Sardar Mohammad Aslam Khan

Sardar Muhammad Aslam Khan (June 1937 – 12 December 1997) was member of the upper house of parliament of Pakistan (the Senate). He was twice elected as senator on the Pakistan Peoples Party ticket. He was also member of Pakistan Peoples Party central executive committee and President Pakistan Peoples Party Hazara division from 1967 to 1977. He was also a three-time president of the District Bar Association Abbottabad.

Background

Sardar Aslam was born in Nawanshehr, District Abbottabad. He was son of Retired Subedar and Honorary Captain Sardar Zain Muhammad Khan, of the Karlal tribe of Abbottabad and one of earliest parliamentarians of North-West Frontier Province (NWFP) from Hazara. The elder Sardar was elected as Member Legislative Assembly of NWFP in 1946 elections on the ticket of All India Muslim League from Abbottabad and, after the creation of Pakistan, also served as parliamentary secretary for education till 1952.[1]

Sardar Muhammad Aslam was a law graduate from Peshawar University and initially joined the North-West Frontier Province police department as prosecutor, but in 1966 he resigned from service and started law practice in District Bar Abbottabad.

Political career

He remained President of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) Hazara Division and member Central Executive Committee of PPP from 1967-77. He along with Hayyat Sherpao Shaeed was a pioneer who laid the foundations of PPP in NWFP. In the initial phase of organizing of the PPP he was one the close aides of Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto.

In 1973 he became member of the first Senate of Pakistan for a three-year term by ballot and later on in 1976 was again nominated by Bhutto for another term of six years.[2] He remained a member of the Senate until the imposition of the Martial Law in 1977. He also represented Pakistan in International Parliamentarians Congress 1976 in Colombo and was also member of Pakistan's delegation to China in 1974 and 1975. He also served as President of District Bar Association Abbottabad three times. Apart from national politics, throughout his life he remained an influential tribal elder of district Abbottabad.[3] He died on 12 December 1997.[4][5][6]

References

  1. Quaid-e-Azam Papers Reports June 1947 Hazara
  2. SENATE OF PAKISTAN DIRECTORY 1973-1977
  3. Daily Mushriq ,Peshawar "YAD-e-Rifteghan Sardar Muhammad Aslam,12 December 1998
  4. Daily AAJ, Abbottabad, 12 December 1997
  5. Muslim League Records Notification of All India Muslim League Organizing Committee NWFP 1946.
  6. Daily Frontier Post,Peshawar,13 December 1997

External links

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