A confidante of Quaid-e-Azam and a leading figure of the struggle for independence, Sardar Muhammad Ibrahim, had passed away in 2003, in Islamabad, after a prolonged illness. Popularly known as Ghazi-e-Millat (national hero) he was laid to rest in his native village, Rawalakot.
The AJK government has announced a public holiday on his death anniversary. In addition, special ceremonies would be organised in various parts of AJK including the capital town and tehsil headquarters, to pay homage to the departed Kashmiri leader for the services he had rendered for the cause of independence.
Education spending in AJK
In 1946, Ibrahim won the Jammu and Kashmir State Assembly election and became a member of the Praja Sabha. In 1947, during the Poonch rebellion, he led an army of Kashmiri guerrillas against the Maharaja of Kashmir, Hari Singh.
Before that, on 19 July 1947, Ibrahim’s Muslim Conference had passed a resolution for Kashmir’s accession to Pakistan.
Ibrahim and his army were unable to capture the entire Kashmiri territory due to a resolution passed by the United Nations on August 13, 1948.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 30th, 2017.
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