vajpayee s company DailyO Retrieved 3 September 2022 Feels Like Home The Indian Express 1 November 2020 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Savita Kovind enters Rashtrapati Bhavan but India s First Ladies are yet to make a mark The Indian Express 26 July 2017 Retrieved 3 September 2022 The Orlando Sentinel 11 Feb 1977 page 48 Newspapers com Retrieved 3 September 2022 Former President s son to fight for TMC The Economic Times Retrieved 3 September 2022 Former President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed s son files nomination Business Standard India Press Trust of India 31 March 2014 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed Kashmir Life 22 March 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Sharma Nalini May the Force be with you Justice Badar Durrez Ahmed bids farewell to Delhi HC Read speech Bar and Bench Indian Legal news Retrieved 3 September 2022 SALUTE TO THE PRESIDENT FAKHRUDDIN ALI AHMED Films Division filmsdivision org Retrieved 11 June 2021 COMMEMORATIVE POSTAGE STAMPS OF INDIA postagestamps gov in India Postage Stamps Archived from the original on 23 November 2018 Retrieved 3 September 2022 COMMEMORATIVE STAMPS PDF India Post Retrieved 3 September 2022 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmad Teachers Training College About Us www faattc in Retrieved 3 September 2022 BJP s Pasmanda Move Pushes Muslim Politics To A New Moment Outlook 18 August 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2022 List of achievements of the Raisina Hill occupants Rajendra Prasad 1950 1962 The Economic Times Retrieved 3 September 2022 Agriculture scientists get ICAR s national award The Hindu 16 July 2021 Retrieved 6 September 2022 Habib Haroon 6 October 2013 Bangladesh honour for Indians who helped in its liberation The Hindu Retrieved 3 September 2022 Further reading EditFakhruddin Ali Ahmed by M A Naidu 1975 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed by Attar Chand Pub Homeland 1975 Janak Raj Jai 2003 Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Presidents of India 1950 2003 Daya Books p 101 ISBN 81 87498 65 X Speeches of President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Publications Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Govt of India 1980 My eleven years with Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed by F A A Rehmaney S Chand 1979 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Wikiquote has quotations related to Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Legends of Assam Archived 8 July 2018 at the Wayback MachinePolitical officesPreceded byVarahagiri Venkata Giri President of India1974 1977 Succeeded byBasappa Danappa Jatti Acting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed amp oldid 1151340612, wikipedia, 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