Mian Ghulam Jilani
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(PA – 42) Major General Mian Ghulam Jilani (SQA, Imtiazi Sanad) (born 1914 - died March 2, 2004) was a World War II Japanese POW camp survivor at Singapore, who subsequently rose to help negotiate Pakistan’s membership in the Baghdad Pact and the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization. An ethnic Pashtun, he retired from the Pakistan Army in 1962 and in 1973 he was jailed for his political beliefs. Amnesty International declared him a prisoner of conscience in 1974. He escaped from custody and took political asylum in the U.S. in 1975.
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[edit] Early life
He was born in Sibi, Balochistan, when the British ruled the Indian subcontinent. He was educated at Forman Christian College in Lahore and later finished Law at Aligarh University in India. He completed his officer’s training at the Prince of Wales Royal Indian Military College (RIMC) in Dehra Dun in India and was commissioned as second lieutenant in the British Indian Army by King Edward VIII in 1936.
Mian Ghulam Jilani was commissioned into the British Indian Army from the Royal Indian Military Academy at Dera Doon in 1936. He was captured as a POW at Singapore in 1942 when the Japanese forces overran the garrison.
[edit] Captured at Singapore
During the Second World War he was transferred to Singapore with the British Indian Army and was captured and taken prisoner by the Japanese. He was a prisoner of war for nearly forty months. He was tortured and kept in solitary confinement for seven months during this period.
Shortly after World War II, the movement for independence from the British resulted in the creation of Pakistan in 1947. Jilani threw his energy and enthusiasm behind it.
[edit] Pakistan and the Kashmir Operations
He joined the newly formed Pakistan army and commanded the a unit of the Frontier Force Regiment. A few weeks later he took a leave of absence from the army to volunteer as a fighter in Kashmir, fighting for its independence and right to join Pakistan. His troops played a major role in establishing what became the line of control between India and Pakistan, which has become a sort of international border for the last half-century.
In 1947, he opted for the Pakistan Army and was the 42nd senior most officer (PA - 42). When fighting broke out at the start of the Kashmir War he was commanding 4 FF Rifles (Wilde’s) now known as 9 FF. In April 1948, he was appointed Commanding Officer at Gilgit where he remained until the ceasefire.
[edit] Relations with the United States
Jilani was later posted as Defense Attaché in the Embassy of Pakistan in Washington. He was also Military Attache for Canada and Mexico. In 1955 he was awarded the Legion of Merit by President Eisenhower for his efforts in establishing friendship between the United States and Pakistan. Pakistan awarded him the Sitara-i-Quaid-i-Azam, or Star of the Quaid, named after the founder of Pakistan.
In 1952, as a Brigadier he went to Washington as Pakistan’s first Military Attaché to the USA. Details of his assignment at this crucial juncture of Pak-US relations can be found in the reference in the bibliography.
[edit] Senior Commander
On promotion to Major General, he served as GOC East Pakistan commanding 14th Infantry Division (Dhaka), Commandant of the Command and Staff College (Quetta), Master General of Ordnance (GHQ) and GOC 15th Infantry Division (Sialkot).
As GOC 15th Div he along with (then) Brig Rakhman Gul MC Inspector General Frontier Corps served under (then) Maj Gen M Attiqur Rahman MC GOC 7th Infantry Division who was the Force Commander for the Dir-Bajaur operation of October 1960. When Nawab Sir Shah Jehan Khan and his son Khan Shahabud Din Khan of Jandol were captured on 28 October, Maj Gen Attiqur Rahman MC moved back to Peshawar and Maj Gen Mian Ghulam Jilani took over as Force Commander.
[edit] Political Struggle
After retiring from the army, he entered politics and became a member of the provincial assembly in the North-West Frontier Province. He was an outspoken critic of the government of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.
On retirement from the army, he was General Manager with the Valika group in Karachi, until his entry into politics. He joined the National Awami Party, and was elected to the NWFP Assembly from his home constituency in Swabi (now Mardan) in the General Elections of 1970. During his National Awami Party years, he was the head of the Zalme Pukhtun, and was arrested by the PPP government on 15 February 1973.
His wife Mrs. Nancy Habiba Jilani filed a writ petition against his detention, and the judgment of the Lahore High Court was authored by Nasim Hasan Shah, J. and is reported as: Mrs. Habiba Jilani V Federation of Pakistan (PLD 1974 Lahore 153)
A smear campaign was launched against him. In a crackdown on his party, Jilani was arrested in 1973. Bhutto then attempted to bribe Jilani with offers of high positions—all to no avail. He was frequently arrested, but all charges against him were repeatedly dismissed by the courts. Amnesty International adopted him as a “prisoner of conscience” in 1974.
In jail, Jilani managed to escape from his guards during a hospital visit in 1975 and got political asylum in the United States. He became a U.S. citizen in 1981, and died at his home in Washington DC on March 2, 2004
Member Provincial Assembly (NWFP) 1970-77
[edit] Bibliography
“Judgments on the Constitution, Rule of Law, and Martial Law in Pakistan” by Chief Justice Dr Nasim Hassan Shah, edited by Prof Dr M A Mannan (OUP 1993)
“Pakistan. Problems of Governance” by Mushahid Hussain & Akmal Hussain (Vanguard Books 1993) (p. 30, 87 & 90)