'West Pakistan' was the popular and sometimes official (1955–1970) name of the western wing of
Pakistan until
1971, when the eastern wing (
East Pakistan) became independent as
Bangladesh. The politically dominant western wing was composed of three Governor's provinces (
North-West Frontier Province,
Punjab and
Sind), one Chief Commissioner's province (
Balochistan), the
Baluchistan States Union, several other
princely states (notably
Bahawalpur,
Chitral,
Dir,
Hunza,
Khairpur and
Swat), the Federal Capital Territory (around
Karachi) and the
tribal areas.
The eastern wing formed the single province of
East Bengal (including the former
Assam district of
Sylhet), which despite having over half of the population had a disproportionately small number of seats in the Constituent Assembly. This inequality of the two wings and the geographical distance between them was believed to be holding up the adoption of a new
constitution. To diminish the differences between the two regions, the government decided to reorganise the country as two distinct provinces under the One Unit policy announced by
Prime Minister Chaudhry Muhammad Ali on 22nd November,
1954.
History
The province of West Pakistan was created in 14th October
1955 by the merger of the provinces, states and tribal areas of the western wing. The province was composed of twelve
divisions and the provincial capital was established at
Lahore. The province of
East Bengal was renamed East Pakistan with the provincial capital at
Dhaka. The federal government moved in
1959 from
Karachi to
Rawalpindi (provisional capital until
Islamabad was finished), whilst the federal legislature moved to Dhaka.
West Pakistan formed a seemingly block but with marked linguistic and ethnic distinctions and the One Unit policy was regarded as a rational administrative reform which would reduce expenditure and eliminate provincial prejudices. However with the military coup of
1958, trouble loomed for the province when the office of Chief Minister was abolished and the President took over executive powers for West Pakistan. The province of West Pakistan was dissolved in July
1970 by President
Yahya Khan.
General elections held in December
1970 saw the
Awami League under
Mujibur Rahman win an overall majority of seats in parliament (all but two of the 162 seats allocated to East Pakistan). The Awami League advocated greater autonomy for East Pakistan but the military government did not permit Mujibur Rahman to form a government.
On March 25th
1971, West Pakistan began a
civil war to subdue the democratic victory of East Pakistanis. This began the war between the Pakistani military and the
Mukhti Bahini. The resulting refugee crisis led to the intervention by
India, eventually leading to the surrender of the
Pakistani Army. East Pakistan suffered a genocide of its Bengali population. East Pakistan became the independent state of Bangladesh on December 16, 1971. The term West Pakistan became redundant.
Government
The office of 'Governor' of West Pakistan was a largely ceremonial position but later Governors wielded some executive powers as well. The first Governor was Mushtaq Ahmad Gurmani who was also the last Governor of West Punjab.
The 'Chief Minister' of West Pakistan was the chief executive of the province and the leader of the largest party in the provincial assembly. The first Chief Minister was
Dr Khan Sahib who had served twice as Chief Minister of the
North-West Frontier Province prior to independence. The office of Chief Minister was abolished on 1st July 1970 when President
Yahya Khan took over the administration of West Pakistan.
The 'twelve divisions' of West Pakistan province were
Bahawalpur,
Dera Ismail Khan,
Hyderabad,
Kalat,
Khairpur, Lahore,
Malakand,
Multan,
Peshawar,
Quetta, Rawalpindi, and
Sargodha; all named after their capitals except the capital of Malakand was Saidu, and Rawalpindi was administered from Islamabad. The province also incorporated the former
Omani enclave of
Gwadar following its purchase in 1958, and the former Federal Capital Territory (Karachi) in 1961; the latter forming a new division in its own right.
| Tenure | Governor of West Pakistan |
|---|
| 14th October 1955 - August 1957 | Mushtaq Ahmad Gurmani |
| August 1957 - April 1960 | Akhter Husain |
| April 1960 - 18th September 1966 | Malik Amir Mohammad Khan |
| 18th September 1966 - 20th March 1969 | Mohammad Musa Khan |
| 20th March 1969 - 25th March 1969 | Yusuf Haroon |
| 25th March 1969 - 29th August 1969 | M Attiqur Rahman (first term) (martial law administrator) |
| 29th August 1969 - 1st September 1969 | Tikka Khan (martial law administrator) |
| 1st September 1969 - 1st February 1970 | Nur Khan |
| 1st February 1970 - 1st July 1970 | M Attiqur Rahman (second term) |
| 1st July 1970 | Province of West Pakistan dissolved |
See also
★
Indo-Pakistani War of 1971
★
Bangladesh Liberation War
★
Partition of India