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  1. Habibur Rahman Khan (5 January 1930 – 20 October 2015) was a judge of the High Court Division of Bangladesh Supreme Court and the only chairman of the Truth and Accountability Commission. [1]

  2. Feb 16, 2016 · Lt Col Habibur Rahman Khan, Subhas Chandra Bose's fiercely loyal ADC, was the only Indian witness to his leader's reported death in Taihoku (Taipei) on August 18, 1945. The story of Netaji's...

  3. Muhammad Habibur Rahman (3 December 1928 – 11 January 2014) was a Chief Justice of Bangladesh Supreme Court in 1995. [1] He was the Chief Adviser of the 1996 caretaker government which oversaw the Seventh parliamentary elections in Bangladesh. [1]

  4. Download free Adobe Acrobat Reader software for your Windows, Mac OS and Android devices to view, print, and comment on PDF documents.

    • Early Life and Education
    • Military Career
    • Indian National Army
    • First Kashmir War
    • Administrator
    • Awards and Honours
    • Death
    • Bibliography
    • Further Reading
    • External Links

    Habib ur Rahman, son of Raja Manzoor Ahmad Khan was born in the village of Panjeri, Mirpur District in Jammu and Kashmir, British India (now Bhimber District, Pakistan) on 22 December 1913. Born in a Rajput Musalman family, his maternal grandfather Raja Rahamdad served in the court of Maharaja Pratap Singh of Jammu and Kashmir He was educated in sc...

    Rahman was commissioned a Second Lieutenant on the Special List, Indian Land Forces on 15 July 1936 and was attached to the 2nd battalion of Duke of Wellington's Regiment from 10 August 1936.He was appointed to the British Indian Army and was posted to 1st Battalion of the 14th Punjab Regiment, which was called "Sher Dil Paltan" on the 10 August 19...

    Formation of the INA

    At the stage on Farrer Park Capt. Mohan Singh addressed the POWs and decided to form an organised and disciplined power in the form of Indian National Army. The erstwhile POWs were to become now the soldiers of India's "Army of Liberation", the army that was to fight under its own leadership, with a real and just cause to wage war. Mohan Singh was from the same unit from which was Rahman. He was a close friend of Rahman. On 17 February 1942, Rahman decided to join the Indian National Army. Ne...

    Shaping the INA

    Rahman's health improved at Seletar Camp. He along with over thirty important senior officers from among the Indian prisoners of war attended the Bidadari Conference called by Captain Mohan Singh at Bidadari Camp in Singapore on 24 April 1942. The resolutions of this Conference, came to be known as the Bidadari Resolutions, formed the backbone of formation of INA. As resolved at the Tokyo Conference, a representative conference of the Indians who lived in East Asian countries was held at Bang...

    The 5th Guerrilla Regiment

    Rahman was appointed Second-in-Command in December 1943, and raised the 5th Guerrilla regiment at Bidadari in Singapore. Apart from helping in raising the regiment Rahman was responsible for training, discipline, morale and welfare of the troops. The 5th Guerrilla Regiment was formed as part of the 2nd INA Division, which was organised under the command of Col. N.S. Bhagat consequent on the 1st Division's move to the Front. On 30 March 1944, the 5th Guerrilla Regiment moved to Ipoh in Perak s...

    After Independence Muhammad Ali Jinnah was delighted with Rahman joining the government service and advised him in writing to visit and report about the current situation of the state of Jammu and Kashmir in Srinagar. Following this request he went to visit the Prime Minister of Jammu & Kashmir Ram Chandra Kak and Maharaja Hari Singh to better unde...

    Following the Indo-Pakistani War of 1947, Rahman joined the Central Superior Services of Pakistan. He worked in several positions such as the Deputy Commissioner of Bannu, Chief Administrator of Northern Areas (Gilgit-Baltistan), Additional Defence Secretary in the Government of Pakistan, and as a member of the Azad KashmirCouncil.

    In recognition of his contribution to the "independence movement" the Azad Jammu and KashmirGovernment awarded Rahman the following honours: 1. Fateh-e-Bhimber(Liberator of Bhimber). 2. Fakhr-e-Kashmir 3. Ghazi-e-Kashmir The Degree college of Bhimberis named after him. Government of Pakistanawarded him the civil and military honours: 1. Sitara-e-Pa...

    Rahman died and was buried on 26 December 1978 in his ancestral village of Panjeri, in Bhimber, Pakistan administered Kashmir.

    Bose, Sugata (2011), His Majesty's Opponent, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-04754-9
    Effendi, Col. M. Y. (2007), Punjab Cavalry: Evolution, Role, Organisation and Tactical Doctrine 11 Cavalry, Frontier Force, 1849-1971, Karachi: Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-547203-5
    Suharwardy, Abdul Haq (1983), Tragedy in Kashmir, Lahore: Wajidalis
    Shohaab NamaBy Qudarat-ulah-Shohaab
    The Bleeding KashmirBy Major Iqbal Hashmi
    Mirpur Before 1947By Sayad Sultan Shah
    The KashmirBy Khalid Mehmood Kokhar Adocate Kotli
  5. I am inclined to believe that Rahman Khan was actually a British spy and agent planted in INA under the confusion of battles, retreats, and defections bang in the middle of WWII. His ultimate aim was assassination of Bose, and this he carried off.

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  7. Oct 20, 2015 · Habibur Rahman Khan (5 January 1930 – 20 October 2015) was a judge of the High Court Division of Bangladesh Supreme Court and the only chairman of the Truth and Accountability Commission. [1]

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