Sultan Mohammed Khan Mengal
Sultan Mohammed Khan Mengal | |
---|---|
Born | November 1918 |
Died | 26 September 2021 Quetta, Balochistan province, Pakistan | (aged 102)
Allegiance | British India Pakistan |
Service | British Indian Army (1941–1947) Pakistan Army (1947–1967) |
Years of service | 1941–1967[1] |
Rank | Lieutenant Colonel |
Battles / wars | World War II |
Lieutenant Colonel (retd) Sultan Mohammed Khan Mengal (November 1918 – 26 September 2021) was the oldest Pakistan Army veteran. He joined the British Indian Army in 1941 and was commissioned in the 5th Baluch (Jacob Regiment) in 1942.[2] Following the independence of Pakistan, he joined Pakistan Army and retired as a Lieutenant Colonel in 1967. Sultan Mohammad also held pivotal positions in Balochistan after his retirement, such as the Vice Chancellor of University of Balochistan, the Commander of the Balochistan Dehi Muhaafiz (now known as Balochistan Reserve Police) and as Director of Project Kohlu. He died on 26 September 2021 in Quetta and was 103 years old at the time of his death.[1][3]
Family
[edit]Sultan Mengal was born in November 1918.[4] His father's name was Mir Habib Khan. Habib Khan belonged to the celebrated Paindzai subclan of the Zagr Mengal branch of the Mengal Tribe. Sultan Khan's mother was Bibi Hooran. She was the sister of Mir Raheem Khan, the head of the Rakhshani Badini Tribe. She was a learned woman who knew how to read Persian and also the Quran in Arabic, which was thought of as considerable achievement for a man, more-so a woman. She played an important role in raising her sons. Sultan Muhammad was the Youngest among five brothers. He also had three sisters.[5][unreliable source?]
His eldest brother Mir Samand Khan (born c. 1889) had served in the British Army and also as a commander in Khan of Kalat's army. His second brother Mir Lawang Khan (born c. 1901) was a tribal politician and also had the reputation of being a self-taught local doctor. He died on 7 August 1973 while fighting with the Pakistan Army during the 1973 Military Operation carried out in Balochistan by the Federal Government. Mir Lawang Khan is noted for being a martyr of the Baloch people. Sultan Mohammad was arrested the day he returned to Quetta after burying Mir Lawang Khan. Sultan Khan's third brother Mir Lal Bux Mengal (born c.1906) also served for a while in Khan of Kalat's army during which time he held a commanding position in Makran. Sultan Mohammad's Fourth Brother Mir Gul Khan Nasir was a Baloch politician, poet, historian, and journalist from Balochistan. Most of his work is in Balochi language, but he also wrote in English, Urdu, Brahui and Persian.[5][unreliable source?]
Military career
[edit]Sultan Mengal started his military career by joining the British Indian Army in 1941 and got a commission in the 5th Baluch (Jacob Regiment) in 1942.[2][1] After the independence of Pakistan, he joined Pakistan Army's Frontier Force Regiment and also served as the instructor at Infantry School Quetta. He also served as the commandant of the Khyber Rifles, 2FF Guides, Sutlej Rangers, Northern Scouts Gilgit.[2] He retired in 1967 from Pakistan Army as a Lieutenant Colonel.[1][6]
Commander of the Balochistan Dehi Muhafiz
[edit]Sultan Mohammad became the first Chief of the Force for the newly established Dehi Muhafiz (Rural Police). The then provincial government of Chief Minister Ataullah Mengal sought to induct more Baloch into the provincial police and civil service. As noted in The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan; "[t]he Mengal Ministry dislocated 60 per cent of the non-Baloch officers of the Balochistan Reserve Police and instituted a new police structure" known as Balochistan Dehi Muhafiz (BDM).[7] The Dehi Muhafiz also filled the gap left by the transfer of 2,600 Reserve Police to their home provinces.[8] A white paper of the Federal government stated that 1,100 men had been recruited into the BDM, claiming they were "mostly supporters of the NAP."[7] Hasan-Askari Rizvi also states that the BDM mainly consisted of "loyal tribesmen."[9] The formation of the BDM, together with other actions of the Mengal ministry led to a "serious rift between the provincial and federal governments."[10]
The Balochistan Dehi Muhafiz force was used together with tribal lashkars to attack the Jamotes in Lasbela, then rivals of the provincial government, between December 1972 and February 1973. Around 8,000 Jamotes were "surrounded and besieged", while property losses added up to Rs. 2.6 million, as claimed by a Federal white paper, which also claimed the operation was under Ataullah Mengal's direct command. This provided the Federal government, which had already been pertubed by the transfer of non-Baloch civil servants, to act against the Mengal Provincial government.[7][9] Previously the Federal Government looked at it with considerable suspicion and planned to defeat the BDM by any means. According to Mir Ghaus Bakhsh Bizenjo, the Balochistan Dehi Muhafiz was organised with the full knowledge and approval of the Governors’ Conference. Yet the Centre launched a campaign alleging that this was a "private army” of the NAP, ordering the Pakistan Army to take control of Lasbela District on February 9th, 1973. The PPP ministry later maintained this force, with only its name changed into “Balochistan Police Reserve", after which Col. Sultan Mohammad Mengal was removed as Chief.[11][7] According to a 1981 statement of Ataullah Mengal to Tariq Ali "Bhutto and his Punjabi aide Khar organized a police strike against our government",[12][13] which, according to Taj Mohammad Breseeg "paralyzed the province."[11]
Death
[edit]Sultan Mengal died at the age of 103 in Combined Military Hospital in the city of Quetta on 26 September 2021.[2] Pakistan military spokesman, Major General Babar Iftikhar, expressed his condolences on the demise of Sultan Mohammed Khan Mengal and described him as "a keen soldier and adventurist who had climbed, walked, skied, sailed and rowed through all of the country’s natural terrain on many expeditions".[14][15][16]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d "Pakistan Army's oldest veteran dies at 103: ISPR". ARY NEWS. 26 September 2021.
- ^ a b c d "پاک فوج کے معمر ترین افسر انتقال کرگئے پاک فوج کے لیفٹیننٹ کرنل سلطان محمد خان مینگل کی عمر 103 سال تھی". UrduPoint (in Urdu). 27 September 2021.
- ^ "Oldest Pakistan Army veteran Lt-Col (r) Sultan Mengal breathes his last at 103". Daily Pakistan Global. 27 September 2021.
- ^ "اولڈ وار ویٹرن لیفٹیننٹ کرنل ریٹائرڈ سلطان محمد خان مینگل انتقال کرگئے". Roznama Dunya (in Urdu). 27 September 2021.
- ^ a b "Mir Gul Khan Naseer (Politician, Scholar, Historian, Poet) 1914-1986". baask.com. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
- ^ Zehra, Mehak (27 September 2021). "Lt Col. Sultan Mengal, Oldest Army Veteran Passes Away At 103". Brandsynario.
- ^ a b c d Siddiqi, Farhan Hanif (2012). The Politics of Ethnicity in Pakistan: The Baloch, Sindhi and Mohajir Ethnic Movements. Routledge. pp. 66–67. ISBN 978-0-415-68614-3.
- ^ Yaqubi, Himayatullah (2015). "PAKISTAN NATIONAL AWAMI PARTY: NATURE AND DIRECTION OF POLITICS" (PDF). [Quaid-i-Azam University]].
- ^ a b Rizvi, Hasan-Askari (September 1, 2000). Military, State and Society in Pakistan (2000th ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. p. 155. ISBN 978-0312231934.
- ^ "Roots of resentment - II". The Friday Times. 2016-08-05. Retrieved 2024-10-20.
- ^ a b Breseeg, Taj Mohammad (2001). "Baloch Nationalism: Its Origin and Development up to 1980" (PDF). School of Oriental & African Studies. Baloch Nationalism: Its Origin and Development up to 1980. University of London: 267.
- ^ Tariq Ali, Can Pakistan Survive?. The Death of a State. pp. 117–118.
- ^ "Ironic indeed". Daily Times. 2016-04-22. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
- ^ "ISPR DG condoles demise of oldest veteran soldier of Pakistan Army". Daily Times. 27 September 2021.
- ^ "Army veteran Sultan Mengal passes away". DAWN.COM. 27 September 2021.
- ^ "ISPR DG condoles demise of Lieutenant Colonel (R) Sultan Mohammed Khan Mengal". www.radio.gov.pk. 27 September 2021.