PropertyValue
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rdfs:label
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi
rdfs:comment
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi (; c. 1915 – 2 February 2004), was a former lieutenant-general in the Pakistan Army, served as the last governor and martial law administrator of East Pakistan and the last unified commander of the Eastern Military High Command of the Pakistan Armed Forces. Presided over East Pakistan for only two days, Niazi was responsible for the eastern contingent of the Pakistan Armed Forces during the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War and the Bangladesh Liberation War, jointly with Vice-Admiral Mohammad Shariff, Commander of Eastern Naval Command. General Niazi is still remembered as the "Jackal of Bengal" in Pakistan due to his surrender in East Pakistan. His awards were withdrawn and he was stripped of his honors.
owl:sameAs
Unit
  • 5
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • 1934
term start
  • 1971-09-16
  • 1971-12-14
Birth Date
  • 1915
Commands
  • 5
  • 14
  • 50
  • 52
Branch
  • 20
death place
  • Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan
primeminister
Nickname
Name
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi
Caption
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi
Alma mater
President
  • General Yahya Khan
Birth Place
  • Lahore, Punjab Province, British India
Title
  • Governor of East Pakistan
  • Unified Commander of Eastern Military High Command
Awards
term end
  • 1971-12-16
death date
  • 2004-02-02
Rank
  • 30
Citizenship
  • British Indian
Allegiance
  • British India
Battles
Cabinet
  • Military Government of Yahya Khan
Successor
Before
  • Abdul Motaleb Malik
alongside
Years
  • --12-14
After
  • Office abolished
vicepresident
Order
  • Governor of East Pakistan
  • Martial Law Administrator of East-Pakistan
  • Commander of Eastern Military High Command
deputy
Birthname
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi
Predecessor
abstract
  • Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi (; c. 1915 – 2 February 2004), was a former lieutenant-general in the Pakistan Army, served as the last governor and martial law administrator of East Pakistan and the last unified commander of the Eastern Military High Command of the Pakistan Armed Forces. Presided over East Pakistan for only two days, Niazi was responsible for the eastern contingent of the Pakistan Armed Forces during the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War and the Bangladesh Liberation War, jointly with Vice-Admiral Mohammad Shariff, Commander of Eastern Naval Command. General Niazi is still remembered as the "Jackal of Bengal" in Pakistan due to his surrender in East Pakistan. His awards were withdrawn and he was stripped of his honors. Niazi got commission in the Indian Army in 1934 and took part in combat operations in the Burma Campaign, most notably in the Imphal operation, for which he became famous. After the establishment of Pakistan he joined the Pakistan Army. He commanded Operation Chavinda in the Indo-Pakistani war of 1965 and was ordered to command the Pakistan Armed Forces in East Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War. In 1971 war, Niazi surrendered his forces of almost 45,000 men to the Indian Armed Forces and the Mukti Bahini guerrilla armed resistance force. He stated that he had acted on the orders of the West Pakistan Military High Command under General Yahya Khan. After the war, other parties like Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto framed him as personally responsible for the surrender, and he was accused of being involved in Pakistan's alleged human rights violations in Bangladesh. He was dismissed by President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto from his general officer rank and his military decorations, while he sought a court-martial to prove his innocence, filing petitions through his military lawyers both in the civilian Supreme Court of Pakistan and in the Judge Advocate General Branch of the Pakistan Armed Forces.
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