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| LIAQAT ALI KHAN |
Liaquat Ali Khan, (conceived Oct. 1, 1895, Karnal, India—kicked the bucket Oct. 16, 1951, Rawalpindi, Pak.), first head administrator of Pakistan (1947–51). Conceived the child of a landowner, Liaquat was instructed at Aligarh, Allahabad, and Exeter College, Oxford. An attorney by calling, similar to his chief, Mohammed Ali Jinnah, he entered governmental issues in 1923, being chosen first for the commonplace council of the United Provinces and afterward to the focal authoritative gathering. He joined the Muslim League and before long turned out to be firmly connected with Jinnah. By degrees he won first the regard and afterward the reverence of the Muslim people group for his portion in the battle for Pakistan; when freedom was won in 1947 and Jinnah turned into the main lead representative general, Liaquat was the undeniable decision as head administrator. In this post his accomplishments were extraordinary. On the off chance that Jinnah established Pakistan, Liaquat set up it, setting out the principle lines of strategy, homegrown and unfamiliar, that subsequently directed the country. After Jinnah's passing, Liaquat was acclaimed as qaid-I-millet ("head of the country"). Liaquat was killed in Rawalpindi in 1951 by a Muslim devotee who despised his consistent refusal to think about battle with India.

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