Pakistan through history

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Gen. Niazi is treated to lunch by Lt Gen Jacob after the surrender ceremony
 
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Mohammed Ali Jinnah with Annie Besant and other leaders of the Home Rule League during his early political career
 
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c. 1970s: Justice Hamoodur Rehman presenting his commission report to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto.
 
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President Ayub Khan and Indian Prime Minister Jawahar Lal Nehru waving hands to the public in the commercial area of Karachi in 1960.
 
Briefing President Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto about Karachi Nuclear Power Plant, Chairman PAEC, Munir Ahmad Khan. Governor of Sindh Mumtaz Ali Bhutto is behind him.


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This letter is a historical correspondence between Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah and Mir Bande Ali Talpur regarding the crisis of the Sindh ministry.

In the 1940s, Sindh was the victim of political instability in its provincial government, where ministries kept changing time and again and again.

Differences between local leaders were common.
Quaid-e-Azam — who was the visionary leader of the All India Muslim League — guided and advised Mir Bande Ali Talpur.

He emphasized prioritizing unity, responsible government and the welfare of the people over personal and group interests.

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All Muslim League Poster, 24 December 1916
 
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Huzaifa

@MHuzaifaNizam

They were Armenians kicked out of Kabul who got sanctuary here. Old Peshawar is an entire world in itself. We also apparently had Peshawari Jews. There’s an extreme amount of undocumented history in old Peshawar.


2:36 PM · Jan 22, 2026
 
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Maj Brown of the Gilgit Rebellion and G D Langlands, the absolute madlad who parachuted into Dieppe and then became a headmaster in Chitral.

Sometimes I wonder what's in this dirt that makes people from all over the world feel as if it was their home all along.

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