Honorific Prefix: | General |
Rahimuddin Khan | |
Order1: | 7th |
Office1: | Governor of Balochistan |
Term Start1: | 18 September 1978 |
Term End1: | 22 March 1984 |
1Blankname2: | Chief Minister |
1Namedata2: | Akhtar Ali Kazi |
Predecessor1: | Khuda Bakhsh Marri |
Successor1: | Farooq Shaukat Lodhi |
Order2: | 16th |
Office2: | Governor of Sindh |
Term Start2: | 24 June 1988 |
Term End2: | 11 September 1988 |
Predecessor2: | Ashraf Wali Tabani |
Successor2: | Qadeeruddin Ahmed |
Birth Date: | 21 July 1926 |
Death Place: | Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan |
Serviceyears: | 1947–1987 |
Rank: | General |
Unit: | Baloch Regiment |
Battles: |
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Rahimuddin Khan (21 July 1926 – 22 August 2022) was a general of the Pakistan Army who served as the 4th Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee from 1984 to 1987, after serving as the 7th governor of Balochistan from 1978 to 1984.[1] He also served as the 16th governor of Sindh in 1988.[2]
Opting for Pakistan during the Partition, Rahimuddin enrolled as the first cadet of the Pakistan Military Academy. He was part of military action during the 1953 Punjab disturbances, and later commanded 111 Brigade in Rawalpindi and II Corps in Multan. As Chairman Joint Chiefs, he rejected the future military plan for the Kargil Conflict.[3]
As the longest-serving governor of Balochistan, Rahimuddin declared a general amnesty and ended all military operations in the province.[4] His tenure saw widespread development, including the opening of Sui gas fields to Quetta,[5] the construction of nuclear test sites in Chaghai, and the halting of the Baloch insurgency.[6] [7] He was credited with financial honesty, but suppressed mujahideen entering the province during the Soviet war in Afghanistan.
Khan refused an extension of service as chairman joint chiefs, retiring in 1987.
Rahimuddin Khan was born on 21 July 1926, in Kaimganj, United Provinces, British India, to an ethnic Pashtun (Afridi) family, that had ancestry from Kohat and Tirah.[8] He was the nephew of educationist Zakir Husain, later the President of India, and the son-in-law of Husain's brother, Pakistan Movement figure and member of the first Constituent Assembly Mahmud Husain.[9]
He attended Jamia Millia Islamia University in Delhi, founded by Zakir Husain.
He opted for Pakistan during independence in 1947, enrolling as Gentleman Cadet-1 of the Pakistan Military Academy.[10]
As a captain, Rahimuddin was part of the military operation under Azam Khan during the 1953 Lahore riots. He attended Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and Command and Staff College in Quetta in 1965, and was posted to Hyderabad in 1969. He served as inaugural commander of 111 Brigade in Rawalpindi in 1970. Rahimuddin served as Chief Instructor at the Armed Forces War College at the then National Defence College, Rawalpindi, until 1975. Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto requested Rahimuddin to head the new Atomic Energy Commission and nuclear programme, but was declined.[11] [12] As lieutenant-general, he became Commander II Corps in Multan[13] in 1976. He was made Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee by General Zia-ul-Haq on 22 March 1984, a position he served in till 29 March 1987.[14]
As Chairman Joint Chiefs, Rahimuddin was asked to approve the military plan for an offensive in Kargil, Kashmir, in 1986. The plan was authored by Commander I Corps. Both Rahimuddin and Air Chief Marshal Jamal A. Khan rejected it as untenable, citing the harsh conditions, strategy, and concurrent conflict with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan. The plan was later approved by General Pervez Musharraf, leading to the Kargil war in 1998.[15]
Rahimuddin declined an extension of service at superannuation, and retired in 1987. After his retirement on time, Prime Minister Muhammad Khan Junejo rejected Zia's proposal of extension for Vice Chief of Staff General KM Arif, embarrassing Zia.[16] Arif was replaced by Mirza Aslam Beg as Vice Chief.
A military operation against separatists was commenced in Balochistan by Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto led by army chief Tikka Khan in 1973, claiming thousands of lives.[17] Rahimuddin was appointed Governor of Balochistan on 16 September 1978. He declared an end to the operation, and announced a general amnesty for fighters willing to give up arms. Army withdrawal was completed by 1979. The Baloch separatist movement came to a standstill.[18] [19] Under Rahimuddin, the Foreign Policy Centre held that "the province's tribal sardars were taken out of the pale of politics for the first time."[20] He was known for a clean reputation during corrupt regimes.[21]
Rahimuddin opened the Sui gas field to provide gas directly to Quetta and other Baloch towns for the first time. Electricity expansion from Quetta to Loralai converted vast areas with sub-soil water into fertile ones.[22] He alsoconsolidated the then-contentious integration of Gwadar into Balochistan, notified as a district in 1977. Despite opposition from finance minister Ghulam Ishaq Khan, Rahimuddin heavily promoted large-scale manufacturing and investment in infrastructure, leading to provincial GDP growth rising to the highest in Balochistan's history.[23] Addressing the province's literacy rate, the lowest in the country, he administered the freeing up of resources towards education, created girls' incentive programs, and had several girls' schools built in Dera Bugti District.[24] He also oversaw the construction of nuclear test sites in Chaghai where tests were conducted in 1998.
In March 1981, the militant group Al-Zulfikar, led by Murtaza Bhutto, hijacked a Pakistan International Airlines airplane from Karachi to Kabul,[25] and shot and killed passenger Captain Tariq Rahim, mistakenly believing him to be the son of General Rahimuddin Khan.[26] [27] The decision to kill Rahim was taken after Murtaza Bhutto consulted KHAD chief Mohammad Najibullah.[28] [29]
Zia dismissed his own government in May 1988. Khan became civilian Governor of Sindh, and governor's rule was imposed after citing emergency.[30] Claiming corruption, Khan began dismissing large numbers of police and civil servants.[31] [32] Khan also launched a brutal police crackdown on land mafia, one of the widest ever in Karachi, criticized by both PPP and the Zia regime for its heavy-handed tactics. It was stopped by the government immediately after he resigned. He moved to create separate police forces for the city and the rural areas, but this was also resisted after his resignation for fears of complicating the Sindhi-Muhajir relationship.[33] Special riot control officers were trained to cope with ethnic riots, and river and forest police were also set up to battle dacoity.[34] Ghulam Ishaq Khan became acting President after Zia's death in an aircrash on 17 August, and reintroduced the Chief Minister of Sindh office. Khan resigned in response to the attempt to limit his gubernatorial powers.[35]
Post-retirement, he promoted his former chief of staff Asif Nawaz for appointment as Chief of Army Staff.[36]
Khan died on 22 August 2022, in Lahore, Pakistan, at the age of 96.[37]
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