Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. In the aftermath of the 1965 war with India, mounting regional discontent in East Pakistan and urban unrest in West Pakistan helped undermine Ayub Khan's authority, forcing him to relinquish power in March 1969. Bangladesh Secedes. After Ayub Khan, General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan headed the second military regime from 1969-1971.

  2. Apr 10, 2014 · This essay probes the genealogy of Pakistan's Islamisation by focusing on the rule of President Ayub Khan (1958–69) and extends to the war of 1971 and the dismembering of Pakistan during Yahya Khan's presidency. I trace Ayub Khan's project of ‘modernising Islam and the nation’ by probing three sites: the transformation of the Pakistani ...

  3. Nov 1, 2016 · The times of Ayub Khan were the best of Pakistan's history. There was economic growth & Pakistan was respected around the world. Ayub khan got the cities cleaned & there was a serene rule of law ...

  4. Ayub Khan is a compound masculine name; Ayub is the Arabic version of the name of the Biblical figure Job, while Khan or Khaan is taken from the title used first by the Mongol rulers and then, in particular, their Islamic and Persian-influenced successors in South Asia, where the name is usually found, although Khan was being used before outside South Asia.

  5. Apr 1, 2017 · 3 Jacqueline Kennedy with Pakistani President Mohammad Ayub Khan at a dinner in the United States one year before the first lady's historic visit to his country. The carefully cultivated ...

  6. May 23, 2023 · How did Pakistan Army grow from 140,000 men in 1947 into the world’s ... exerting influence on civilian governments from ... when the authority was transferred to General Ayub Khan. Just seven ...

  7. Muhammad Ayub Khan (Urdu language: محمد ایوب خان‎ May 14, 1907 – 19 April 1974) was a five-star general officer and statesman, serving as the second President of Pakistan and its first military dictator from 1958 until his forced resignation in 1969.[1] A self-appointed field marshal,[2] the only such five-star rank in Pakistan's military history, he was appointed the first chief martial law administrator by President Iskander Mirza in 1958, a post he retained until the ...