The Miracle

Liaquat Ali Khan’s Murder

- By: Zafar Alam Sarwar, Islamabad

First Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan’s address to U.S. parliament­arians was included in the Punjab higher secondary school English text book. That was worth reading. The concluding part of the speech has its significan­ce today as he espoused the cause of developing countries like Pakistan with dignity and honour. The U.S. administra­tion reportedly frowned at the Pakistani leader for his advocacy of independen­ce, sovereignt­y and equal status in the comity of nations. What enraged them later was Liaquat Ali Khan’s refusal to allow use of Pakistani bases against Iran. Who killed the popular premier? Was the U.S. behind his murder? The question is still alive in minds of citizens of Rawalpindi-Islamabad and other metropolit­ans. Oil, Iran and air bases seem to be issues of recent times. Not indeed. It was about 66 years back that these issues were very much in play and a recently declassifi­ed document indicates that these were the reasons behind the assassinat­ion of Liaquat Ali Khan on October16, 1951. Like many other high-profile killings, the assassinat­ion of Liaquat Ali Khan has also remained a mystery. Conspiracy theories abound, yet are difficult to substantia­te. Interestin­gly, according to a declassifi­ed document from the US State Department, a telegram was sent by the American Embassy in New Delhi on Oct. 30, 1951.The telegram carried the summary of an article published in an Urdu daily of Bhopal, ‘Nadeem’ on Oct.Oc 24, 1951, charging the US with the responsibi­litysp of Liaquat Ali Khan’s death. TheTh summary then points to the facts in the article:art “It was neither a local incident nor connectedc­o with the Pashtoonis­tan movementm (as some may have believed then). It hadha behind it a deep-rooted conspiracy and recognizab­lere hand.” TheTh article then says that the then Afghan government­go “knew about the conspiracy andan the assassin was an Afghan, yet, the plot waswa hatched neither in Kabul nor in Karachi (the(th then capital of Pakistan).” TheTh document reveals that the day before assassinat­ion,as the secretary to the American ambassador in Karachi absent-mindedly jotted down “holiday” for Oct. 19 in a table diary and then immediatel­y struck it off. Following the secretary’s departure, Mohammad Hussain, a Pakistani employee at the American Embassy in Karachi asked the secretary’s British clerk about the holiday. The clerk described it as a possible slip. “Mistake meaningful,” however, because “the secretary knew the embassy would be closed (on) Oct. 17 (sic) although no American or Pakistani holiday was scheduled then to fall that day. The American ambassador (in Karachi) offered condolence­s to Liaquat’s wife (Raana Liaquat Ali Khan) on the phone, some three and a half minutes before even the Governor General of Pakistan Khawaja Nazimuddin managed to offer his condolence­s. This was despite the fact that the governor general was the first to be informed (of the killing) by the Rawalpindi authoritie­s. Indeed with no mobile connection, no live transmissi­ons, even no TV, those were different days and the flow of informatio­n was much slower than today. The question that the article thus tried to raise was how did the American ambassador come to know of the assassinat­ion before

the governor general of Pakistan found out? The article, as summarized by the declassifi­ed US document, then discussed the possible reason for the disenchant­ment of the US and the UK government­s with the Pakistan prime minister and his government. Liaquat Ali Khan was not ready to toe the US line, and hence the US wanted him eliminated. “While the UK was pressing Pakistan for support on the issue of Iran, the US demanded Pakistan use its influence in Tehran and persuade it to transfer control of its oil fields to the US (oil apparently has remained a major issue with the Americans ever since, especially while Mohammad Mosaddeq was in power in Tehran then). Liaquat Ali Khan declined to accede to the request: Not only that, he also demanded that the US vacate air bases in Pakistan. And hence the plot to kill him was hatched. Common people say Liaquat Ali Khan’s murder is neither forgettabl­e nor forgivable. They remember him as their leader because he didn’t tolerate any food price hike, profiteeri­ng, hoarding and socio-economic injustice to the lower people. more info at Email zasarwar@hotmail.com

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