East Pakistan[b] was the eastern province ofPakistan between 1955 and 1971, restructured and renamed from the province ofEast Bengal and covering the territory of the modern country ofBangladesh. Its land borders were with India andBurma, with a coastline on theBay of Bengal. East Pakistanis were popularly known as "Pakistani Bengalis"; to distinguish this region from India's stateWest Bengal (which is also known as "Indian Bengal"), East Pakistan was known as "Pakistani Bengal". In 1971, East Pakistan became the newly independent state Bangladesh, which means "country ofBengal" or "country ofBengalis" inBengali language.
TheEast Pakistan Provincial Assembly was the legislative body of the territory, it was the largest provincial legislature in Pakistan and elections were held only twice in 1954 and 1970. During the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971, most Bengali members elected to the Pakistani National Assembly and the East Pakistani provincial assembly became members of the Constituent Assembly of Bangladesh.
Due to the strategic importance of East Pakistan, the Pakistani union was a member of theSoutheast Asia Treaty Organization. The economy of East Pakistan grew at an average of 2.6% between 1960 and 1965. The federal government invested more funds and foreign aid in West Pakistan, even though East Pakistan generated a major share of exports. However, President Ayub Khan did implement significant industrialisation in East Pakistan. TheKaptai Dam was built in 1965. TheEastern Refinery was established inChittagong.Dacca was declared as thesecond capital of Pakistan and planned as the home of the national parliament. The government recruited American architectLouis Kahn to design the national assembly complex inDacca.[3]
In 1955, Prime MinisterMohammad Ali Bogra implemented theOne Unit scheme which merged the four western provinces into a single unit called West Pakistan while East Bengal was renamed as East Pakistan.[4]
Pakistan ended its dominion status and adopted arepublican constitution in 1956, which proclaimed an Islamic republic.[5] The populist leaderH. S. Suhrawardy of East Pakistan was appointed prime minister of Pakistan. As soon as he became the prime minister, Suhrawardy initiated legal work reviving the joint electorate system. There was strong opposition and resentment to the joint electorate system in West Pakistan.[6] The Muslim League had taken the cause to the public and began calling for the implementation of a separate electorate system. In contrast to West Pakistan, the joint electorate was highly popular in East Pakistan. The tug of war with the Muslim League to establish the appropriate electorate caused problems for his government.[citation needed]
The constitutionally obliged National Finance Commission Program (NFC Program) was immediately suspended by Prime Minister Suhrawardy despite the reserves of the four provinces of West Pakistan in 1956. Suhrawardy advocated for the USSR-based Five-Year Plans to centralise the national economy. In this view, East Pakistan's economy would be quickly centralised and all major economic planning would be shifted to West Pakistan.[citation needed]
Efforts leading to centralising the economy were met with great resistance in West Pakistan when the elite monopolist and the business community angrily refused to adhere to his policies.[citation needed] The business community in Karachi began its political struggle to undermine any attempts of financial distribution of the US$10 million ICA aid to the better part of East Pakistan and to set up a consolidated national shipping corporation. In the financial cities of West Pakistan, such asKarachi,Lahore,Quetta, andPeshawar, a series of major labour strikes against the economic policies of Suhrawardy were supported by the elite business community and the private sector.[7]
Furthermore, in order to divert attention from the controversial One Unit Program, Prime Minister Suhrawardy tried to end the crisis by calling a small group of investors to set up small businesses in the country. Despite many initiatives and holding off the NFC Award Program, Suhrawardy's political position and image deteriorated in the four provinces in West Pakistan. Many nationalist leaders and activists of the Muslim League were dismayed by the suspension of the constitutionally obliged NFC Program. His critics and Muslim League leaders observed that with the suspension of the NFC Award Program, Suhrawardy tried to give more financial allocations, aids, grants, and opportunities to East Pakistan than West Pakistan, including West Pakistan's four provinces. During the last days of his Prime ministerial years, Suhrawardy tried to remove the economic disparity between the Eastern and Western wings of the country but to no avail. He also tried unsuccessfully to alleviate the food shortage in the country.[8]
His contribution in formulating the 1956 constitution of Pakistan was substantial as he played a vital role in incorporating provisions for civil liberties and universal adult franchise in line with his adherence to the parliamentary form of liberal democracy.[citation needed]
Elizabeth II, seen here visiting Chittagong in 1961, was Pakistan's Queen until 1956.
In 1958, PresidentIskandar Mirza enacted martial law as part of amilitary coup by thePakistan Army's chiefAyub Khan. Roughly after two weeks, President Mirza's relations with Pakistan Armed Forces deteriorated leading Army Commander General Ayub Khan relieving the president from his presidency and forcefully exiling President Mirza to the United Kingdom. General Ayub Khan justified his actions after appearing on national radio declaring that: "the armed forces and the people demanded a clean break with the past...". Until 1962, the martial law continued while Field Marshal Ayub Khan purged a number of politicians and civil servants from the government and replaced them with military officers. Ayub called his regime a "revolution to clean up the mess of black marketing and corruption". Khan replaced Mirza as president and became the country'sstrongman for eleven years. Martial law continued until 1962 when the government of Field Marshal Ayub Khan commissioned a constitutional bench under Chief Justice of Pakistan Muhammad Shahabuddin, composed of ten senior justices, each five from East Pakistan and five from West Pakistan. On 6 May 1961, the commission sent its draft to President Ayub Khan. He thoroughly examined the draft while consulting with his cabinet.
In January 1962, the cabinet finally approved the text of thenew constitution, promulgated by President Ayub Khan on 1 March 1962, which came into effect on 8 June 1962. Under the 1962 constitution, Pakistan became apresidential republic.Universal suffrage was abolished in favour of a system dubbed 'Basic Democracy'. Under the system, anelectoral college would be responsible for electing the president and national assembly. The 1962 constitution created a gubernatorial system in West and East Pakistan. Each province ran its own separate provincial gubernatorial governments. The constitution defined a division of powers between the central government and the provinces.Fatima Jinnah received strong support in East Pakistan during her failed bid to unseat Ayub Khan in the1965 presidential election.
Dacca was declared as thesecond capital of Pakistan in 1962. It was designated as the legislative capital andLouis Kahn was tasked with designing anational assembly complex. Dacca's population increased in the 1960s. Seven natural gas fields were tapped in the province. The petroleum industry developed as the Eastern Refinery was established in the port city of Chittagong.
The Constitution should provide for a Federation of Pakistan in its true sense based on theLahore Resolution, and the parliamentary form of government with supremacy of a Legislature directly elected on the basis of universal adult franchise.
The federal government should deal with only two subjects: Defence and Foreign Affairs, and all other residual subjects should be vested in the federating states.
Two separate, but freely convertible currencies for two wings should be introduced; or if this is not feasible, there should be one currency for the whole country, but effective constitutional provisions should be introduced to stop the flight of capital from East to West Pakistan. Furthermore, a separate Banking Reserve should be established and separate fiscal and monetary policy be adopted for East Pakistan.
The power of taxation and revenue collection should be vested in the federating units and the federal centre would have no such power. The federation would be entitled to a share in the state taxes to meet its expenditures.
There should be two separate accounts for the foreign exchange earnings of the two wings; the foreign exchange requirements of the federal government should be met by the two wings equally or in a ratio to be fixed; indigenous products should move free of duty between the two wings, and the constitution should empower the units to establish trade links with foreign countries.
East Pakistan should have a separate military or paramilitary force, and Navy headquarters should be in East Pakistan.
When the federal general election was held, the Awami League emerged as the single largest party in the Pakistani parliament. The League won 167 out of 169 seats in East Pakistan, thereby crossing the half way mark of 150 in the 300-seatNational Assembly of Pakistan.[12] In theory, this gave the League the right to form a government under theWestminster tradition. But the League failed to win a single seat in West Pakistan, where the Pakistan Peoples Party emerged as the single largest party with 81 seats. Themilitary junta stalled the transfer of power and conducted prolonged negotiations with the League. Acivil disobedience movement erupted across East Pakistan demanding the convening of parliament.Mujib-ur- Rahman announced a struggle for independence from Pakistan during a speech on 7 March 1971 and called for anon-cooperation movement from the Bengali populace. Between 7–26 March, East Pakistan was virtually under the popular control of the Awami League. On Pakistan's Republic Day on 23 March 1971, the firstflag of Bangladesh was hoisted in many East Pakistani households. Pakistan Army was ordered to immediately launch a crackdown on 26 March whose purpose was to curb the resistance, some of these operations includeOperation Searchlight[13] and the1971 Dhaka University massacre.[14][15] This led to theBangladeshi Declaration of Independence.[16]
With Ayub Khan ousted from office in 1969, Commander of the Pakistani Army,General Yahya Khan became the country's second ruling chief martial law administrator. Both Bhutto andMujib strongly disliked General Khan, but patiently endured him and his government as he had promised to hold an election in 1970. During this time, strong nationalistic sentiments in East Pakistan were perceived by the Pakistani Armed Forces and the central military government. Therefore, Khan and his military government wanted to divert the nationalistic threats and violence against non-East Pakistanis. TheEastern Command was under constant pressure from the Awami League and requested an active-duty officer to control the command under such extreme pressure. The highflag rank officers, junior officers, and many high command officers from Pakistan's Armed Forces were highly cautious about their appointment in East-Pakistan, and the assignment of governing East Pakistan and appointment of an officer was considered highly difficult for the Pakistan High Military Command.
East Pakistan's Armed Forces, under themilitary administrations of Major-GeneralMuzaffaruddin and Lieutenant-GeneralSahabzada Yaqub Khan, used an excessive amount of show of military force to curb theuprising in the province. With such action, the situation became highly critical and civil control over the province slipped away from the government. On 24 March, dissatisfied with the performance of his generals, Yahya Khan removed General Muzaffaruddin and General Yaqub Khan from office on 1 September 1969. The appointment of a military administrator was considered quite difficult and challenging with the crisis continually deteriorating. Vice-AdmiralSyed Mohammad Ahsan,Commander-in-Chief of thePakistan Navy, had previously served as political and military adviser of East Pakistan to former President Ayub Khan. Having such a strong background in administration, and being an expert on East Pakistan affairs, General Yahya Khan appointed Vice-Admiral Syed Mohammad Ahsan asMartial Law Administrator, with absolute authority in his command. He was relieved as naval chief and received an extension from the government.[citation needed]
The tense relations between East and West Pakistan reached a climax in 1970 when the Awami League, the largest East Pakistani political party, led bySheikh Mujibur Rahman, (Mujib), won a landslide victory in the national elections in East Pakistan. The party won 160 of the 162 seats allotted to East Pakistan, and thus a majority of the 300 seats in the Parliament. This gave the Awami League the constitutional right to form a government without forming a coalition with any other party. Khan invited Mujib toRawalpindi to take the charge of the office, and negotiations took place between the military government and the Awami Party. Bhutto was shocked with the results and threatened his fellowPeoples Party members if they attended the inaugural session at theNational Assembly, famously saying he would "break the legs" of any member of his party who dared enter and attend the session. However, fearing East Pakistani separatism, Bhutto demanded Mujib to form a coalition government. After a secret meeting held inLarkana, Mujib agreed to give Bhutto the office of the presidency with Mujib as prime minister. General Yahya Khan and his military government were kept unaware of these developments and under pressure from his own military government, refused to allow Mujib-ur-Rahman to become the prime minister of Pakistan. This increased agitation for greater autonomy in East Pakistan. The military police arrested Mujib and Bhutto and placed them inAdiala Jail in Rawalpindi. The news spread like a fire in both East and West Pakistan, and the struggle for independence began in East Pakistan.[19]
The senior high command officers in Pakistan Armed Forces, and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, began to pressure General Yahya Khan to take armed action against Mujib and his party. Bhutto later distanced himself from Yahya Khan after he was arrested by Military Police along with Mujib. Soon after the arrests, a high-level meeting was chaired by Yahya Khan. During the meeting, high commanders of the Pakistan Armed Forces unanimously recommended an armed and violent military action. East Pakistan's Martial Law AdministratorAdmiral Ahsan, Governor of East Pakistan, and Air CommodoreZafar Masud,Air Officer Commanding ofDacca's only airbase, were the only officers to object to the plans. When it became obvious that military action in East Pakistan was inevitable, Admiral Ahsan resigned from his position as martial law administrator in protest, and immediately flew back toKarachi, West Pakistan. Disheartened and isolated, Admiral Ahsan took early retirement from the Navy and quietly settled in Karachi. OnceOperation Searchlight andOperation Barisal commenced, Air Marshal Masud flew to West Pakistan, and unlike Admiral Ahsan, tried to stop the violence in East Pakistan. When he failed in his attempts to meet General Yahya Khan, Masud too resigned from his position as AOC of Dacca airbase and took retirement from Air Force.
Lieutenant-General Sahibzada Yaqub Khan was sent into East Pakistan in an emergency, following a major blow of the resignation of Vice Admiral Ahsan. General Yaqub temporarily assumed the control of the province, he was also made the corps-commander ofEastern Corps. General Yaqub mobilised the entire major forces in East Pakistan.
Sheikh Mujib-ur-Rahman made a declaration of independence at Dacca on 26 March 1971. All major Awami League leaders including elected leaders of the National Assembly and Provincial Assembly fled to neighbouring India and anexile government was formed headed by Sheikh Mujib-ur-Rahman. While he was in a Pakistan prison,Syed Nazrul Islam was the acting president withTajuddin Ahmed as the prime minister. The exile government took oath on 17 April 1971 at Mujib Nagar, within East Pakistan territory of Kushtia district, and formally formed the government. Colonel MOG Osmani was appointed the Commander in Chief ofLiberation Forces and whole East Pakistan was divided into eleven sectors headed by eleven sector commanders. All sector commanders were Bengali officers who had defected from the Pakistan Army. This started the nine-month longBangladesh Liberation War in which thefreedom fighters, joined in December 1971 by 400,000Indian soldiers, faced thePakistani Armed Forces of 365,000 plus paramilitary andcollaborationist forces. An additional approximately 25,000 ill-equipped civilian volunteers and police forces also sided with the Pakistan Armed Forces. Bloodyguerrilla warfare ensued in East Pakistan.
The Pakistan Armed Forces were unable to counter such threats. With no intel and low morale, they performed poorly and were inexperienced in guerrilla tactics, Pakistan Armed Forces and their assets were defeated by the Bangladesh Liberation Forces. In April 1971, Lieutenant-General Tikka Khan succeeded General Yaqub Khan as the Corps Commander. General Tikka Khan led the massive violent andmassacre campaigns in the region. He is held responsible for killing hundreds of thousands of Bengali people in East Pakistan, mostly civilians and unarmed peoples. For his role, General Tikka Khan gained the title of "Butcher of Bengal". General Khan faced an international reaction against Pakistan, and therefore, General Tikka was removed as Commander of the Eastern front. He installed a civilian administration under Abdul Motaleb Malik on 31 August 1971, which proved to be ineffective. However, during the meeting, with no high officers willing to assume the command of East Pakistan, Lieutenant-GeneralAmir Abdullah Khan Niazi volunteered for the command of East Pakistan. Inexperienced and the large magnitude of this assignment, the government sent Rear-AdmiralMohammad Shariff as Flag Officer Commanding of Eastern Naval Command (Pakistan). Admiral Shariff served as the deputy of General Niazi when doing joint military operations. However, General Niazi proved to be a failure and ineffective ruler. Therefore,General Niazi and Air CommodoreInamul Haque Khan, AOC, PAF Base Dacca, failed to launch any operation in East Pakistan against Indian or its allies. Except for Admiral Shariff who continued to keep pressure on the Indian Navy until the end of the conflict. Admiral Shariff's effective plans made it nearly impossible for the Indian Navy to land its naval forces on the shores of East Pakistan. The Indian Navy was unable to land forces in East Pakistan and the Pakistan Navy was still offering resistance. TheIndian Army, entered East Pakistan from all three directions of the province. TheIndian Navy then decided to wait near the Bay of Bengal until the Army reached the shore.
The Indian Air Force dismantled the capability of the Pakistan Air Force in East Pakistan. Air CommodoreInamul Haque Khan, Dacca airbase's AOC, failed to offer any serious resistance to the actions of the Indian Air Force. For the most part of the war, the IAF enjoyed complete dominance in the skies over East Pakistan.
On 16 December 1971, the Pakistan Armed Forces surrendered to thejoint liberation forces ofMukti Bahini and the Indian Army, headed by Lieutenant-GeneralJagjit Singh Arora, the General Officer Commanding-in-Chief (GOC-in-C) of the Eastern Command of the Indian Army. Lieutenant General AAK Niazi, the last corps commander ofEastern Corps, signed theInstrument of Surrender at about 4:31 pm. Over 93,000 personnel, including Lt. General Niazi and Admiral Shariff, were taken asprisoners of war.
On 16 December 1971, the territory of East Pakistan was handed over to the Indian Army under thesurrender agreement from West Pakistan and in theSimla Agreement became the newly independent state ofBangladesh. The Eastern Command, civilian institutions, and paramilitary forces were disbanded in the following months.[citation needed]
In contrast to the desert and rugged mountainous terrain of West Pakistan, East Pakistan featured theworld's largest delta, 700 rivers, and tropical hilly jungles. The Chittagong Division of East Pakistan was home to hill ranges and forests (mainly in theChittagong Hill Tracts and Sylhet). TheKhulna Division and parts of the Dacca and Chittagong Divisions were largely Deltaic. East Pakistan was almost entirely an alluvial plain which consists of lower course of thePadma andJamuna. Climatically, East Pakistan was essentially humid, hot climate with heavy to very heavy rainfall. The implication of East Pakistan's heavy rainfall was that the main crops that were grown in East Pakistan were rice, tea, and jute.[20]
TheKaptai Dam in 19651971 documentary film about East PakistanPresident Ayub Khan (left) with Bengali industrialistAbul Kashem Khan (right) in ChittagongEntrance to theAdamjee Jute Mills, the world's largest jute processing plant, in 1950
At the time of thePartition of British India,East Bengal had aplantation economy. TheChittagong Tea Auction was established in 1949 as the region was home to the world's largest tea plantations. TheEast Pakistan Stock Exchange Association was established in 1954. Many wealthy Muslim immigrants from India,Burma, and former British colonies settled in East Pakistan. TheIspahani family, Africawala brothers, and the Adamjee family were pioneers of industrialisation in the region. Many of modern Bangladesh's leading companies were born in the East Pakistan period.
By the 1950s, East Bengal surpassedWest Bengal in having the largestjute industries in the world. TheAdamjee Jute Mills was the largest jute processing plant in history and its location in Narayanganj was nicknamed theDundee of the East. The Adamjees were descendants ofSir Haji Adamjee Dawood, who made his fortune inBritish Burma.
In 1965, Pakistan implemented theKaptai Dam hydroelectric project in the southeastern part of East Pakistan with American assistance. It was the sole hydroelectric dam in East Pakistan. The project was controversial for displacing over 40,000 indigenous people from the area.
The centrally located metropolis Dacca witnessed significant urban growth.
Although, East Pakistan had a larger population, West Pakistan dominated the divided country politically and received more money from the common budget. According to theWorld Bank, there was much economic discrimination against East Pakistan, including higher government spending on West Pakistan, financial transfers from East to West, and the use of the East's foreign exchange surpluses to finance the West's imports.
The discrimination occurred despite the fact that East Pakistan generated a major share of Pakistan's exports.
Spending on East Pakistan (in millions of Pakistani rupees)
Amount spent on East as percentage of West
1950–55
11,290
5,240
46.4
1955–60
16,550
5,240
31.7
1960–65
33,550
14,040
41.8
1965–70
51,950
21,410
41.2
Total
113,340
45,930
40.5
Source: Reports of the Advisory Panels for the Fourth Five Year Plan 1970–75, Vol. I, published by the planning commission of Pakistan.
The annual rate of growth of the gross domestic product per capita was 4.4% in West Pakistan versus 2.6% in East Pakistan from 1960 to 1965. Bengali politicians pushed for more autonomy, arguing that much of Pakistan's export earnings were generated in East Pakistan from the exportation of Bengali jute and tea. As late as 1960, approximately 70% of Pakistan's export earnings originated in East Pakistan, although this percentage declined as international demand for jute dwindled. By the mid-1960s, East Pakistan was accounting for less than 60% of the nation's export earnings, and by the time Bangladesh gained its independence in 1971, this percentage had dipped below 50%. In 1966, Mujib demanded that separate foreign exchange accounts be kept and that separate trade offices be opened overseas. By the mid-1960s, West Pakistan was benefiting from Ayub's "Decade of Progress" with its successfulGreen Revolution in wheat and from the expansion of markets for West Pakistani textiles, while East Pakistan's standard of living remained at an abysmally low level. Bengalis were also upset that West Pakistan, the seat of the national government, received more foreign aid. However, East Pakistan did nonetheless benefit from industrialisation and development, which was discerned by the Kaptai Dam in the Chittagong Hill Tracts for instance.
Economists in East Pakistan argued a "Two Economies Theory" within Pakistan itself, which was founded on the Two-Nation Theory with India. The so-called Two Economies Theory suggested that East and West Pakistan had different economic features which should not be regulated by a federal government in Islamabad.[21]
The Daily Ittefaq, edited byTofazzal Hossain, was the leading Bengali newspaper in Pakistan.The first Bangladeshi flag was hoisted on 23 March 1971 across East Pakistan, as a protest on Republic Day.
As per the 1951 census, East Pakistan had a population of 44,251,826 people, of which 34,029,654 followedIslam, 9,757,527 people followedHinduism and 464,644 people followed other religions:Buddhism,Christianity andAnimism.[1] According to the 1961 census, Muslims made up 80.4% of the population, Hindus were 18.4%, and the remaining 1.2% belonged to other religions, mainly Christianity and Buddhism.[23][24]
Bengalis, Pashtuns, Baloch, Gilgit were hugely under-represented in Pakistan's bureaucracy and military. In the federal government, only 15% of offices were occupied by East Pakistanis. Only 10% of the military were from East Pakistan. Cultural discrimination also prevailed, causing the eastern wing to forge a distinct political identity. The Bengal Buddhist influenced culture was different from the west Pakistani Hindu influenced culture.
The Indo-East Pakistan border as shown by theU.S. Army, c. 1960
Since its unification with Pakistan, theEast Pakistan Army had consisted of only one infantry brigade made up of two battalions, the 1st East Bengal Regiment and the1/14 or 3/8 Punjab Regiment in 1948. These two battalions boasted only five rifle companies between them (an infantry battalion normally had 5 companies).[25] This weak brigade was under the command of Brigadier Ayub Khan (acting Major-General –GOC of 14th Army Division), together with theEast Pakistan Rifles, which was tasked with defending East Pakistan during theIndo-Pakistani War of 1947.[26] ThePAF,Marines, and theNavy had little presence in the region. Only one PAF combatant squadron,No. 14 SquadronTail Choppers, was active in East Pakistan. This combatant squadron was commanded bySquadron LeaderParvaiz Mehdi Qureshi, who later became a four-star general. The East Pakistan military personnel were trained in combat diving, demolitions, and guerrilla/anti-guerrilla tactics by the advisers from theSpecial Service Group (Navy) who were also charged with intelligence data collection and management cycle.
The East Pakistan Navy had only one active-duty combatant destroyer, thePNSSylhet; one submarineGhazi (which was repeatedly deployed in the West); four gunboats, inadequate to function in deep water. The joint special operations were managed and undertaken by the Naval Special Service Group (SSG(N)) who was assisted by the army, air force, and marines unit. The entire service, the Marines were deployed in East Pakistan, initially tasked with conducting exercises and combat operations inriverine areas and at the near shoreline. The small directorate ofNaval Intelligence (while the headquarters and personnel, facilities, and directions were coordinated by West) had a vital role in directing special and reconnaissance missions, and intelligence gathering also was charged with taking reasonable actions to slow down the Indian threat. The armed forces of East Pakistan also consisted of the paramilitary organisation, theRazakars from the intelligence unit of theISI's Covert Action Division (CAD).
The trauma was extremely severe inPakistan when the news of secession of East Pakistan asBangladesh arrived—a psychological setback,[30] complete and humiliating defeat that shattered the prestige of the Pakistan Armed Forces.[30][31] The governor and martial law administrator, Lieutenant-GeneralAmir Abdullah Khan Niazi, was defamed, his image was maligned and he was stripped of his honours.[30] The people ofPakistan could not come to terms with the magnitude of the defeat, and spontaneous demonstrations and mass protests erupted on the streets of major cities in (West) Pakistan.[30] GeneralYahya Khan surrendered powers to Nurul Amin of thePakistan Muslim League, the first and lastvice-president andprime minister of Pakistan.[30]
Prime Minister Amin invited then-PresidentZulfikar Ali Bhutto and thePakistan Peoples Party to take control ofPakistan in a colourful ceremony where Bhutto gave a daring speech to the nation onnational television.[30] At the ceremony, Bhutto waved his fist in the air and pledged to his nation to never again allow the surrender of his country like what happened with East Pakistan. He launched and orchestrated the large-scaleatomic bomb project in 1972.[32] In memorial of East Pakistan, theEast-Pakistan diaspora in Pakistan established the East-Pakistan colony in Karachi, Sindh.[33] In accordance, the East-Pakistani diaspora also composed patriotic tributes to Pakistan after the war; songs such as "Sohni Dharti" (lit. "Beautiful Land") and "Jeevay, Jeevay Pakistan" (lit. "long-live, long-live Pakistan"), were composed by Bengali singerShahnaz Rahmatullah in the 1970s and 1980s.
According toWilliam Langewiesche, writing forThe Atlantic, "it may seem obvious that the loss of Bangladesh was a blessing"[32]—but it has never been seen that way in Pakistan.[32] In the bookScoop! Inside Stories from the Partition to the Present, Indian politicianKuldip Nayar opined, "Losing East Pakistan and Bhutto's releasing of Mujib did not mean anything to Pakistan's policy—as if there was no liberation war".[34] Bhutto's policy, and even today the policy ofPakistan, is that "she will continue to fight for the honour and integrity ofPakistan".[34]
^Sanaullah, M. (1962). "Second and Third Release from the Second Population Census of Pakistan, 1961".The Pakistan Development Review.2 (1):106–113.doi:10.30541/v2i1pp.106-113 (inactive 1 November 2024).ISSN0030-9729.JSTOR41258062.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: DOI inactive as of November 2024 (link)
^Ali, Tariq (1983).Can Pakistan Survive? The Death of a State. Penguin Books. pp. 98–99.ISBN0-14-02-2401-7.The defeat of the Pakistan army traumatized West Pakistan and considerably dented the prestige of the armed services ... The defeat suffered in Dacca and the break-up of the country traumatized the population from top to bottom.
^abcLangewiesche, William (November 2005)."The Wrath of Khan".The Atlantic.Archived from the original on 24 August 2011. Retrieved31 July 2016.Thirty-four years later it may seem obvious that the loss of Bangladesh was a blessing—but it is still not seen so today in Pakistan, and it was certainly not seen so at the time ... One month after the surrender of Pakistan's army in Bangladesh [Bhutto] called a secret meeting of about seventy Pakistani scientists ... He asked them for a nuclear bomb, and they responded enthusiastically.
^Abbas Naqvi (17 December 2006)."Falling back".Daily Times. Pakistan. Archived fromthe original on 5 August 2011. Retrieved25 March 2012.Few people in Karachi's Chittagong Colony can forget Dec 16, 1971 – the Fall of Dhaka