| Road to 1971 |
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| Written by Administrator |
| Saturday, 28 March 2009 00:41 |
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1940 23 March: A conference of the All-India Muslim League, meeting in Lahore, adopts a resolution calling for the creation of independent states for Muslims in the subcontinent. 1946 1947 1948 21 March: On his first and only visit to Dhaka, Mohammad Ali Jinnah states that Urdu will be the state language of Pakistan. The statement is protested by students of Dhaka University. 11 September: Mohammad Ali Jinnah dies and is succeeded by Khwaja Nazimuddin. 1952 1954 In May, Governor General Iskandar Mirza dismisses the Huq ministry and imposes Section 92a in East Pakistan. 1956 1958 27 October: General Ayub Khan ousts Iskandar Mirza, sends him into exile in London and takes over as President in addition to his position as Chief Martial Law Administrator. 1961 1962 H.S. Suhrawardy is arrested. 1963 1965 1966 8 May: Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is arrested under the Defence of Pakistan Rules. In the following days, his close associates Tajuddin Ahmed, Syed Nazrul Islam and others, are taken into custody as well. 7 June: A total general strike in support of the Six Points is observed all over East Pakistan. In July, Foreign Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto goes on leave and subsequently is asked to leave the government by President Ayub Khan. 1967 1968 In November, the regime arrests Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Khan Abdul Wali Khan in West Pakistan after an attempt is made on the life of President Ayub Khan in Peshawar. Days later, retired air marshal Asghar Khan and Justice Syed Mahbub Murshed announce their entry into politics. By early December, public protests break out in East and West Pakistan against the regime. Moulana Bhashani leads protest rallies in East Pakistan. 1969 In East Pakistan, demands intensify for a withdrawal of the Agartala Case and unconditional release of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and all other accused. 22 February: Vice Admiral A.R. Khan, Pakistan's defence minister, announces the withdrawal of the Agartala Case and the unconditional release of all accused. 23 February: Sheikh Mujibur Rahman is bestowed the honorific of Bangabandhu, friend of Bengal, at a million-strong public rally in Dhaka. The next day he flies to Rawalpindi to attend the RTC. 10 March: The round table conference collapses after President Ayub Khan refuses to accept the Six Points as the basis for Pakistan's constitutional future. Mujib condemns DAC for its failure to support him. 25 March: President Ayub Khan resigns and hands over power to army chief General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan, who promptly places Pakistan under martial law. 26 March: General Yahya Khan, in a radio broadcast, promises the creation of conditions 'conducive to the holding of general elections' in Pakistan. 5 December: Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman tells a meeting on H.S. Suhrawardy's death anniversary that henceforth East Pakistan will be known as Bangladesh. 1970 1 July: The One Unit system is disbanded in West Pakistan and the wing reverts to the provinces of Punjab, Sind, Baluchistan and North-West Frontier Province. 12 November: A devastating cyclone batters the coastal areas of East Pakistan, leaving a million dead. Pakistan government's slow response results in condemnation. 7 December: The general elections result in an outright victory for the Awami League. It ends up winning 167 of the 169 seats allocated for East Pakistan, thus obtaining a majority in the 300 seat National Assembly. The Pakistan People's Party emerges as the second largest party with 88 seats. 1971 In February, President Yahya Khan calls for a meeting of the National Assembly on 3 March in Dhaka. On 15 February, Bhutto tells a rally in West Pakistan that his party will not attend the assembly session unless the Awami League modifies its Six Point programme. Sheikh Mujibur Rahman dismisses suggestion. 1 March: General Yahya Khan postpones National Assembly meeting. Protests erupt in East Pakistan as Mujib launches a non-violent non-cooperation movement. 2 March: The students of Dhaka University, led by the Chhatra Sangram Parishad hoist the flag of 'independent' Bangladesh on the campus. 6 March: As conditions slip out of government control in East Pakistan, with Admiral S.M. Ahsan and Lt. General Sahibzada Yaqub Khan resigning their positions as governor and zonal martial law administrator respectively, President Yahya Khan calls the National Assembly to session in Dhaka on 25 March. Meanwhile, Lt. General Tikka Khan, notorious as the Butcher of Baluchistan, is appointed governor of East Pakistan. Chief Justice B.A. Siddiky refuses to swear him in. 7 March: At a massive public rally in Dhaka, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman tells Bengalis: 'The struggle this time is the struggle for emancipation. The struggle this time is for independence.' 15 March: General Yahya Khan arrives in an East Pakistan under Mujib's absolute control. The president and the Awami League chief, along with their aides, meet over the next few days to thrash out a solution to the crisis. 21 March: Zulfikar Ali Bhutto arrives in Dhaka after getting a green signal from Yahya Khan. Tripartite negotiations involving the regime, Awami League and People's Party go on till 23 March, when Bengalis observe Pakistan Day through hoisting Bangladesh flags atop homes and offices. 25 March: The Pakistan army launches Operation Searchlight in East Pakistan and goes into a spree of killing at Dhaka University, the headquarters of the East Pakistan Rifles and the Rajarbagh police lines. 26 March: Minutes after midnight, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman declares the independence of Bangladesh. Sometime later, he is arrested by the Pakistan army and taken to Dhaka cantonment, whence he will be flown to West Pakistan a few days later. Compiled by Editorial Desk Resource: |
| Last Updated on Sunday, 22 August 2010 18:55 |