Gohar Ayub Khan Explained

Gohar Ayub Khan
Office:Minister of Foreign Affairs
Primeminister:Nawaz Sharif
Term Start:25 February 1997
Term End:7 August 1998
Predecessor:Sahabzada Yaqub Khan (Acting)
Successor:Sartaj Aziz
Office1:14th Speaker of the National Assembly
Deputy1:Nawaz Khokhar
Term Start1:4 November 1990
Term End1:17 October 1993
Predecessor1:Malik Meraj Khalid
Successor1:Yousaf Raza Gillani
Birth Date:8 January 1937
Birth Place:Rehana, North-West Frontier Province, British India
(now Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan)
Death Place:Islamabad, Pakistan
Nationality:Pakistani
Party:Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (2018–2024)
Otherparty:Pakistan Peoples Muslim League (2009–2012)
Pakistan Muslim League (Q) (1999–2009)
Islamic Democratic Alliance (1988–1990)
Pakistan Muslim League (F) (1985–1988)
Tehrik-e-Istiqlal (1977–1985)
Convention Muslim League (before 1977)
Alma Mater:Royal Military Academy Sandhurst
Nickname:Kaptaan
Serviceyears:1957–1962 1971–1972
Rank:Captain
Unit:1/14 Punjab
Battles:Indo-Pakistan War of 1971
Children:4, including Omar Ayub Khan
Father:Ayub Khan
Relations:Mir Dad Khan (grandfather)
Sardar Bahadur Khan (uncle)
Yousuf Ayub Khan (nephew)
Arshad Ayub Khan (nephew)
Akbar Ayub Khan (nephew)

Gohar Ayub Khan (Urdu: {{nq|گوہر ایوب خان; 8 January 1937 – 17 November 2023) was a Pakistani politician, business oligarch, army officer, and a leader of the Pakistan Muslim League, who held ministerial positions during the administration of prime minister Nawaz Sharif.

Gohar Ayub Khan hailed from the village of Rehana, located in the Haripur District of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and belonged to the Tareen tribe of ethnic Pashtuns. He was fluent in Hindko and Pashto. He was the son of military dictator former president and field marshal, Ayub Khan, and played an influential role in sustaining his father's presidential rule after the 1965 presidential election. Educated at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, after graduation, Gohar Ayub Khan was commissioned in the Pakistan Army in 1959. During his military service, he served as his father's aide-de-camp, travelling with him on several foreign trips. Upon his resignation in 1962 with the rank of captain, he established a business conglomerate and entered politics in 1974.

Khan first contested the 1977 general election through the Independence Movement platform but later joined the Islamic Democratic Alliance (IDA) in 1988. After the 1990 general election he was appointed the 14th speaker of the National Assembly. He became the 20th minister of Foreign Affairs after securing his seat with a heavy margin in the 1997 general election. Later he shifted to the energy department, serving as Minister for Water and Power beginning 7 August 1998. His term was abruptly ended on 12 October 1999 by General Pervez Musharraf, and he subsequently retired from national politics.

Early life and military career

Gohar Ayub was born in the village of Rehana, in Haripur District during the British Raj in the North-West Frontier Province (present day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) into a military family on 8 January 1937.[1] [2] A native Hindko speaker, Gohar Ayub belonged to the Tareen tribe of Pashtuns. His father, Ayub Khan, was a senior commanding officer in the British Army and later ascended to staff and field operational assignments in the Pakistan Army. Ayub Khan subsequently became President of Pakistan through a bloodless military coup that commenced in 1958.

Gohar Ayub was sent to study at the military-controlled Army Burn Hall College and eventually moved on to attend Saint Mary's Academy, a private school in Rawalpindi.[3] Gohar Ayub joined the Pakistan Army in 1957, and trained at the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in the United Kingdom.[3] Upon his return from the UK, he began active duty with the Pakistan Army and started to serve on staff appointments. In 1958 he began to serve as his father's aide-de-camp, travelling with him on several foreign trips in Europe, the Americas, the Soviet Union, and Asia.[3] He did not rise beyond the rank of Captain during his time in the army, despite his father's support.[1] In his army records, there are allegations of professional and behavioural misconduct.[1]

Gohar Ayub was prematurely given retirement in 1962 by the Army's Promotion Branch, despite his father's efforts to stop the investigations against his son. After his early retirement, he and his father-in-law, General (retired) Habibullah Khan established a private industrial firm, the Universal Insurance Co. Ltd.[1]

During the 1971 War, Gohar Ayub briefly returned to active service, seeing action in the Punjab border areas.[4]

Political career

Role in the 1965 presidential election

Gohar Ayub reportedly played an influential, but controversial, role in Karachi after his father's election in the allegedly rigged 1965 presidential election against Fatima Jinnah.[5] This move led to fierce clashes between rival political groups.[6] [7] [8] [9] Gohar Ayub also faced criticism during that time on questions of family corruption and cronyism through his business links with his father-in-law.[5]

Speaker of the National Assembly

Gohar Ayub had been a long-standing member of the Pakistan Muslim League and was elected five times to the National Assembly from his home constituency.[10] He first successfully contested a presidential election in March 1965 on a Muslim League platform. In 1977, he contested the National Assembly seat from Peshawar Jail and was elected on the ticket of Asghar Khan's Independence Movement party, defeating the candidate Akhtar Nawaz Khan of the Pakistan People's Party.

After successfully contesting the 1990 general election, Ayub Khan was appointed the 14th Speaker of the National Assembly of Pakistan on 4 November 1990, remaining until 1993.[11] He was succeeded by Yousaf Raza Gillani (later Prime minister) after the 1993 general election. Gohar Ayub also served as senior vice president of the Pakistan Muslim League from 1990 to 1993. After his re-election in 1993, Gohar Ayub became deputy leader of the opposition in the National Assembly.

Foreign affairs and water and power ministry under Nawaz Sharif

After securing a heavy mandate from his constituency, Gohar Ayub was appointed as the 20th Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1997 by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. Gohar Ayub publicly backed Prime Minister Sharif in authorising a nuclear testing programme in response to India's nuclear test in May 1998.[12] Although the prime minister was much more subdued, Gohar Ayub reportedly issued hostile statements and began to call for atomic tests in response to India.[12] He prematurely issued media reports to the media, which reportedly displeased the prime minister.[12]

On 7 August 1998, Gohar Ayub was replaced by economic minister Sartaj Aziz (who put forth efforts to make peace between India and Pakistan), and was reassigned as Minister for Water and Power, a position he filled until he was ousted and forced to resign on 12 October 1999 as a result of a military coup commenced by General Pervez Musharraf.

Parting ways with Nawaz Sharif

Gohar Ayub's relationship with Nawaz Sharif eventually became strained, causing the former to leave the Pakistan Muslim League in 1999.[13] Gohar Ayub defected to the Pakistan Muslim League's splinter group in 2001. He was appointed the first secretary general of the party. Unable to contest the 2002 election because of a graduation degree restriction introduced by Pervez Musharraf, Gohar Ayub instead endorsed and provide vital support to his family. His younger son, Omar Ayub Khan, won his Haripur District seat, while his wife Zeb Gohar Ayub was elected MNA on the reserved women seats. Gohar Ayub's strongest political opponent in his constituency was former chief minister Raja Sikander Zaman.

Post-retirement and controversies

After his retirement from national politics in 2002, Gohar Ayub wrote Glimpses into the Corridors of Power and published his father's diary.[14] He opposed the proposal to rename the NWFP to Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, while supporting the creation of a separate Hazara province. [15]

Reconciliation with Nawaz Sharif

After spending few years with the Pakistan Muslim League (Q) during the 2000s, he eventually rejoined PML-N in December 2012, following his reconciliation with Nawaz Sharif.[16]

Business career

Gohar Ayub Khan co-established an industrial firm under the business umbrella of Universal Insurance company Limited, founded by his father-in-law.[17] During a short span of time, Ayub Khan intensified pro-Western and pro-Capitalism policies, and Gohar Ayub emerged as a powerful business oligarch. There was no evidence that suggests Gohar Ayub secured all these positions with the consent of his father. In 1969, a Western commentator estimated Gohar Ayub's wealth at $4 million, while his family's wealth was put in the range of $10–20 million.[18]

Gohar Ayub served as the Chief Executive of Universal Insurance and was on the board of several other companies in his in-laws, Khan Khattak family's corporation the Bibojee Group.[19]

Death

Gohar Ayub Khan died at Kulsum International Hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan on 17 November 2023, at the age of 86 following a brief illness.[20]

He left four children behind, two daughters and two sons, including politician Omar Ayub Khan.[21]

Books

See also

External links

References

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Raman . B . Campaign against Field Marshal Sam . South Asia Analysis Group . 26 May 2012 . usurped . https://web.archive.org/web/20100613040928/http://southasiaanalysis.org/papers23/paper2237.html . 13 June 2010.
  2. Book: Glimpses Into the Corridors of Power . 2007 . Oxford University Press . 11 . 978-0-19-547354-4 . 17 November 2023.
  3. Web site: PR. Gohar Ayub Khan. Mera Haripur. 26 May 2012. 3 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181003080142/http://meraharipur.com/Personalities/Political/Gohar_Ayub_Khan.html. dead.
  4. Web site: 22 September 2015 . 1965 war: India attacked Pakistan, now neither side wants war: Gohar Ayub Khan (IANS Interview) . Business Standard.
  5. Web site: Associated Press . Pakistan's Chief son is called Killer . 1965 . Pakistan Peoples Party and New York Times Services . 26 May 2012 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120328043751/http://criticalppp.com/archives/9407 . 28 March 2012.
  6. https://web.archive.org/web/20080526141535/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,941860,00.html?iid=chix-sphere A Sorry Beginning—Time
  7. Web site: Who did the Massacre of 4 January 1965 in Karachi . 15 July 2014 . 5 July 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150705073656/http://pkpolitics.com/discuss/topic/who-did-the-massacre-of-january-4-1965-in-karachi . dead .
  8. http://mqmhistory.wordpress.com/2013/08/14/the-great-muhajir-massacre-of-1965/ The Great Muhajir Massacre of 1965
  9. Mazari, Sherbaz 1999. A journey into disillusionment. Oxford University Press
  10. Web site: سابق وزیرخارجہ گوہر ایوب انتقال کر گئے . 18 November 2023 . urdu.geo.tv . en.
  11. Web site: سابق وزیر خارجہ گوہر ایوب خان وفات پا گئے - BBC Urdu . 18 November 2023 . BBC News اردو . ur-IN.
  12. Web site: Sublette. Carey. Initial Reactions. 30 March 2001. Nuclear Weapon Archive, 1998. 27 May 2012.
  13. Web site: 17 November 2023 . پہلے فوجی صدر کے بیٹے گوہر ایوب خان جو ’ہاک تھے ڈوو نہیں‘ . 18 November 2023 . Urdu News – اردو نیوز . ur.
  14. Khan, Ayub (26 April 2007) Diaries of Field Marshal Mohammad Ayub Khan, 1966–1972. OUP Pakistan
  15. Web site: 2012-03-21 . Establishing new provinces need of the hour: Gohar Ayub . 2024-05-07 . The Nation . en-US.
  16. Web site: 28 December 2012 . Welcome back: Gohar Ayub and son join Nawaz League . 17 November 2023 . The Express Tribune.
  17. Book: Rizvi, Hassan Askari . The military and politics . Sang-e-Meel Publications, 2000 . 2000 . 9789693511482 . Lahore, Pakistan . 164–382.
  18. Pick, Franz, World Currency report. April 1969
  19. https://www.marketscreener.com/business-leaders/Gohar-Ayub-Khan-0GQL42-E/biography/ Market Screener: Business Leaders: Gohar Ayub Khan
  20. Web site: Gohar Ayub Khan passes away . 17 November 2023 . www.thenews.com.pk . en.
  21. Web site: 18 November 2023 . Gohar Ayub Khan passes away . The News International.