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The Bogra Formula was a political compromise presented and proposed by Prime Minister Bogra on 7 October 1953 before the Constituent Assembly. [42] Upon taking the control of the Prime Minister's Secretariat , Bogra announced that drafting of the codified Constitution was his primary target, and within six months, he announced a proposal that ...
It was led by Prime Minister Muhammad Ali Bogra on 22 November 1954 and passed on 30 September 1955. The government claimed that the programme would overcome the difficulty of administering the two unequal polities of West and East Pakistan separated from each other by more than a thousand miles. [1]
Governor-General Ghulam Mohammad dismissed Pakistani Prime Minister Khawaja Nazimuddin's government in 1953 despite the Prime Minister enjoying the support of the Constituent Assembly and, subsequently, dismissed Pakistan's first constituent assembly in 1954, [1] steps later described as Pakistan's constitutional coup given that Ghulam Mohammad was the representative of the head of state and ...
Next on 17 April, using his special powers under the Government of India Act 1935, Ghulam Muhammad dismissed Prime Minister, Khwaja Nazimuddin and the entire federal cabinet. Muhammad Ali Bogra (Pakistan's ambassador to the United States) replaced him. Bogra, who did not know why he was being called back, took the oath as new Prime Minister ...
Muhammad Ali Bogra is sworn as the new prime minister. 1953–1954 PAF's No. 14 Squadron led an operation from Miramshah airbase and heavily bombarded the Faqir of Ipi's compound in Gurwek ultimately causing the effective end of Waziristan rebellion (1948-1954)
Muhammad Ali Bogra: 27 February 1952 16 April 1953 Syed Amjad Ali: 26 September 1953 17 September 1955 Muhammad Ali Bogra: November 1955 March 1959 Aziz Ahmed: 23 March 1959 July 1963 Ghulam Ahmed 19 July 1963 15 September 1966 Agha Hilaly: 21 October 1966 20 October 1971 Maj Gen (R) N.A.M. Raza: 22 October 1971 22 April 1972 Sultan Mohammed ...
Nazimuddin became Prime Minister of Pakistan after the assassination of Liaquat Ali Khan in 1951. [20] He left the office when Governor-General Malik Ghulam Muhammad dissolved his government in 1953. [3] — 3 Mohammad Ali Bogra. محمد علی بوگرہ (1909–1963) 17 April 1953 12 August 1955 2 years, 117 days — Muslim League
Chaudhri Muhammad Ali [a] (15 July 1905 – 2 December 1982) was a Pakistani politician and statesman who served as the fourth prime minister of Pakistan from 1955 until his resignation in 1956. His government transitioned Pakistan from a British Dominion to an Islamic Republic .