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Sheikh Anwarul Haq

Sheikh Anwarul Haq (Punjabi and Urdu: شیخ انوار الحق‎; 11 May 1917 – 3 March 1995), was a Pakistani jurist and an academic who served as the 9th Chief Justice of Pakistan from 23 September 1977 until resigning on 25 March 1981. He signed the death warrant for former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in a controversial murder case. Bhutto was executed on April 4, 1979.[1][2][3]

Sheikh Anwarul Haq
شیخ انوار الحق
9th Chief Justice of Pakistan
In office
23 September 1977 – 25 March 1981
Nominated byZulfikar Ali Bhutto
Appointed byFazal Ilahi Chaudhry
Preceded byYaqub Ali
Succeeded byMohammad Haleem
Acting President of Pakistan
In office
20 April 1978 – 7 May 1978
Preceded byFazlul Qadir Chaudhry
(29 November 1963 – 12 June 1965)
Succeeded byWasim Sajjad
(18 July 1993 – 14 November 1993)
Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan
In office
16 October 1972 – 23 September 1977
Nominated byZulfikar Ali Bhutto
Personal details
Born
Sheikh Anwarul Haq

(1917-05-11)11 May 1917
Jullundur, Punjab, British India
Died3 March 1995(1995-03-03) (aged 77)
Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
Citizenship British Indian (1917–1947)
 Pakistani (1947–1995)
NationalityPakistani
Alma materPunjab University
ProfessionJurist
Supreme Court of Pakistan

Educated as an economist at the DAV College and the Punjab University in Lahore, he served as a civil servant of the Indian Civil Service as an appointee to lead the municipal governance in the British India in 1944. He continued serving in the civil service after the independence of Pakistan as a result of partition of British India in 1947 and subsequently elevated as a judge in the Sindh High Court in 1957.

In 1962, he was nominated to serve on the Supreme Court and later appointed as Chief Justice of Lahore High Court in 1970 before his reappointment as a Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 1971. He 1972, he earned public and international notability when he co-chaired the War Enquiry Commission with Chief Justice Hamoodur Rahman to investigate the economic and military collapse of Pakistan in a war against India in 1971 that led to the separation of East Pakistan as Bangladesh.

He was known for his judicial conservative philosophical leanings and is noted in country's political history for providing legality for the martial law upheld by chief of army staff General Zia-ul-Haq to restore law and order, in light of doctrine of necessity, as part of his conservative leanings.[2] He also heard the case of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and constituted a 7-member (7 supreme court judges) bench to decide on the appeal of the capital sentence by the Lahore High Court for authorizing the death sentence of the ex-Prime Minister of Pakistan.[1][4] After the death sentence of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who was convicted of murdering through proxy the father of one of his political opponents, Anwarul Haq took up the case against General Zia-ul-Haq's breaking his promise of holding elections. General Zia-ul-Haq introduced the PCO to legitimise his rule to by-pass the issues presented with this case and asked all the judges to sign an agreement accepting the PCO. Anwarul Haq notably refused to take an oath under the imposed PCO, resigning on conscientious grounds.[3] He also mobilised other like minded judges in the Supreme Court and High Courts to reject the proposed PCO by not signing the PCO. He was removed as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan due to his refusal to sign the PCO.

Biography edit

Early life and public service edit

Sheikh Anwarul Haq was born in Jullunder, Punjab, British India on 11 May 1917, to a Punjabi family.[5] S. Anwarul Haq earned early education from Jullunder and Wazirabad, passing his matriculation from Jullunder in 1932.: 259 [5] He stood first in matriculation that earned him a scholarship to attend the DAV College in 1932[citation needed]. In 1936, he earned BA in Economics and Political science and went on to attend the D.A.V. College, Lahore of Punjab University, where he earned an MA in Economics in 1938.[6] He ranked first in MA in Economics examination at the Punjab University, setting a new record in that subject.: 54 [5] He also did his LLB from there.

During his time at the Punjab University, Anwarul Haq participated in a large number of declamation contests and prize debates and was often judged as the best speaker.: 55 [5] From 1936 to 1938, he was an activist of All-India Muslim League and was a student advocate of the assertion of the separate identity of Indian Muslims.: 53–54 [5] He attended the All-India Muslim League meeting in Calcutta in December 1937 as a student delegate.: 54 [5]

In 1939, he was selected and joined the Indian Civil Service and went to United Kingdom to be educated in Oxford.: 53–54 [5] Upon returning in 1940, he was appointed Assistant Commissioner at Ferozepur and later appointed as Undersecretary of Punjab and the North-West Frontier from 1942 until 1944.: 214 [7] In 1944, he was appointed as Sub Divisional Magistrate at the Dalhousie, India and heard various cases involving the civil lawsuits.[8] During the same time, he was sent to Gurdaspur and was appointed as Deputy Commissioner and later elevated as Session Judge as well as Assistant Commissioner in 1946.[9] For a short brief of time, he served as the deputy commissioner of Hissar (in East Punjab) in 1946, before joining the Cabinet Mission to be served as its Secretary to the Partition Steering Committee for the Punjab in 1947.[9]

After the establishment of Pakistan as a result of partition of British India by the British Empire, he opted for Pakistan and appointed as deputy commissioner of Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan.: 696 [10] During this time, he worked towards managing the Indian emigrants settling in Pakistan.: 228 [11] From 1948 to 1952, he served in the bureaucracy as deputy commissioner of Montgomery and Sialkot.[9]

In 1952, he joined the Ministry of Defence (MoD) as its deputy secretary until 1954 when he left for the United Kingdom to attend the Imperial Defence College in London.[12] In 1956, he earned the degree and secured his graduation from the Imperial Defence College and subsequently returned to Pakistan.[12] He was appointed as joint secretary in MoD but later moved to Ministry of Law and Justice (MoLJ) to pursue career as federal judge.[12]

Supreme court and chief justice edit

In 1957, he was elevated as district-session judge in Sindh High Court but later moved to Lahore High Court in Punjab in 1958.: 225–247 [13][2]

In 1959, he was appointed as a judge in the West Pakistan High Court and moved on to the Supreme Court as a senior justice in 1962.[12] In 1965, he was appointed as the deputy leader of the Pakistan Delegation to the Third Commonwealth and Empire Law Conference held at Sydney, Australia in 1965.[12] In 1967, he was appointed as a member of the Law Reform Commission led by Chief Justice Alvin Robert Cornelius that conducted the various case studies on land reforms in Pakistan.: 266–267 [14]

In 1969, he was selected to lead a Legal Expert Delegation to Somalia to provide expertise in overviewing the constitutional crises in Somalia.[12] In 1970, he was elevated as Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court by President Yahya Khan who issued the decree, the LFO No. 1970 that dissolved the status of West Pakistan.: 184–186 [15]

He witnessed the war between India and Pakistan that resulted in the separation of East Pakistan as Bangladesh.: 41–42 [16]

On 26 December 1971, he was named as a member of the War Enquiry Commission (WEC) along with Chief Justice Hamoodur Rahman, and the chief justices of the Sindh, Balochistan, and Punjab High Court, formed by the Chief Justice Rahman on the request of then-President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.: 229–230 [17] On 1 January 1972, he was re-elevated as the senior justice at the Supreme Court.: 141 [18]

Temporal Order Name of Post From To
1 Secretary to the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province Public Service Commission. Secretary to Government of Punjab, Pakistan, Medical & Local Government Department 22 February 1944 29 February 1944
2 Under-Secretary to Government of Punjab, Pakistan Revenue Department, Lahore 1 March 1944 1 May 1944
3 Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Dalhousie, India 2 May 1944
4 Special Sub-Judge at Lahore for Judicial training 9 November 1944
5 Sub-Divisional Magistrate, Dalhousie 28 May 1945
6 Deputy Commissioner, Gurdaspur, India June 1945 July 1945
7 District and Sessions Judge, Gurdaspur 3 November 1945
8 Assistant Commissioner, Gurdaspur 23 February 1946
9 Deputy Commissioner, Hisar, India 27 March 1946
10 Secretary to the Partition Steering Committee for Punjab, Pakistan 9 July 1947
11 Deputy Commissioner, Rawalpindi, Pakistan 8 August 1947
12 Deputy Commissioner, Montgomery (now Sahiwal), Pakistan October 1948
13 Deputy Commissioner, Sialkot April 1950
14 Deputy Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Government of Pakistan, Rawalpindi January 1952 December 1954
15 Training at Imperial Defence College (IDC), London January 1955 December 1955
16 Deputy Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Government of Pakistan, Karachi August 1956
17 Joint Secretary, Ministry of Defence, Government of Pakistan, Karachi August 1956
18 District and Sessions Judge, Karachi February 1957
19 District and Sessions Judge, Lahore June 1958
20 Additional Judge, High Court of West Pakistan, Lahore 24 October 1959
21 Permanent Judge, High Court of West Pakistan, Lahore 24 October 1962
22 Member of the Law Reforms Commission May 1967
23 Acting leader of the legal expert delegation to the Republic of Somalia July 1969
24 Chief Justice Lahore High Court, Lahore, on dismemberment of One Unit 1 July 1970
25 Judge, Supreme Court of Pakistan 16 October 1972
26 Chief Justice of Pakistan 23 September 1977 25 March 1981[2][3]
27 11th President of Pakistan 20 April 1978 7 May 1978

Anwarul Haq attended the Third Commonwealth and Empire Law Conference in Sydney, Australia in August–September 1965 as leader of the Pakistan delegation. He was interested in academic and educational activities and had been a member of the Syndicates of:

Anwarul Haq was President of the Himayat-i-Islam Law College, Lahore for several years. He was acting Vice-Chancellor of Punjab University on multiple occasions. He was appointed as a member of the 1971 War Inquiry Commission from January 1972 to November 1974 along with CJ Hamoodur Rahman. He was also appointed as Chairman of the National Pay Commission and Armed Forces Pay Commission in January 1976. He represented the Pakistan Supreme Court at the centenary celebrations of the Supreme Court of Ghana at Accra in October 1976. He was appointed Chairman of the commission on the Indus River System in September 1977. He was appointed Chairman of the Civil Services Commission in February 1978. He had been President of the British Universities Alumni Association, Lahore since 1962. He was a guest speaker at a large number of social, intellectual, and cultural functions in Lahore, Rawalpindi, and Karachi.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Shaikh Aziz (21 December 2014). "A leaf from history: Supreme Court rejects Bhutto's appeal". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d Burki, Shahid Javed (19 March 2015). Historical Dictionary of Pakistan (page 73). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781442241480.
  3. ^ a b c . KPPSC website. Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  4. ^ Constable, Pamela (19 July 2011). Playing with Fire: Pakistan at War with Itself. Random House Publishing. p. 219. ISBN 9780679603450.
  5. ^ British Government, His Majesty's Stationery Office, 1944 (1945). India Office and Burma Office List Advertiser (googlebook). London: Harrison & Sons Ltd. Retrieved 5 December 2016.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "Sheikh Anwarul Haque vs The State Of Bihar & Ors on 31 August, 2015". indiankanoon.org. The Land Acquisition Act, 1894. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  7. ^ a b c . sys.lhc.gov.pk. Lahore High Court, Lahore Press. Archived from the original on 30 July 2017. Retrieved 5 December 2016.
  8. ^ Zaidi, Z. H.; Project, Quaid-i-Azam Papers (2001). Quaid-i-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers: Pakistan : pangs of birth, 15 August-30 September 1947. Quaid-i-Azam Papers Project, National Archives of Pakistan. ISBN 9789698156091. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  9. ^ GoP, Government of Pakistan. The Journey to Pakistan: A Documentation on Refugees of 1947. Government of Pakistan, Cabinet Secretariat, Cabinet Division, National Documentation Centre.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Baqa, Khurram. . Overseas Pakistanis Foundation website. Khurram. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  11. ^ Yousaf, Nasim (2005). Pakistan's Birth & Allama Mashraqi: Chronology & Statements, Period,1947–1963. AMZ Publications. p. 225. ISBN 9780976033349. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  12. ^ Mian, Ajmal (2004). A Judge Speaks Out. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195799842.
  13. ^ Burki, Shahid Javed; Baxter, Craig; LaPorte, Robert; Azfar, Kamal (1991). Pakistan Under the Military: Eleven Years of Zia Ul-Haq. Westview Press. ISBN 9780813379852.
  14. ^ Abdul Matin (1991). Bangladesh liberation struggle, 1971: the role of USA, China, Soviet Union & India. Radical Asia Publications. ISBN 9780907546115.
  15. ^ Dixit, J. N. (2 September 2003). India-Pakistan in War and Peace. Routledge. ISBN 9781134407583.
  16. ^ Court, Pakistan Supreme (2003). Annual Report. Secretariat, Law and Justice Commission of Pakistan.
Legal offices
Preceded by Chief Justice of Pakistan
1977–1981
Succeeded by

sheikh, anwarul, punjabi, urdu, شیخ, انوار, الحق, 1917, march, 1995, pakistani, jurist, academic, served, chief, justice, pakistan, from, september, 1977, until, resigning, march, 1981, signed, death, warrant, former, prime, minister, zulfikar, bhutto, controv. Sheikh Anwarul Haq Punjabi and Urdu شیخ انوار الحق 11 May 1917 3 March 1995 was a Pakistani jurist and an academic who served as the 9th Chief Justice of Pakistan from 23 September 1977 until resigning on 25 March 1981 He signed the death warrant for former Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto in a controversial murder case Bhutto was executed on April 4 1979 1 2 3 The HonourableSheikh Anwarul Haqشیخ انوار الحق9th Chief Justice of PakistanIn office 23 September 1977 25 March 1981Nominated byZulfikar Ali BhuttoAppointed byFazal Ilahi ChaudhryPreceded byYaqub AliSucceeded byMohammad HaleemActing President of PakistanIn office 20 April 1978 7 May 1978Preceded byFazlul Qadir Chaudhry 29 November 1963 12 June 1965 Succeeded byWasim Sajjad 18 July 1993 14 November 1993 Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of PakistanIn office 16 October 1972 23 September 1977Nominated byZulfikar Ali BhuttoPersonal detailsBornSheikh Anwarul Haq 1917 05 11 11 May 1917Jullundur Punjab British IndiaDied3 March 1995 1995 03 03 aged 77 Lahore Punjab PakistanCitizenship British Indian 1917 1947 Pakistani 1947 1995 NationalityPakistaniAlma materPunjab UniversityProfessionJurist Supreme Court of Pakistan Educated as an economist at the DAV College and the Punjab University in Lahore he served as a civil servant of the Indian Civil Service as an appointee to lead the municipal governance in the British India in 1944 He continued serving in the civil service after the independence of Pakistan as a result of partition of British India in 1947 and subsequently elevated as a judge in the Sindh High Court in 1957 In 1962 he was nominated to serve on the Supreme Court and later appointed as Chief Justice of Lahore High Court in 1970 before his reappointment as a Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan in 1971 He 1972 he earned public and international notability when he co chaired the War Enquiry Commission with Chief Justice Hamoodur Rahman to investigate the economic and military collapse of Pakistan in a war against India in 1971 that led to the separation of East Pakistan as Bangladesh He was known for his judicial conservative philosophical leanings and is noted in country s political history for providing legality for the martial law upheld by chief of army staff General Zia ul Haq to restore law and order in light of doctrine of necessity as part of his conservative leanings 2 He also heard the case of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan and constituted a 7 member 7 supreme court judges bench to decide on the appeal of the capital sentence by the Lahore High Court for authorizing the death sentence of the ex Prime Minister of Pakistan 1 4 After the death sentence of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto who was convicted of murdering through proxy the father of one of his political opponents Anwarul Haq took up the case against General Zia ul Haq s breaking his promise of holding elections General Zia ul Haq introduced the PCO to legitimise his rule to by pass the issues presented with this case and asked all the judges to sign an agreement accepting the PCO Anwarul Haq notably refused to take an oath under the imposed PCO resigning on conscientious grounds 3 He also mobilised other like minded judges in the Supreme Court and High Courts to reject the proposed PCO by not signing the PCO He was removed as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan due to his refusal to sign the PCO Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and public service 1 2 Supreme court and chief justice 2 See also 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly life and public service edit Sheikh Anwarul Haq was born in Jullunder Punjab British India on 11 May 1917 to a Punjabi family 5 S Anwarul Haq earned early education from Jullunder and Wazirabad passing his matriculation from Jullunder in 1932 259 5 He stood first in matriculation that earned him a scholarship to attend the DAV College in 1932 citation needed In 1936 he earned BA in Economics and Political science and went on to attend the D A V College Lahore of Punjab University where he earned an MA in Economics in 1938 6 He ranked first in MA in Economics examination at the Punjab University setting a new record in that subject 54 5 He also did his LLB from there During his time at the Punjab University Anwarul Haq participated in a large number of declamation contests and prize debates and was often judged as the best speaker 55 5 From 1936 to 1938 he was an activist of All India Muslim League and was a student advocate of the assertion of the separate identity of Indian Muslims 53 54 5 He attended the All India Muslim League meeting in Calcutta in December 1937 as a student delegate 54 5 In 1939 he was selected and joined the Indian Civil Service and went to United Kingdom to be educated in Oxford 53 54 5 Upon returning in 1940 he was appointed Assistant Commissioner at Ferozepur and later appointed as Undersecretary of Punjab and the North West Frontier from 1942 until 1944 214 7 In 1944 he was appointed as Sub Divisional Magistrate at the Dalhousie India and heard various cases involving the civil lawsuits 8 During the same time he was sent to Gurdaspur and was appointed as Deputy Commissioner and later elevated as Session Judge as well as Assistant Commissioner in 1946 9 For a short brief of time he served as the deputy commissioner of Hissar in East Punjab in 1946 before joining the Cabinet Mission to be served as its Secretary to the Partition Steering Committee for the Punjab in 1947 9 After the establishment of Pakistan as a result of partition of British India by the British Empire he opted for Pakistan and appointed as deputy commissioner of Rawalpindi Punjab Pakistan 696 10 During this time he worked towards managing the Indian emigrants settling in Pakistan 228 11 From 1948 to 1952 he served in the bureaucracy as deputy commissioner of Montgomery and Sialkot 9 In 1952 he joined the Ministry of Defence MoD as its deputy secretary until 1954 when he left for the United Kingdom to attend the Imperial Defence College in London 12 In 1956 he earned the degree and secured his graduation from the Imperial Defence College and subsequently returned to Pakistan 12 He was appointed as joint secretary in MoD but later moved to Ministry of Law and Justice MoLJ to pursue career as federal judge 12 Supreme court and chief justice edit In 1957 he was elevated as district session judge in Sindh High Court but later moved to Lahore High Court in Punjab in 1958 225 247 13 2 In 1959 he was appointed as a judge in the West Pakistan High Court and moved on to the Supreme Court as a senior justice in 1962 12 In 1965 he was appointed as the deputy leader of the Pakistan Delegation to the Third Commonwealth and Empire Law Conference held at Sydney Australia in 1965 12 In 1967 he was appointed as a member of the Law Reform Commission led by Chief Justice Alvin Robert Cornelius that conducted the various case studies on land reforms in Pakistan 266 267 14 In 1969 he was selected to lead a Legal Expert Delegation to Somalia to provide expertise in overviewing the constitutional crises in Somalia 12 In 1970 he was elevated as Chief Justice of the Lahore High Court by President Yahya Khan who issued the decree the LFO No 1970 that dissolved the status of West Pakistan 184 186 15 He witnessed the war between India and Pakistan that resulted in the separation of East Pakistan as Bangladesh 41 42 16 On 26 December 1971 he was named as a member of the War Enquiry Commission WEC along with Chief Justice Hamoodur Rahman and the chief justices of the Sindh Balochistan and Punjab High Court formed by the Chief Justice Rahman on the request of then President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto 229 230 17 On 1 January 1972 he was re elevated as the senior justice at the Supreme Court 141 18 Temporal Order Name of Post From To 1 Secretary to the Punjab and North West Frontier Province Public Service Commission Secretary to Government of Punjab Pakistan Medical amp Local Government Department 22 February 1944 29 February 1944 2 Under Secretary to Government of Punjab Pakistan Revenue Department Lahore 1 March 1944 1 May 1944 3 Sub Divisional Magistrate Dalhousie India 2 May 1944 4 Special Sub Judge at Lahore for Judicial training 9 November 1944 5 Sub Divisional Magistrate Dalhousie 28 May 1945 6 Deputy Commissioner Gurdaspur India June 1945 July 1945 7 District and Sessions Judge Gurdaspur 3 November 1945 8 Assistant Commissioner Gurdaspur 23 February 1946 9 Deputy Commissioner Hisar India 27 March 1946 10 Secretary to the Partition Steering Committee for Punjab Pakistan 9 July 1947 11 Deputy Commissioner Rawalpindi Pakistan 8 August 1947 12 Deputy Commissioner Montgomery now Sahiwal Pakistan October 1948 13 Deputy Commissioner Sialkot April 1950 14 Deputy Secretary Ministry of Defence Government of Pakistan Rawalpindi January 1952 December 1954 15 Training at Imperial Defence College IDC London January 1955 December 1955 16 Deputy Secretary Ministry of Defence Government of Pakistan Karachi August 1956 17 Joint Secretary Ministry of Defence Government of Pakistan Karachi August 1956 18 District and Sessions Judge Karachi February 1957 19 District and Sessions Judge Lahore June 1958 20 Additional Judge High Court of West Pakistan Lahore 24 October 1959 21 Permanent Judge High Court of West Pakistan Lahore 24 October 1962 22 Member of the Law Reforms Commission May 1967 23 Acting leader of the legal expert delegation to the Republic of Somalia July 1969 24 Chief Justice Lahore High Court Lahore on dismemberment of One Unit 1 July 1970 25 Judge Supreme Court of Pakistan 16 October 1972 26 Chief Justice of Pakistan 23 September 1977 25 March 1981 2 3 27 11th President of Pakistan 20 April 1978 7 May 1978 Anwarul Haq attended the Third Commonwealth and Empire Law Conference in Sydney Australia in August September 1965 as leader of the Pakistan delegation He was interested in academic and educational activities and had been a member of the Syndicates of Punjab University University of Engineering and Technology Lahore University of Agriculture Faisalabad in Lyallpur now called Faisalabad Allama Iqbal Open University Islamabad Anwarul Haq was President of the Himayat i Islam Law College Lahore for several years He was acting Vice Chancellor of Punjab University on multiple occasions He was appointed as a member of the 1971 War Inquiry Commission from January 1972 to November 1974 along with CJ Hamoodur Rahman He was also appointed as Chairman of the National Pay Commission and Armed Forces Pay Commission in January 1976 He represented the Pakistan Supreme Court at the centenary celebrations of the Supreme Court of Ghana at Accra in October 1976 He was appointed Chairman of the commission on the Indus River System in September 1977 He was appointed Chairman of the Civil Services Commission in February 1978 He had been President of the British Universities Alumni Association Lahore since 1962 He was a guest speaker at a large number of social intellectual and cultural functions in Lahore Rawalpindi and Karachi See also editChief Justice of Pakistan Supreme Court of Pakistan List of PakistanisReferences edit a b Shaikh Aziz 21 December 2014 A leaf from history Supreme Court rejects Bhutto s appeal Dawn newspaper Retrieved 7 November 2021 a b c d Burki Shahid Javed 19 March 2015 Historical Dictionary of Pakistan page 73 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 9781442241480 a b c Chief Justice Anwar ul Haq profile KPPSC website Archived from the original on 11 September 2016 Retrieved 7 November 2021 Constable Pamela 19 July 2011 Playing with Fire Pakistan at War with Itself Random House Publishing p 219 ISBN 9780679603450 a b c d e f g The All Pakistan Legal Decisions All Pakistan Legal Decisions 1977 pp 259 260 Retrieved 7 November 2021 The All Pakistan Legal Decisions The All Pakistan Legal Decisions 1972 pp 53 54 Retrieved 7 November 2021 British Government His Majesty s Stationery Office 1944 1945 India Office and Burma Office List Advertiser googlebook London Harrison amp Sons Ltd Retrieved 5 December 2016 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Sheikh Anwarul Haque vs The State Of Bihar amp Ors on 31 August 2015 indiankanoon org The Land Acquisition Act 1894 Retrieved 7 November 2021 a b c Lahore High Court Lahore sys lhc gov pk Lahore High Court Lahore Press Archived from the original on 30 July 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2016 Zaidi Z H Project Quaid i Azam Papers 2001 Quaid i Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah Papers Pakistan pangs of birth 15 August 30 September 1947 Quaid i Azam Papers Project National Archives of Pakistan ISBN 9789698156091 Retrieved 7 November 2021 GoP Government of Pakistan The Journey to Pakistan A Documentation on Refugees of 1947 Government of Pakistan Cabinet Secretariat Cabinet Division National Documentation Centre a b c d e f Baqa Khurram Profile of Justice Sheikh Anwarul Haq Overseas Pakistanis Foundation website Khurram Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 7 November 2021 Yousaf Nasim 2005 Pakistan s Birth amp Allama Mashraqi Chronology amp Statements Period 1947 1963 AMZ Publications p 225 ISBN 9780976033349 Retrieved 7 November 2021 Mian Ajmal 2004 A Judge Speaks Out Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195799842 Burki Shahid Javed Baxter Craig LaPorte Robert Azfar Kamal 1991 Pakistan Under the Military Eleven Years of Zia Ul Haq Westview Press ISBN 9780813379852 Abdul Matin 1991 Bangladesh liberation struggle 1971 the role of USA China Soviet Union amp India Radical Asia Publications ISBN 9780907546115 Dixit J N 2 September 2003 India Pakistan in War and Peace Routledge ISBN 9781134407583 Court Pakistan Supreme 2003 Annual Report Secretariat Law and Justice Commission of Pakistan Legal offices Preceded byMuhammad Yaqub Ali Chief Justice of Pakistan1977 1981 Succeeded byMohammad Haleem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sheikh Anwarul Haq amp oldid 1221778188, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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