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Pakistan
was born in bloodshed and came into existence on August 15, 1947, confronted by
seemingly insurmountable problems. As many as 12 million people--Muslims leaving
India for Pakistan, and Hindus and Sikhs opting to move to India from the new
state of Pakistan--had been involved in the mass transfer of population between
the two countries, and perhaps 2 million refugees had died in the communal
bloodbath that had accompanied the migrations. Pakistan's boundaries were
established hastily without adequate regard for the new nation's economic
viability. Even the minimal requirements of a working central
government--skilled personnel, equipment, and a capital city with government
buildings--were missing. Until 1947 the East Wing of Pakistan, separated from
the West Wing by 1,600 kilometers of Indian Territory, had been heavily
dependent on Hindu management. Many Hindu Bengalis left for Calcutta after
partition, and their place, particularly in commerce, was taken mostly by
Muslims who had migrated from the Indian state of Bihar or by West Pakistanis
from Punjab. After
partition, Muslim banking shifted from Bombay to Karachi, Pakistan's first
capital. Much of the investment in East Pakistan came from West Pakistani banks.
Investment was concentrated in jute production at a time when international
demand was decreasing. The largest jute processing factory in the world, at
Narayanganj, an industrial suburb of Dhaka, was owned by the Adamjee family from
West Pakistan. Because banking and financing were generally controlled by West
Pakistanis, discriminatory practices often resulted. Bengalis found themselves
excluded from the managerial level and from skilled labor. West Pakistanis
tended to favor Urdu-speaking Biharis (refugees from the northern Indian state
of Bihar living in East Pakistan), considering them to be less prone to labor
agitation than the Bengalis. This preference became more pronounced after
explosive labor clashes between the Biharis and Bengalis at the Narayaganj jute
mill in 1954. Pakistan
had a severe shortage of trained administrative personnel, as most members of
the preindependence Indian Civil Service were Hindus or Sikhs who opted to
belong to India at partition. Rarer still were Muslim Bengalis who had any past
administrative experience. As a result, high-level posts in Dhaka, including
that of governor general, were usually filled by West Pakistanis or by refugees
from India who had adopted Pakistani citizenship. One
of the most divisive issues confronting Pakistan in its infancy was the question
of what the official language of the new state was to be. Jinnah yielded to the
demands of refugees from the Indian states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, who
insisted that Urdu be Pakistan's official language. Speakers of the languages of
West Pakistan--Punjabi, Sindhi, Pushtu, and Baluchi--were upset that their
languages were given second-class status. In East Pakistan, the dissatisfaction
quickly turned to violence. The Bengalis of East Pakistan constituted a majority
(an estimated 54 percent) of Pakistan's entire population. Their language,
Bangla (then commonly known as Bengali), shares with Urdu a common Sanskritic-Persian
ancestor, but the two languages have different scripts and literary traditions. Jinnah
visited East Pakistan on only one occasion after independence, shortly before
his death in 1948. He announced in Dhaka that "without one state language,
no nation can remain solidly together and function." Jinnah's views were
not accepted by most East Pakistanis, but perhaps in tribute to the founder of
Pakistan, serious resistance on this issue did not break out until after his
death. On February 21, 1952, a demonstration was carried out in Dhaka in which
students demanded equal status for Bangla. The police reacted by firing on the
crowd and killing two students. (A memorial, the Shaheed Minar, was built later
to commemorate the martyrs of the language movement.) Two years after the
incident, Bengali agitation effectively forced the National Assembly to
designate "Urdu and Bengali and such other languages as may be
declared" to be the official languages of Pakistan. What
kept the new country together was the vision and forceful personality of the
founders of Pakistan: Jinnah, the governor general popularly known as the Quaid
i Azam (Supreme Leader); and Liaquat Ali Khan (1895-1951), the first prime
minister, popularly known as the Quaid i Millet (Leader of the Community). The
government machinery established at independence was similar to the viceregal
system that had prevailed in the preindependence period and placed no formal
limitations on Jinnah's constitutional powers. In the 1970s in Bangladesh,
another autocrat, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, would enjoy much of the same prestige
and exemption from the normal rule of law. When
Jinnah died in September 1948, the seat of power shifted from the governor
general to the prime minister, Liaquat. Liaquat had extensive experience in
politics and enjoyed as a refugee from India the additional benefit of not being
too closely identified with any one province of Pakistan. A moderate, Liaquat
subscribed to the ideals of a parliamentary, democratic, and secular state. Out
of necessity he considered the wishes of the country's religious spokesmen who
championed the cause of Pakistan as an Islamic state. He was seeking a balance
of Islam against secularism for a new constitution when he was assassinated on
October 16, 1951, by fanatics opposed to Liaquat's refusal to wage war against
India. With both Jinnah and Liaquat gone, Pakistan faced an unstable period that
would be resolved by military and civil service intervention in political
affairs. The first few turbulent years after independence thus defined the
enduring politico- military culture of Pakistan. The
inability of the politicians to provide a stable government was largely a result
of their mutual suspicions. Loyalties tended to be personal, ethnic, and
provincial rather than national and issue oriented. Provincialism was openly
expressed in the deliberations of the Constituent Assembly. In the Constituent
Assembly frequent arguments voiced the fear that the West Pakistani province of
Punjab would dominate the nation. An ineffective body, the Constituent Assembly
took almost nine years to draft a constitution, which for all practical purposes
was never put into effect. Liaquat
was succeeded as prime minister by a conservative Bengali, Governor General
Khwaja Nazimuddin. Former finance minister Ghulam Mohammad, a Punjabi career
civil servant, became governor general. Ghulam Mohammad was dissatisfied with
Nazimuddin's inability to deal with Bengali agitation for provincial autonomy
and worked to expand his own power base. East Pakistan favored a high degree of
autonomy, with the central government controlling little more than foreign
affairs, defense, communications, and currency. In 1953 Ghulam Mohammad
dismissed Prime Minister Nazimuddin, established martial law in Punjab, and
imposed governor's rule (direct rule by the central government) in East
Pakistan. In 1954 he appointed his own "cabinet of talents." Mohammad
Ali Bogra, another conservative Bengali and previously Pakistan's ambassador to
the United States and the United Nations, was named prime minister. During
September and October 1954 a chain of events culminated in a confrontation
between the governor general and the prime minister. Prime Minister Bogra tried
to limit the powers of Governor General Ghulam Mohammad through hastily adopted
amendments to the de facto constitution, the Government of India Act of 1935.
The governor general, however, enlisted the tacit support of the army and civil
service, dissolved the Constituent Assembly, and then formed a new cabinet.
Bogra, a man without a personal following, remained prime minister but without
effective power. General Iskander Mirza, who had been a soldier and civil
servant, became minister of the interior; General Mohammad Ayub Khan, the army
commander, became minister of defense; and Choudhry Mohammad Ali, former head of
the civil service, remained minister of finance. The main objective of the new
government was to end disruptive provincial politics and to provide the country
with a new constitution. The Federal Court, however, declared that a new
Constituent Assembly must be called. Ghulam Mohammad was unable to circumvent
the order, and the new Constituent Assembly, elected by the provincial
assemblies, met for the first time in July 1955. Bogra, who had little support
in the new assembly, fell in August and was replaced by Choudhry; Ghulam
Mohammad, plagued by poor health, was succeeded as governor general in September
1955 by Mirza. The
second Constituent Assembly differed in composition from the first. In East
Pakistan, the Muslim League had been overwhelmingly defeated in the 1954
provincial assembly elections by the United Front coalition of Bengali regional
parties anchored by Fazlul Haq's Krishak Sramik Samajbadi Dal (Peasants and
Workers Socialist Party) and the Awami League (People's League) led by Hussain
Shaheed Suhrawardy. Rejection of West Pakistan's dominance over East Pakistan
and the desire for Bengali provincial autonomy were the main ingredients of the
coalition's twenty-one-point platform. The East Pakistani election and the
coalition's victory proved pyrrhic; Bengali factionalism surfaced soon after the
election and the United Front fell apart. From 1954 to Ayub's assumption of
power in 1958, the Krishak Sramik and the Awami League waged a ceaseless battle
for control of East Pakistan's provincial government. Prime
Minister Choudhry induced the politicians to agree on a constitution in 1956. In
order to establish a better balance between the west and east wings, the four
provinces of West Pakistan were amalgamated into one administrative unit. The
1956 constitution made provisions for an Islamic state as embodied in its
Directive of Principles of State Policy, which defined methods of promoting
Islamic morality. The national parliament was to comprise one house of 300
members with equal representation from both the west and east wings. The Awami League's Suhrawardy succeeded Choudhry as prime minister in September 1956 and formed a coalition cabinet. He, like other Bengali politicians, was chosen by the central government to serve as a symbol of unity, but he failed to secure significant support from West Pakistani power brokers. Although he had a good reputation in East Pakistan and was respected for his prepartition association with Gandhi, his strenuous efforts to gain greater provincial autonomy for East Pakistan and a larger share of development funds for it were not well received in West Pakistan. Suhrawardy's thirteen months in office came to an end after he took a strong position against abrogation of the existing "One Unit" government for all of West Pakistan in favor of separate local governments for Sind, Punjab, Baluchistan, and the North-West Frontier Province. He thus lost much support from West Pakistan's provincial politicians. He also used emergency powers to prevent the formation of a Muslim League provincial government in West Pakistan, thereby losing much Punjabi backing. Moreover, his open advocacy of votes of confidence from the Constituent Assembly as the proper means of forming governments aroused the suspicions of President Mirza. In 1957 the president used his considerable influence to oust Suhrawardy from the office of prime minister. The drift toward economic decline and political chaos continued.
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