Chaudhry Muhammad Ali Explained

Honorific Prefix:Chaudhry
Muhammad Ali
Native Name:
Native Name Lang:ur
Order:4th
Office:Prime Minister of Pakistan
Term Start:12 August 1955
Term End:12 September 1956
President:Iskander Mirza
Governor General:Iskander Mirza (1955–1956)
Predecessor:Mohammad Ali Bogra
Successor:Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy
Order2:Minister of Defence
Term Start2:12 August 1955
Term End2:12 September 1956
Deputy2:Akhter Husain (Defence Secretary)
Predecessor2:General Ayub Khan
Successor2:Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy
Order3:2nd Minister of Finance
Term Start3:24 October 1951
Term End3:11 August 1955
Deputy3:Mumtaz Hasan (Finance Secretary)
Predecessor3:Ghulam Muhammad
Successor3:Amjad Ali
Order4:Federal Secretary
Term Start4:14 August 1947
Term End4:24 October 1955
Order5:Finance Secretary of Pakistan
1Namedata5:Ghulam Muhammad
Alongside5:Sir Victor Turner
Term Start5:14 August 1947
Term End5:12 September 1948
Term Start6:2 September 1946
Term End6:14 August 1947
1Blankname6:Minister
1Namedata6:Liaquat Ali Khan
Predecessor6:Ghulam Muhammad
Successor6:Sir Victor Turner
Order7:President of Pakistan Muslim League
Term Start7:12 August 1955
Term End7:12 September 1956
Predecessor7:Mohammad Ali Bogra
Successor7:I. I. Chundrigar
Birth Name:Chaudhry Muhammad Ali
Birth Date:15 July 1905
Birth Place:Jalandhar, Punjab, British India
Death Place:Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
Party:Nizam-e-Islam (until 1969)
Otherparty:Muslim League (1936–1956)
Children:5, including Khalid

Chaudhry Muhammad Ali (15 July 1905 – 2 December 1982) was a Pakistani politician and statesman who served as the fourth prime minister of Pakistan from 1955 until his resignation in 1956. His government transitioned Pakistan from a British Dominion to an Islamic Republic.

He resigned from the position of Prime Minister in 1958, and from the Muslim League as well, when he failed at healing rifts with Muslim League, and a new party, named as Republican Party. His credibility is noted for promulgating the first set of the Constitution of Pakistan lost political endorsement from his party when failing to investigate the allegations on vote rigging and the secret defections in favour of the Republican Party.[1]

Biography

Muhammad Ali was born in Jullundar, Punjab on 15 July 1905 into an Arain Punjabi Muslim family.[2] [3] [4]

After his matriculation, Muhammad Ali showed great aptitude for science, first moving to attend the Punjab University in Lahore where he read and graduated with BSc degree in chemistry in 1925.[5] In 1927, Muhammad Ali attained MSc in chemistry from Punjab University, and lectured at the Islamia College until 1928.[6] [5] [7]

In 1928, Muhammad Ali went to join the Indian Civil Service, first working as an accountant at the Audit and Accounts Service and was deputed to audit the Bahawalpur state. In 1936, Muhammad Ali was moved as Private Secretary to James Grigg, the Finance Minister of India, who later appointed him as the First Indian financial adviser when Grigg was appointed as the War Secretary in 1945. In 1946–47, Muhammad Ali was selected to serve as one of two secretaries to the Partition Council presided over by Lord Mountbatten, later appointed as Finance Secretary at the Ministry of Finance. Over this issue of partition, Muhammad Ali worked with H.M. Patel and Walter Christir to prepare a document titled The Administrative Consequences of Partition.[8]

At the time of the India's partition in 1947, Muhammad Ali opted for Pakistan.[9]

After the establishment of Pakistan in 1947, Muhammad Ali was moved as the Finance Secretary under Finance Minister Sir Ghulam Muhammad, along with Victor Turner, but this appointment lasted until 1948 due a cabinet reshuffle. He was appointed as the Federal Secretary at the Establishment Division, and aided greatly in setting up the civil bureaucracy and preparing the nation's first federal budget presented by Finance Minister Sir Ghulam Muhammad in 1951.

Prime Minister of Pakistan

In 1951, Muhammad Ali was appointed as the Finance Minister by Prime Minister K. Nazimuddin and was announced to be kept in the Finance ministry in Bogra's Talent ministry in 1953.[10]

On 11 August 1955, Muhammad Ali was appointed as the Prime Minister of Pakistan by then-Governor-General Iskandar Mirza, upon the dismissal of the Bogra's Talent administration. Prime Minister Ali placed a great emphasis on drafting the Constitution of Pakistan, and implemented the One Unit scheme despite regional opposition.[11]

He favored French architect Michel Ecochard over Greek architect Constantinos Doxiadis for the planning of the new capital in 1955, though the project nonetheless went Doxiadis in the 1960s.[12]

It was during his term that the first Constitution of Pakistan was promulgated, on 23 March 1956, where the nation-state was declared as Islamic republic with a parliamentary form of government.[13] His premiership was endorsed by President Iskandar Mirza and the three-party coalition government composing of Awami League, Muslim League and the Republican Party at the National Assembly. In 1955, Prime Minister Ali took over the party presidency.

In July 1956, Muhammad Ali met with the Indian Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru of India in an attempt to settle the key issue that was preventing the normalization of relations between Pakistan and India. This was the issue of Kashmir that had been divided between India and Pakistan in 1948. That issue remains unsettled to this day.

Despite his feat, Prime Minister Muhammad Ali proved to be a poor politician who failed to maintain control over his party when he reached a compromise to dismissed the cabinet members of his own party in favor of appointing the cabinet composing of Republican Party and Awami League in 1955–56. After appointing Abdul Jabbar Khan as the Chief minister of West-Pakistan who subsequently helped in secret trading in favor of Republican Party that made the Republicans in majority in the National Assembly, the Muslim League demanded its president to investigate the matter but Prime Minister Ali refused to support the parliamentary resolution in the National Assembly by believing that "he was responsible only to the Cabinet and the Parliament, not the party."

On 8 September 1956, the parliamentary leaders of the Muslim League under A.Q. Khan, successfully brought the motion of no confidence at the National Assembly that effectively removed him from the party's presidency. Despite support from President Mirza, Prime Minister Ali eventually resigned when Huseyn S. Suhrawardy gained support from the Muslim League for the premiership.

After his resignation, Ali joined the National Bank as an advisor. He tried playing a role in national politics in the 1960s, but was ostracized by the Muslim League due to his political role played in 1950s.

His son, Khalid Anwer, is a well-known lawyer and constitutional expert, who served as the Law and Justice minister in Sharif's administrations while his younger son is Dr. Amjad Ahsan Ali is well known medical doctor. In 1967, he wrote his memoirs and died due to a cardiac arrest on 2 December 1982 in estate in Karachi where he was buried.[14]

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chaudhry Muhammad Ali Becomes Prime Minister . storyofpakistan.com . Nazaria-i-Pakistan Trust . 29 January 2018 . Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan . en-pk . 1 June 2003.
  2. Web site: Chaudhry Muhammad Ali–Former Prime Minister of Pakistan . storyofpakistan.com . Nazaria-i-Pakistan Trust . 11 April 2016 . Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan . en-pk . 1 June 2003.
  3. Book: Burki . Shahid Javed . Baxter . Craig . Craig Baxter . LaPorte . Robert . Azfar . Kamal . Pakistan Under the Military: Eleven Years of Zia Ul-Haq . 1991 . Westview Press . New York City . 9780813379852 . 4 . 29 January 2018 . en-us.
  4. Book: Naz . Huma . Bureaucratic Elites & Political Developments in Pakistan, 1947-58 . 1990 . National Institute of Pakistan Studies, Quaid-i-Azam University . 157 . 29 January 2018 . en.
  5. Book: Kumarasingham . H. . Constitution-making in Asia: Decolonisation and State-Building in the Aftermath of the British Empire . 2016 . Routledge . Cambridge, UK . 9781317245100 . 106 . 29 January 2018 . en-uk.
  6. Book: Blattner . Elwyn James . Blattner . James Elwyn . Who's who in U.A.R. and the Near East . 1955 . Paul Barbey Press . 294 . 29 January 2018 . fr.
  7. Encyclopedia: Chaudhri Mohammad Ali—prime minister of Pakistan . Encyclopædia Britannica . 29 January 2018 . London, Eng. U.K. . en-uk.
  8. John Christie Morning Drum BACSA 1983 pp95-102
  9. Book: Lyon . Peter . 2008 . Conflict Between India and Pakistan: An Encyclopedia . ABC-CLIO . 9 . 978-1-57607-712-2 . In 1947 he became secretary-general to the government [of Pakistan] ... Mirza did not want Suhrawardy to replace him [Choudhury Muhammad Ali] as prime minister and tried energetically but unsuccessfully to dissuade Choudhury Muhammad Ali from resigning. But Suhrawardy's appointment as prime minister was nonetheless forthcoming ... During the early years of the Mohammed Ayub Khan regime, Ali acted as an adviser to the National Bank of Pakistan. In 1962 he joined the opposition, but soon increasing frailty prevented him from playing an active or formal role..
  10. Book: Khuhro . Hamida . Mohammed Ayub Khuhro: a life of courage in politics . 1998 . Ferozsons . Karachi, Pakistan . 405 . 9789690014245 . 29 January 2018 . en.
  11. Book: Wynbrandt . James . A Brief History of Pakistan . 2009 . Facts On File . 9780816061846 . 178 . 29 January 2018 . en.
  12. Book: Bates . Crispin . Mio . Minoru . §Cities in South Asia . 2015 . Routledge . 9781317565130 . 72 . en-us.
  13. Web site: The Constitution of 1956 . storyofpakistan.com . Nazaria-i-Pakistan Trust . 29 January 2018 . 1 June 2003 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151125103457/http://storyofpakistan.com/the-constitution-of-1956 . 25 November 2015 . dead.
  14. Book: Asian Recorder . 1981 . K. K. Thomas at Recorder Press . 29 January 2018 . en.