Allama Mashriqi Foretold
of
theBreakup of Pakistan
By
Nasim Yousaf
“Ye
Muslims! Today from this platform I sound you a warning. Listen carefully and ponder.
In 1970…A panic of widespread bloodshed will sweep the nation. The frenzy of
racial and provincial prejudices will grip the whole country…Take it from me
that in 1970, Pakistan will be plagued with a grave threat to its sovereignty.
You might actually lose it…I warn you about 1970. I warn you to prepare from
now to face the situation which will emerge in that year…”
- Allama Mashriqi, 1956
In 1947,the British partitioned India
and Pakistan into two wings, East and West Pakistan,which were separated by about
1,400 miles (about 2,200 kilometers). The people of Bengal played a vital role
in the creation of Pakistan. However, only about 24 years after Pakistan’s
creation, the Bengalis in the East Wing fought the War of Independence to
obtain a separate homeland for themselves; Bangladesh thus came into being.
Allama Mashriqi recognized the poor handling of affairs by the PakistaniGovernment
in East Pakistan from 1947 onwards and foretold of the breakup of Pakistan in
1956.
How did Mashriqi know that a Pakistan
divided into two wings would not last? Even prior to independence in 1947,
Mashriqi had recognized - and conveyed to Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah
(Founder of Pakistan) - that the division of India would be detrimental and
thataccepting a Pakistanwith two completely disconnected parts would make it inherently
difficult to maintain unity.And following independence, the Pakistani
Government leadership (including Jinnah and his lieutenants) exacerbated this
problem through a series of damaging decisions that further alienated the
Bengalis in East Pakistan. For example, Dhaka was not made the capital of the
country, despite the fact that the Bengalis were greater in number. Key
positions in the Government were also given to West Pakistanis. And the
country’s resources were diverted mainly to developing West Pakistan. Perhaps
the most egregious example was the denial of the Bengalis’ demand to recognize
Bengali as a national language. On March 21, 1948, while in Dhaka, Jinnah said,“…let me make it
very clear to you that the State language of Pakistan is going to be Urdu and no other language…”This
declarationled tolarge protests in East Pakistan, but the Government leadership
did not acquiesce to the Bengalis’ demand.
Following Jinnah’s death,Prime Minister Liaquat
Ali Khan continued with the precedent set by his predecessor.Mashriqi and other
opposition leaders were suppressed, while “Quaid-i-Azam's plea for one party in
Pakistan”was emphasized (The Pakistan
Times, April 21, 1948). All of these actions by the leadership led to an
increasing rift within the country. On May 28, 1950, a worried and frustrated
Mashriqi made a historic address, known as Khitab-i-Lahore(Lahore
Speech), critiquing the Government and pointing out the grave issues facing the
nation:
“The
nation should be plainly told that Pakistan is in danger…I consider it of
utmost importance that a large population of the Punjabis and Pathans should be
transferred to East Pakistan without delay and a large number of Bengalis
should be shifted to the Punjab and the NWFP [now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa]…Eastern
and Western wings of the country will thus become equally strong…”
Liaquat Ali Khan did not appreciate
Mashriqi’s advice and instead resented his efforts. Mashriqi, along with his
two sons, were arrested, his Khaksar Movement’s (Tehrik) offices were sealed, Al-Islah newspaper was banned, many
followers were arrested, and copies of Khitab-i-Lahorewere
confiscated.In response to these actions, Hussain Shaheed Suhrawardy(who later
became Prime Minister) from Bengal criticized Mashriqi’s arrest and filed a Habeas
Corpus petition in the Lahore High Court. Along with Suhrawardy, the case was
represented by Mian Mehmood Ali Kasuri (who later became Law Minister) andBarrister
Khawaja Abdul Rahim.Unfortunately, Chief Justice Munir rejected their petition
without any solid grounds. With steps such as these, democracy was crushed in the
initial years of Pakistan’s founding.
Mashriqi remained in jail for 18 months.Meanwhile,
the Government of Pakistan took no meaningful action to address the Bengali
grievances. The autocratic style of rule led to a collapse of Jinnah’s Muslim
League in the first provincial elections, which were held in 1954 in East
Pakistan. Mashriqi sensed the disunity in the country. As a humanitarian and
believer in the unity of people from all races and faiths, he was deeply
concerned that the country would be torn apart. Therefore, in a historic speech
addressing a large gathering in Minto Park (later Iqbal Park, Lahore) in 1956,
Mashriqi issued a wake-up call to those in power as well as the nation:
“Ye
Muslims! Today from this platform I sound you a warning. Listen carefully and
ponder. Sometime in the future, probably in 1970, you will be confronted with a
perilous situation. In 1970 - I see it clearly - the nation will be stormed
from all sides. The internal situation would have deteriorated gravely. A panic
of widespread bloodshed will sweep the nation. The frenzy of racial and
provincial prejudices will grip the whole country. Zindabad [long live] and
murdabad [death to] will defean your ears. Plans will be initiated to dismember
the country. Take it from me that in 1970, Pakistan will be plagued with a
grave threat to its sovereignty. You might actually lose it if the reigns of
the country were not in the hands of courageous and unrelenting leadership…Or,
the governance of thecountry will fall in the hands of spineless self-seekers
or self-centred opportunists…I warn you about 1970. I warn you to prepare from
now to face the situation which will emerge in that year.”
FollowingLiaquat Ali’s assassination on
October 16, 1951, subsequent governments maintained the status quo.The poor
governance of the civil government paved the way forarmy rule and General(later
President) Mohammad Ayub Khan took advantage of the situation to impose Martial
Law. Despite taking some steps to redress Bengali resentment, Ayub Khan failed
to win the Bengalis’ hearts. East Pakistan’s resentment against West Pakistan
continued to grow. I saw the situation with my own eyes when I visited East
Pakistan in 1969.
When Ayub Khan’s government fell, he
handed power totheArmy Chief, General (later President) Mohammad Yahya Khan. Under
Yahya’s Government, elections were held and,in East Pakistan, Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman’s party (Awami League) received a clearmajority in the National Assemblyand
Provincial Assembly.To prevent Mujibur Rahman from gaining power, Yahya did not
convene a National Assembly session to elect a new Prime Minister. He instead tried
to broker a power-sharing arrangement for himself with Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
(whose Pakistan Peoples Party ended up in second position in the elections). It
seemed that both Yahya and Bhutto were willing to riskthe break-up of Pakistan
to secure power for themselves. Once again, the grievances of the Bengalis were
ignored by the leadership.
With these types of political maneuvers,
relations between East and West Pakistan deteriorated gravely. Yahya didn’t
seem interested invisiting East Pakistanor understanding the ground realities.
Finally, under pressure from the East Wing’s Armed Forces, Yahyafinally arrived
in Dhaka on March 15, 1971.During a high-level meeting in Dhaka, Air Commodore
Zafar Masud, Commander of the Pakistan Air Force’s East Wing (and also Allama
Mashriqi’s niece’s son), adamantly opposed the use of force against the
Bengalis and suggested a political settlement (for more information, read my
book entitled Air Commodore M. Zafar
Masud: A Pioneer of the Pakistan Air Force). Nevertheless, Yahya ordered
military action. This led to the War of Bangladesh Independence.Ultimately, the
Pakistan Army surrendered (90,000 soldiers and civilians became prisoners of
war)and Bangladesh emerged as a sovereign country on December 16, 1971.
Had the Government listened to Mashriqi’s
concern for the Bengalis and treated East Pakistan fairly, the country would
have remained intact and the West Pakistanis’humiliating surrender, along with the
many human atrocities and suffering that accompanied the war, would not have
occurred.A selfless and visionary leadership could have kept Pakistan united.The
country still awaits this kind of leadership, even today.
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