Ahmad Ali khan | |
Birth Name: | Ahmad Ali Khan |
Birth Date: | 1 July 1924 |
Birth Place: | Bhopal State, United Provinces, British India |
Death Place: | Karachi, Pakistan |
Party: | none |
Citizenship: | British Indian (1924–1947) Pakistani (1947 onwards) |
Known For: | Editor at Dawn (1962 - 2003) |
Years Active: | 1946 - 2003 |
Spouse: | Hajra Masroor |
Children: | 2 daughters |
Awards: | Hilal-i-Imtiaz (Crescent of Excellence) Award by the Government of Pakistan in 2009 Pride of Performance Award by the President of Pakistan in 1997 |
Ahmad Ali Khan (1924 13 March 2007) was a veteran Pakistani journalist who was also the editor of Dawn newspaper for 28 years.
His association with Dawn newspaper was for nearly 42 years as a journalist and later as an editor/chief editor for 28 years.[1] [2]
Ahmad Ali Khan was born in 1924 in Bhopal State, United Provinces, British India.[1] He completed his education at the Aligarh Muslim University. After the independence of Pakistan in 1947, he migrated to Karachi to continue serving his old employer in India, Dawn newspaper, where he worked as a journalist until May 1949. Then he decided to move to Lahore, Pakistan and started working for the Pakistan Times newspaper there. At that newspaper in Lahore, he benefited and gained useful experience by working with journalists like Faiz Ahmed Faiz, Mazhar Ali Khan and Mian Iftikharuddin.[1]
During the 13 years he worked for this newspaper based in Lahore, he was once detained under Security Act as part of Pakistani government's crackdown on the leftists and people belonging to the Progressive Writers' Movement.[1]
In 1962, Ahmad Ali Khan returned to Karachi to rejoin his old employer from 1946 to 1949, Dawn newspaper, where he started working as an assistant editor under the supervision of its veteran editor Altaf Husain. He later worked with Altaf Gauhar as well at the same newspaper.[1] After the separation of East Pakistan as an independent nation of Bangladesh in 1971, there was a short supply of newsprint paper that reduced the size of Dawn newspaper to just eight pages. In addition, government's denial of advertisements to some newspapers including the Dawn newspaper to pressurize them to be in tune with the regime's policies.[1]
He worked as an editor at Dawn newspaper from May 1973 to 2000, making him the newspaper's longest-serving editor.[3] [2]
He played a key role in improving its financial stability, independence and prestige.[2] [4] He introduced some technical changes such as its printing moving from the old-style hot metal and offset printing to full computerization.[1] He first retired as the chief editor in 2000,[4] and then returned in 2003 for a short period.[1] After retirement, he started working on his autobiography in 2000 but was not in good health. He died in 2007 before he could finish it. Still he was able to finish its 7 chapters and the remaining two chapters were completed by his daughter Naveed Ahmad Tahir after his death. The book was finally published in 2015.[3] [2]
Ahmad Ali Khan died in Karachi on 13 March 2007 after a protracted illness at age 82. Among the survivors were his wife, a noted Pakistani writer Hajra Masroor and two daughters.[1]
According to one of her long-time co-worker and a noted Pakistani columnist Zubeida Mustafa, "Khan was a man of principle and integrity... he was a good teacher and believed in values and ethics of journalism".[3]