Friday , March 29 2024
Latest News
Home / City / Mughal Klan objects on declaring the rulers like Mughal Kings

Mughal Klan objects on declaring the rulers like Mughal Kings

The magnificent portrait the Mughal Emperor JahangirLahore: Mughal Klan objected on declaring the rulers like Mughal Kings.

Arguing that This kind of words specially specifically against one targeted Pakistani Mughal tribe or post will create hate for other and civil blood war in Pakistan.

First of all Pakistani rulers are not Mughal not even Mughal from tribe or blood line, Nawaz Sharif of PML-N is Kashmiri belong to Butt family and Zaradari PPP is sindhi Chaudhry, Pervaiz Elahi of PML-Q  is Jatt from Gujrat. None of them are Mughal, Mughals were great military leaders and good administrators too.

We Mughals were never interested in dirty politics only few people from us enter politics most of us hate dirty politics now below I will tell few famous Mughals there are many more true son of Pakistani soil who didn’t looted Pakistan these are true Pakistani proud present Mughals.

1. Brigadier Muhammad Abbas Baig from 1933 to 1963 .He was one of the pioneering military officers of the Pakistan Army who was dubbed “Baba-e-Artillery” (father of the Artillery) for his role in establishing this core section of Pakistani army .

The newly established Pakistan Army rapidly developed into an efficient force and it was primarily due to the dedication and hard work of officers such as Mirza Abbas Baig. He became the first Muslim commander of number three self-propelled medium regiment and the first commandant of the Artillery centre in Attock in 1952. Amongst his early achievements were the raising of first artillery division and number one Artillery Corps and played a central role in establishing artillery corps to form the backbone of the army.

Abbas Baig’s father, Mirza Azam Baig, was a prominent soldier who had fought in the European theatre for the British army during the Great War (1914–1918). He survived a German gas attack and went on to serve in the personal bodyguard regiment of the emperor of Persia.

2. Chief of Naval Staff of Pakistan Navy from 1999 to 2002, ADMIRAL ABDUL AZIZ MIRZA is a retired four-star rank admiral served commanded Pakistan Navy during the Indo-Pakistani standoff in 2001. He comes from a family of military service men who had served in the British Army before the creation of Pakistan. he was nominated and appointed as Pakistan Ambassador to Saudi Arabia in 2002 until 2005. Admiral Mirza is given credit for commissioning the country’s first ingeniously and locally built long-range submarine, the Agosta 90B submarine in 1999.

AWARDS:- Sitara-e-Basalat
Sitara-e-Imtiaz(Military)
Hilal-e-Imtiaz(Military)
Nishan-e-Imtiaz(Military)
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour French

COMMANDS HELD BY AZIZ MIRZA
Chief of Naval Staff
Secy at Ministry of Defence (MoD)
Commander Pakistan Fleet (COMPAK)
DG Naval Intelligence (DGNI)
Special Service Group Navy

3. Chief of Army Staff General MIRZA ASLAM BAIG from 1952 to 1991 is a retired four-star general of the Pakistan Army, who served as its Chief of Army Staff from 1988 until his retirement in 1991 the Mirza Aslam Baig family had traced a long ancestral roots of the Mughal Royal family who once were emperors of
India from the early 15th century to the early 18th century during his college years, Mirza played collegiate field hockey and was vital member of his hockey team which consisted mainly Muslims According to his memoirs, Baig sought revenge on a Hindu politician belonging to Congress Party after the politician had
beaten up a member of his hockey team Egged on by a mob of students, Baig used his hockey stick to beat up the politician at a public meeting this incident came after his graduation from college in 1949, and Baig family decided to move to Pakistan in 1949 after the Indian partition The Beg family set sailed for Karachi
from Mumbai via Pakistan Navy ship in 1949. His elder brother was already a commissioned officer in the Pakistan Army and encouraged young Beg to follow his path to seek a career in the army Beg recalled his memoirs to his Indian interviewer and called Pakistan as “my dream country In 1958, he passed the physical and psychological analysis tests for the special forces Beg departed to United States,
to complete special forces training with the US Army Special Forces in Fort Bragg, North
Carolina. In 1960, he returned to Pakistan and was inducted in the Special Service Group (SSG) after
receiving the promotion to the rank of Major. His new assignment was in field and commanded a commando company of the SSG

4. Lt General KHALID LATIF MUGHAL, May 1992 – October 1995 The I Corps, also known as I Strike Corps, of the Pakistan Army headquartered in Mangla, Azad Kashimir Territory of Pakistan. Known as
I Strike Corps, it is one of two strike corps within its ten manouvre Army corps. The I Strike Corps is one of the oldest and major formations of Pakistan Army, and a major component of Northern Military Command of Pakistan Defence Forces. Active in Indo-Pakistan wars, the I Strike Corps subordinated administrative units played an integral role in Kargil war, and also served in current War in North-West Pakistan. Its
Corps-Commander, Lieutenant-General Tariq Khan, is internationally known and distinguished for his leadership abilities in War in North-West Pakistan.

5. Lt Gen MIRZA MUSHTAQ BAIG, three star general who was also Colonel Commandant of the Army Medical Corps. Beg remains the most senior Army officer to have been martyred since Pakistan’s involvement in the war on terrorism. who was also the principal of the Army Medical College in Rawalpindi

6. MAJOR UMAR BAIG MIRZA AND LIEUTENANT COLONEL AMER BAIG, brothers of the current Commandant ‘Command and Staff College’, Quetta MAJOR GENERAL SHAHID BAIG MIRZA. All three brothers were commissioned in 11 Punjab Regiment; a Battalion that their proud father, LIEUTENANT COLONEL (RETD) MIRZA ABDUL HAQ MUGHAL was also part of. “Both of my martyred sons and my eldest son Shahid were passionate about joining the army and wanted to follow their father. He was one of the prisoners of 1971 war and young Amer used to say that he would join the army to take his father’s revenge from Indira Gandhi,” tells the proud mother Zaib-un-Nisa.

7. Captain Mirza Fawad Amin Baig, the Naval Attaché. A senior officer of Pakistan Navy will address an international symposium being organised in connection with the PLA Navy celebrations. Over 15 countries have pledged to send ships to the east port city of Qingdao as part of the celebrations and at least 28 foreign countries will send delegations, said the officer with the Chinese Navy’s headquarters the parade will be staged off Qingdao, the Navy’s North Sea Fleet’s headquarters in Shandong Province.

8. Miss Sharista Baig, daughter of Col.Mahmud Baig is the first GD fighter pilot from Gilgit Baltistan. She belongs to Karimabad Hunza.

Leave a Reply

Scroll To Top