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Rao Farman Ali

Major General Rao Farman Ali Khan SQASK (Urdu: راؤ فرمان علی ; January 1, 1922 – 20 January 2004) was a Pakistani military officer who is widely considered a key architect of the 1971 Bangladesh genocide during the Bangladesh Liberation War.[1][2][3]

Rao Farman Ali Khan
راؤ فرمان علی
Minister of Petroleum and Natural Resources
In office
23 March 1985 – 29 May 1988
PresidentZia-ul-Haq
Prime MinisterMuhammad Khan Junejo
3rd National Security Advisor
In office
29 March 1985 – 17 August 1988
Preceded byTikka Khan
Succeeded byTariq Aziz
Managing Director of Fauji Foundation
In office
1974–1985
Personal details
Born
Rao Farman Ali Khan

1923
Rohtak, Punjab, British Raj
(Present-day Haryana, India)
Died20 January 2004(2004-01-20) (aged 80–81)
Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan
Resting placeWestridge Cemetery
Citizenship British India (1915–1947)
 Pakistan (1947–2004)
Nationality Pakistan
ProfessionBureaucrat
Military service
Branch/service British Indian Army (1935–1947)
 Pakistan Army (1947–1972)
Years of service1943–1972
Rank Major-General
UnitRegiment of Artillery
Battles/warsWorld War II
Bangladesh Liberation War
AwardsSitara-e-Quaid-e-Azam
Sitara-e-Kidmat
Service numberPA – 1364

Farman oversaw the deployment of local militias (razakars) during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971.[4] He testified his responsibilities in the Hamoodur Rahman Commission in 1972 but denied allegations of genocide committed in Bangladesh in spite of the Hamoodur Rahman Commission which proved the involvement of misconducts and genocide of Pakistani military personnel.[5]

Upon retirement, he joined the Fauji Foundation and founded the Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited in 1978.[6] From 1985–88, he served as petroleum minister and National Security Advisor in President Zia-ul-Haq's administration, and went into hiding after Zia's death.[6]

Farman authored a book titled How Pakistan Got Divided.[7]

Biography edit

Rao Farman Ali Khan was born into a Panjabi Rajput family in Rohtak, East Punjab, then under the British Colonial rule in 1923.[8] His date of birth is read as 1 January 1923, according to the official headstone written in Urdu in his grave which is located in the Westridge cemetery in Rawalpindi.

He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Regiment of Artillery of the British Indian Army during the World War II in 1943.[9] At the partition of British India in 1947, he opted to join the Pakistan Army.[8]

He was in East Pakistan from 28 February 1967 to 25 March 1969.[8] In this time, he was commander of the 14th Division's artillery. On the promulgation of martial law on all over Pakistan by Gen. Yahya Khan, Farman was appointed as the Brigadier (Civil Affairs) in the office of the Zonal Administrator of martial law in East Pakistan and was later promoted to Maj. Gen. while remaining in the same post. From 4 July 1971 to 3 September 1971 he functioned under the designation of Major General (Political Affairs) and from the latter date to 14 December 1971 he worked as adviser to the Governor of East Pakistan.[7]

He enjoyed full support of President Yahya Khan serving under several governors and oversaw various civil affairs in the government.757-759[9] He helped raise the paramilitary units such as the Volunteers (Razakars), Peace Committee, Al Badr, and Al Shams to aid the genocide of the Pakistan army.[9]

In 1971, when the talks with Awami League failed, Ali along with Lieutenant-General Tikka Khan launched the military crackdown on the people of erstwhile East Pakistan under direction of President Yahya Khan.[4] Ali is held responsible for widespread genocide and massacre took place in Dhaka University.[10] Hamoodur Rahman Commission though heavily criticized other senior military staff of Pakistan Army in East Pakistan at the time including confirmation of mass atrocities, cleared Ali citing the fact that he was not involved in any direct Military Operation due to the nature of his post which was mostly Administrative.[11]

Altaf Gohar, an East Pakistani civil servant, recounted an incident from his memory that a hit list had been drawn up for elimination of certain Bangalis.[2] A friend of Altaf Gohar was also in the list and his friends and relatives requested Gohar if he could do something to save his friend.[2] Gohar held a meeting with Farman and requested him to drop the name from his hit list. " Farman took, said Gohar, a diary out of his drawer and crossed the name out. The name was of Mr. Sanaul Huq and he was spared."[2]

Pages of this very diary with lists of intellectuals were recovered from the debris of Rao Farman's office, the then Governor's House, which was bombed by Indian Air Force on 14 December.A note book was found in Rao farman Ali's office in Dhaka, One page contained a list of university teachers with addresses, with tick marks besides some of the names like "M. Haider Chy. Bangali" or "Saduddin-Sociology, 16-D, UQ" (university quarter). It is up to the readers to find out the reality of this page, and the meaning of the marks, bearing in mind that the last entry was most probably on 13 December.[1]

After the civil war in 1971 ended, Farman's diary was recovered from the ruins of the Governor's house. The copy of a page from the diary shows the list of intellectuals from Dhaka University. Out of which, 14 of them were killed on 14 December 1971.[2] In 1971, he, along with Lieutenant-General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi, sent a telegram to the U.S. Embassy in Dacca to transmit the surrender proposal to New Delhi. Farman Ali also sent a request for a cease-fire to the United Nations, but it was quickly countermanded by a message from President Yahya Khan which described Farman Ali's request as "unauthorized".

About the Bangladesh Liberation War, General A.A.K. Niazi maintained that Farman requested the latter on multiple occasions to stationed him back to Pakistan after the Farman's gained notoriety over his involvement in the killing of the intellectuals.[10] A.A.K. Niazi wrote in his book, "The Betrayal of East Pakistan that Farman had quoted: "Mukti Bahini would kill him of his alleged massacre of the Bangalees and intellectuals on the night of 15–16 December. It was a pathetic sight to see him pale and almost on the verge of break down."[10] He is also alleged to have written in his Diary as: "Green Land of East Pakistan will be painted Red."[12] However, Farman Ali had denied all the accusations leveled against him, and branded these accusations as "lies."

In 1972, Ali testified against A.A.K. Niazi in the Hamoodur Rahman Commission and noted that Niazi's morale collapsed as early as 7 December and cried fanatically over the progress report presented to the Abdul Motaleb Malik.[13] Controversy regarding his own involvement in the political events of East had arisen since he had denied all accusations leveled against him despite testifying his responsibilities.

Farman Ali was forcefully retired from the military in 1972 but appointed as managing director of Fauji Foundation in 1974 which he remained in that position until 1984.[6] He founded the Fauji Foundation and helped create the chemical fertilizer and served its first director of the Fauji Fertilizer Company in 1978.[6] In 1985, he was appointed as Minister of Petroleum and Natural Resources and National Security Advisor in President Zia-ul-Haq's administration, which he served until 1988.[6]

After sudden death of President Zia-ul-Haq, Farman Ali reportedly went into hiding and lived a very quiet life in Rawalpindi on a pension.[6] Throughout the 1990s, he fought a brief illness and authored a book, Sar Gazisht, based on the East Pakistan crises.[6] On 20 January 2004, Farman Ali died and was laid to rest with military honors in Westridge cemetery in Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan.[6]

Awards and decorations edit

   
       
       
Sitara-e-Quaid-e-Azam

(SQA)

Sitara-e-Khidmat

(SK)

Tamgha-e-Diffa

(General Service Medal)

1. 1965 War Clasp

2. 1971 War Clasp

Tamgha-e-Jang 1965 War

(War Medal 1965)

Tamgha-e-Jang 1971 War

(War Medal 1971)

Pakistan Tamgha

(Pakistan Medal)

1947

Tamgha-e-Jamhuria

(Republic Commemoration Medal)

1956

Burma Star War Medal

1939-1945

Queen Elizabeth II

Coronation Medal

(1953)

Foreign decorations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mahfuz, Asif (13 December 2014). "Rao Farman Ali's master plan". The Daily Star (newspaper). Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d e Ibrahim, Muntassir Mamoon ; translated from Bengali by Kushal (2000). The Vanquished Generals and the Liberation War of Bangladesh. Dhaka: Somoy Prokashan. pp. 29, 70–71. ISBN 9789844582101.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Tripathi, Salil (January 2016). The Colonel Who Would Not Repent: The Bangladesh War and Its Unquiet Legacy. Yale University Press. pp. 186–187. ISBN 9780300218183.
  4. ^ a b Ganguly, Sumit (April 2002). Conflict Unending: India-Pakistan Tensions Since 1947. Columbia University Press. pp. 59–60. ISBN 9780231507400.
  5. ^ (PDF). 7 January 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h "Rao Farman Ali passes away". Dawn Newspapers. 21 January 2004. Retrieved 22 May 2021.
  7. ^ a b Khan, Rao Farman Ali (1992). How Pakistan Got Divided by Maj. Gen. (Retd.) Rao Farman Ali Khan. Jang Publishers, Lahore. ISBN 9780199406982.
  8. ^ a b c "Rao Farman Ali - Pakistan Who's Who". sites.google.com. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  9. ^ a b c Bhattacharya, Brigadier Samir (December 2013). NOTHING BUT!. Partridge Publishing. ISBN 9781482816266.
  10. ^ a b c "Major General Rao Farman Ali Khan". www.genocidebangladesh.org/major-general-rao-farman-ali-khan/. Bangla Desh source. 18 September 2008. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  11. ^ Hamood ur Rehman Commission Report on Dunya TV News website Retrieved 22 May 2021
  12. ^ Dogra, Wg Cdr C. Deepak (9 December 2015). Pakistan: Caught in the Whirlwind. Lancer Publishers LLC. ISBN 9781940988221.
  13. ^ Jones, Owen Bennett (2002). Pakistan: Eye of the Storm. Yale University Press, Jones. p. 183. ISBN 0300101473.

farman, major, general, khan, urdu, راؤ, فرمان, علی, january, 1922, january, 2004, pakistani, military, officer, widely, considered, architect, 1971, bangladesh, genocide, during, bangladesh, liberation, major, general, khansqa, skراؤ, فرمان, علیminister, petr. Major General Rao Farman Ali Khan SQA SK Urdu راؤ فرمان علی January 1 1922 20 January 2004 was a Pakistani military officer who is widely considered a key architect of the 1971 Bangladesh genocide during the Bangladesh Liberation War 1 2 3 Major GeneralRao Farman Ali KhanSQA SKراؤ فرمان علیMinister of Petroleum and Natural ResourcesIn office 23 March 1985 29 May 1988PresidentZia ul HaqPrime MinisterMuhammad Khan Junejo3rd National Security AdvisorIn office 29 March 1985 17 August 1988Preceded byTikka KhanSucceeded byTariq AzizManaging Director of Fauji FoundationIn office 1974 1985Personal detailsBornRao Farman Ali Khan1923Rohtak Punjab British Raj Present day Haryana India Died20 January 2004 2004 01 20 aged 80 81 Rawalpindi Punjab PakistanResting placeWestridge CemeteryCitizenshipBritish India 1915 1947 Pakistan 1947 2004 Nationality PakistanProfessionBureaucratMilitary serviceBranch service British Indian Army 1935 1947 Pakistan Army 1947 1972 Years of service1943 1972RankMajor GeneralUnitRegiment of ArtilleryBattles warsWorld War IIBangladesh Liberation War Operation Searchlight and Bangladesh genocideAwardsSitara e Quaid e Azam Sitara e KidmatService numberPA 1364 Farman oversaw the deployment of local militias razakars during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 4 He testified his responsibilities in the Hamoodur Rahman Commission in 1972 but denied allegations of genocide committed in Bangladesh in spite of the Hamoodur Rahman Commission which proved the involvement of misconducts and genocide of Pakistani military personnel 5 Upon retirement he joined the Fauji Foundation and founded the Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited in 1978 6 From 1985 88 he served as petroleum minister and National Security Advisor in President Zia ul Haq s administration and went into hiding after Zia s death 6 Farman authored a book titled How Pakistan Got Divided 7 Contents 1 Biography 2 Awards and decorations 2 1 Foreign decorations 3 See also 4 ReferencesBiography editRao Farman Ali Khan was born into a Panjabi Rajput family in Rohtak East Punjab then under the British Colonial rule in 1923 8 His date of birth is read as 1 January 1923 according to the official headstone written in Urdu in his grave which is located in the Westridge cemetery in Rawalpindi He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Regiment of Artillery of the British Indian Army during the World War II in 1943 9 At the partition of British India in 1947 he opted to join the Pakistan Army 8 He was in East Pakistan from 28 February 1967 to 25 March 1969 8 In this time he was commander of the 14th Division s artillery On the promulgation of martial law on all over Pakistan by Gen Yahya Khan Farman was appointed as the Brigadier Civil Affairs in the office of the Zonal Administrator of martial law in East Pakistan and was later promoted to Maj Gen while remaining in the same post From 4 July 1971 to 3 September 1971 he functioned under the designation of Major General Political Affairs and from the latter date to 14 December 1971 he worked as adviser to the Governor of East Pakistan 7 He enjoyed full support of President Yahya Khan serving under several governors and oversaw various civil affairs in the government 757 759 9 He helped raise the paramilitary units such as the Volunteers Razakars Peace Committee Al Badr and Al Shams to aid the genocide of the Pakistan army 9 In 1971 when the talks with Awami League failed Ali along with Lieutenant General Tikka Khan launched the military crackdown on the people of erstwhile East Pakistan under direction of President Yahya Khan 4 Ali is held responsible for widespread genocide and massacre took place in Dhaka University 10 Hamoodur Rahman Commission though heavily criticized other senior military staff of Pakistan Army in East Pakistan at the time including confirmation of mass atrocities cleared Ali citing the fact that he was not involved in any direct Military Operation due to the nature of his post which was mostly Administrative 11 Altaf Gohar an East Pakistani civil servant recounted an incident from his memory that a hit list had been drawn up for elimination of certain Bangalis 2 A friend of Altaf Gohar was also in the list and his friends and relatives requested Gohar if he could do something to save his friend 2 Gohar held a meeting with Farman and requested him to drop the name from his hit list Farman took said Gohar a diary out of his drawer and crossed the name out The name was of Mr Sanaul Huq and he was spared 2 Pages of this very diary with lists of intellectuals were recovered from the debris of Rao Farman s office the then Governor s House which was bombed by Indian Air Force on 14 December A note book was found in Rao farman Ali s office in Dhaka One page contained a list of university teachers with addresses with tick marks besides some of the names like M Haider Chy Bangali or Saduddin Sociology 16 D UQ university quarter It is up to the readers to find out the reality of this page and the meaning of the marks bearing in mind that the last entry was most probably on 13 December 1 After the civil war in 1971 ended Farman s diary was recovered from the ruins of the Governor s house The copy of a page from the diary shows the list of intellectuals from Dhaka University Out of which 14 of them were killed on 14 December 1971 2 In 1971 he along with Lieutenant General Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi sent a telegram to the U S Embassy in Dacca to transmit the surrender proposal to New Delhi Farman Ali also sent a request for a cease fire to the United Nations but it was quickly countermanded by a message from President Yahya Khan which described Farman Ali s request as unauthorized About the Bangladesh Liberation War General A A K Niazi maintained that Farman requested the latter on multiple occasions to stationed him back to Pakistan after the Farman s gained notoriety over his involvement in the killing of the intellectuals 10 A A K Niazi wrote in his book The Betrayal of East Pakistan that Farman had quoted Mukti Bahini would kill him of his alleged massacre of the Bangalees and intellectuals on the night of 15 16 December It was a pathetic sight to see him pale and almost on the verge of break down 10 He is also alleged to have written in his Diary as Green Land of East Pakistan will be painted Red 12 However Farman Ali had denied all the accusations leveled against him and branded these accusations as lies In 1972 Ali testified against A A K Niazi in the Hamoodur Rahman Commission and noted that Niazi s morale collapsed as early as 7 December and cried fanatically over the progress report presented to the Abdul Motaleb Malik 13 Controversy regarding his own involvement in the political events of East had arisen since he had denied all accusations leveled against him despite testifying his responsibilities Farman Ali was forcefully retired from the military in 1972 but appointed as managing director of Fauji Foundation in 1974 which he remained in that position until 1984 6 He founded the Fauji Foundation and helped create the chemical fertilizer and served its first director of the Fauji Fertilizer Company in 1978 6 In 1985 he was appointed as Minister of Petroleum and Natural Resources and National Security Advisor in President Zia ul Haq s administration which he served until 1988 6 After sudden death of President Zia ul Haq Farman Ali reportedly went into hiding and lived a very quiet life in Rawalpindi on a pension 6 Throughout the 1990s he fought a brief illness and authored a book Sar Gazisht based on the East Pakistan crises 6 On 20 January 2004 Farman Ali died and was laid to rest with military honors in Westridge cemetery in Rawalpindi Punjab Pakistan 6 Awards and decorations edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Sitara e Quaid e Azam SQA Sitara e Khidmat SK Tamgha e Diffa General Service Medal 1 1965 War Clasp2 1971 War Clasp Tamgha e Jang 1965 War War Medal 1965 Tamgha e Jang 1971 War War Medal 1971 Pakistan Tamgha Pakistan Medal 1947 Tamgha e Jamhuria Republic Commemoration Medal 1956 Burma Star War Medal 1939 1945 Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal 1953 Foreign decorations edit Foreign Awards nbsp UK Burma Star nbsp War Medal 1939 1945 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II Coronation Medal nbsp See also editBangladesh Liberation War 1971 killing of Bengali intellectualsReferences edit a b Mahfuz Asif 13 December 2014 Rao Farman Ali s master plan The Daily Star newspaper Retrieved 22 May 2021 a b c d e Ibrahim Muntassir Mamoon translated from Bengali by Kushal 2000 The Vanquished Generals and the Liberation War of Bangladesh Dhaka Somoy Prokashan pp 29 70 71 ISBN 9789844582101 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Tripathi Salil January 2016 The Colonel Who Would Not Repent The Bangladesh War and Its Unquiet Legacy Yale University Press pp 186 187 ISBN 9780300218183 a b Ganguly Sumit April 2002 Conflict Unending India Pakistan Tensions Since 1947 Columbia University Press pp 59 60 ISBN 9780231507400 Hamoodur Rahman Commission Report PDF 7 January 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2021 a b c d e f g h Rao Farman Ali passes away Dawn Newspapers 21 January 2004 Retrieved 22 May 2021 a b Khan Rao Farman Ali 1992 How Pakistan Got Divided by Maj Gen Retd Rao Farman Ali Khan Jang Publishers Lahore ISBN 9780199406982 a b c Rao Farman Ali Pakistan Who s Who sites google com Retrieved 23 May 2021 a b c Bhattacharya Brigadier Samir December 2013 NOTHING BUT Partridge Publishing ISBN 9781482816266 a b c Major General Rao Farman Ali Khan www genocidebangladesh org major general rao farman ali khan Bangla Desh source 18 September 2008 Retrieved 23 May 2021 Hamood ur Rehman Commission Report on Dunya TV News website Retrieved 22 May 2021 Dogra Wg Cdr C Deepak 9 December 2015 Pakistan Caught in the Whirlwind Lancer Publishers LLC ISBN 9781940988221 Jones Owen Bennett 2002 Pakistan Eye of the Storm Yale University Press Jones p 183 ISBN 0300101473 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rao Farman Ali amp oldid 1214528332, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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