Malik Ghulam Muhammad

Ghulam Muhammad
ملک غلام محمد
Malik Ghulam Muhammad (1895–1956)
3rd Governor-General of Pakistan
In office
17 October 1951  7 August 1955
Monarch Elizabeth II (1952-55)
George VI (1951-52)
Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra (1953–55)
Khawaja Nazimuddin (1951–53)
Preceded by K. Nazimuddin
Succeeded by Iskander Ali Mirza
Finance Minister of Pakistan
In office
15 August 1947  19 October 1951
Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan
Deputy Victor Turner (1948-51)
(Finance Secretary)
Muhammad Ali (1947-48)
(Finance Secretary)
Preceded by State proclaimed
Succeeded by Muhammad Ali
Personal details
Born Malik Ghulam Muhammad
(1895-04-20)April 20, 1895
Lahore, Punjab, British India
(Present-day Pakistan)
Died August 29, 1956(1956-08-29) (aged 61)
Lahore, West Pakistan, Pakistan
Citizenship British Raj British India (1895-1947)
 Pakistan (1947-1956)
Alma mater Aligarh Muslim University
(BA in Acc.)
Occupation Civil servant, Chartered Accountant
Awards Order of the Indian Empire

Sir Malik Ghulam Muhammad CIE (Urdu: ملک غلام محمد  20 April 1895– 29 August 1956), was a Pakistani financier who served as the third Governor-General of Pakistan, appointed in this capacity in 1951 until being dismissed in 1955 due to health conditions.[1]

Educated at the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), he joined the Indian Civil Service as a chartered accountant at the Indian Railway's account service before being promoted to join the Ministry of Finance under Liaquat Ali Khan in 1946. After the independence of Pakistan as a result of Partition of India in 1947, he joined the Liaquat administration as the country's first Finance Minister where he helped draft the first five-year plans to alleviate the national economy of Pakistan.

Following the assassination of Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan in 1951, he was appointed Governor-General by Khwaja Nazimuddin who took over the government as Prime Minister. Nationwide violence in the aftermath of the language movement in Dacca and religious riots in Lahore led to him dismissing Nazimuddin's administration and later Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra using the reserve powers to restore control of the Law and order in Pakistan in 1953–54. In 1955, he was forcefully dismissed from the post of Governor-General by then-Interior Minister Iskander Ali Mirza due to the worsening of his health conditions. Afterwards, he fought a brief battle with his illness and then died in 1956.

His personal image is viewed negatively by Pakistan's historians, criticized for giving rise to political intrigue, undermining the civilian control of the military by authorizing the Martial law in Pakistan, and devaluing nascent democratic norms by sacking Constituent Assembly of Pakistan.[1]

Biography

Family background and education

Malik Ghulam Muhammad was born in a suburban neighborhood near Mochi Gate in Lahore, Punjab, India, to a middle class but wealthy family on 20 April 1895.[2]

He hailed from a Punjabi Pathan family who traced their roots Kakazai tribe of Pashtuns and spent his childhood in the Walled City of Lahore and thus the impact of pure Lahori culture was very much visible on his personality.[3]:xxx After completing his schooling in Lahore, he went to Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh to attend the MOA College of the Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), and was a roommate of Nazir Ahmed, a physicist and a bureaucrat.[4] At AMU he gained a BA degree in accountancy.[5]

Civil service and business interests

After graduating from AMU, he joined the Audit and Accounts Service in March 1920.[6][7][8]:630 In January 1921, he received his first official appointment as assistant audit officer with the Oudh and Rohilkhand Railway.[6] Upon its merger into the East Indian Railway in 1925, Muhammad was briefly appointed a government executor of accounts with the Bengal and North Western Railway, serving in this capacity from January to November. Having earned a reputation as an able and competent accountant, he was then appointed to the Indian Railway Board before becoming the Controller of General Supplies and Purchase of the Indian Railways.[8]:274–275 From June 1932 to February 1934, he was attached to the administration of Bhopal State, and worked under its nawab, Hamidullah Khan.[6] In March 1934, he returned to government service and was appointed deputy accountant-general (posts and telegraphs); in May, he was appointed as officiating deputy director-general (posts and telegraphs, finance), and was confirmed in the appointment in January 1935.[6] In July 1936, he was appointed as officiating financial officer in the same department, was confirmed in his appointment in April 1937 and was promoted to financial officer (communications) in October.[6]

Following the outbreak of the Second World War, Muhammad was successively appointed to increasingly important positions: chief controller of stores in March 1940, controller-general of purchase in September 1940 and additional secretary to the Department of Supply in March 1941.[6] His wartime services as a professional accountant were recognized by the British government that year when he was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE) in the 1941 Birthday Honours list.[9] In May 1942, Muhammad was assigned to the Hyderabad State administration,[6] in which he served as an advisor to the Nizam of Hyderabad.

In 1945, he helped co-found the Mahindra and Mohamed Steel Company together with steel industrialists, JC Mahindra and KC Mahindra where Muhammad served the company's chartered accountant.[10] In 1945–47, the company initially registered as the Mahindra & Mohammad, and started the licensed production of the Willys jeeps in Mumbai as Muhammad looked after the company's revenue and finances.[11]

After World War II, he was asked by Nawab of Bahawalpur, Lord Sadeq Mohammad Khan V to represent him at the Round Table Conferences, and during this time, he began formatting political relations with Liaquat Ali Khan.[2] He left Hyderabad left to join the Ministry of Finance in 1946.[2] In the 1946 Birthday Honours, the last honours list in which Indian civil servants were recognised, he received a knighthood.[12]

Finance Minister (1947–51)

In 1946–47, Muhammad left Mahindra & Mahindra and joined the Ministry of Finance as a Cabinet Secretary under Finance Minister Liaquat Ali Khan, assisting him in drafting and preparing India's first union budget.[2]

After witnessing the Partition of India in 1947, he decided to acquire the citizenship of Pakistan and permanently settled in his native city, Lahore, on 14 August 1947.[2] He was brought up in the Liaquat administration when Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan appointed him as country's first Finance Minister.[2] He presented the first budget and submitted the draft of the First Five-Year Plans in 1948.[2]

In 1949, Muhammad invited leaders of the Muslim world to the International Islamic Economics Organization in Pakistan, where he emphasised the idea of a Muslim economic bloc.[2] During this time, he survived the fatal attack of paralysis that made him unable to talk or move effectively and began suffering with poor health conditions.[13][2]

Governor-General (1951-55)

As early as 1951, Prime Minister Liaquat Ali Khan had made a decision of removing Finance Minister Muhammad due to his continuing worsening health conditions.[2] However, the decision was not taken due to the assassination of Prime Minister Liaqat Ali Khan in October 1951.[2] Governor-General Khawaja Nazimuddin nominated him in his capacity while taking control over the government as the Prime Minister, appointing his own cabinet.[2]

In 1953, he represented Pakistan as head of state at the Coronation of Elizabeth II in Westminster Abbey alongside with the Governors-General from Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Ceylon.[14] Upon returning to Pakistan, he witnessed the agitation caused by the language movement in Dacca in East Pakistan, and the series of violent anti-Ahmadiyyah riots in Lahore, Punjab in Pakistan. Both events led him to use the reserve powers awarded by the Government of India Act of 1935 against Prime Minister Nazimuddin, effectively dismissing his administration only to be replace with diplomat M. A. Bogra.[15]:118–119

In 1954, the Constituent Assembly made legislative attempts to try changing the 1935 act to establish checks and balances on the Governor-General's powers.[16]:236 In response, Muhammad again dismissed the Constituent Assembly, an action that was challenged in the Sindh High Court by Maulvi Tamizuddin, the Speaker of the Assembly.[15]:118–119 The Sindh High Court's Chief Justice Sir George Constantine ruled the Governor-General's decision illegal, but the ruling was overturned by Supreme Court of Pakistan, led by Chief Justice Muhammad Munir, in a split decision.[15]:119–121

Historians consider this action the beginning of viceregal politics in Pakistan, in which the military and civil bureaucracy, not elected officials, would gain increasing influence over the country's policymaking.[17]

During this time, his health began to deteriorated as paralysis spread in his whole body, forcing him to take a leave of absence to seek treatment in the United Kingdom in 1955.[2] In his capacity, he appointed Interior Minister Iskander Mirza as acting Governor-General but Mirza dismissed him from his post in order to take his place, supported by the Constituent Assembly's legislators.[2] On 29 August 1956, Malik Sir Ghulam Muhammad died and was buried in Lahore.[5][2]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Ghulam Muhammad - Story of Pakistan, Retrieved 8 June 2017
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 et.al, administration (21 October 2013). "Ghulam Muhammad--Former Governor General of Pakistan". Story Of Pakistan. Lahore, Pakistan: Nazaria-e-Pakistan Trust. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  3. Kumarasingham, H. (2016). "Bureaucratic Statism". Constitution-making in Asia: Decolonisation and State-Building in the Aftermath of the British Empire (1 ed.). U.S: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-24509-4.
  4. Rizvi, H. Military, State and Society in Pakistan. Springer. p. 259. ISBN 978-0-230-59904-8.
  5. 1 2 "Ex-Governor General Ghulam Mohammad's anniversary today". Samaa TV. 29 August 2012. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 The India Office and Burma Office List: 1945. Harrison & Sons, Ltd. 1945. p. 199.
  7. Malik, I. State and Civil Society in Pakistan: Politics of Authority, Ideology and Ethnicity. Springer. p. 26. ISBN 978-0-230-37629-8.
  8. 1 2 Raza, Syed Hashim (1991). Hamari Manzil. Karachi, Pakistan: Mustafain & Murtazain. ISBN 978-969-460-002-4.
  9. "No. 35184". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 June 1941. p. 3285.
  10. Jacobs, A. J. (2016). "Mahindra&Mahindra in North America". The New Domestic Automakers in the United States and Canada: History, Impacts, and Prospects. New York: Lexington Books. p. 334. ISBN 978-0-7391-8826-2.
  11. Mahindra, Mahindra. "Mahindra's history - Mahindra Rise". www.mahindra.com. Mahindra. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  12. "No. 37598". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 June 1946. p. 2757.
  13. Balouch, Akhtar (3 October 2014). "Graves laden with sweets". Dawn. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  14. "Malik Ghulam Muhammad". prideofpakistan.com. Retrieved 25 March 2017.
  15. 1 2 3 Chak, Farhan Mujahid (2015). "The Constitutional cases". Islam and Pakistan's Political Culture (1 ed.). New York: Routledge. p. 180. ISBN 978-1-317-65794-1.
  16. Siddique, Osama (2001). "Approaches to legal and judicial reforms in Pakistan". Pakistan's Experience with Formal Law: An Alien Justice. Cambridge University Press. p. 451. ISBN 978-1-107-03815-8.
  17. "The New Dictatorship". Time. 8 November 1954. Retrieved 8 June 2017.
Political offices
New office Minister of Finance
1947–1951
Succeeded by
Chaudhry Muhammad Ali
Preceded by
Khawaja Nazimuddin
Governor-General of Pakistan
1951–1955
Succeeded by
Iskander Mirza
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