Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: Ayub


Related Topics
PMR

In the News (Mon 28 May 12)

  
  Ayub Khan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Muhammad Ayub Khan (May 14, 1907 – April 19, 1974) was a Field Marshal during the mid-1960s, and the political leader of Pakistan from 1958 to 1969.
Ayub Khan was later made Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistani Army, becoming in 1951 the first non-British general to hold that position.
It was under Ayub Khan that the capital was moved from Karachi to Rawalpindi, in anticipation of the construction of a new capital: Islamabad.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ayub_Khan   (845 words)

  
 Pakistan Ayub Khan's Foreign Policy and the 1965 War with India - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural ...
Ayub Khan was the architect of Pakistan's policy of close alignment with the United States, and his first major foreign policy act was to sign bilateral economic and military agreements with the United States in 1959 (see The United States Alliance, ch.
Ayub Khan maintained, as did many Pakistanis, that in return for the use of Pakistani military facilities, the United States owed Pakistan security allegiance in all cases, not merely in response to communist aggression.
Ayub Khan reacted by alternating conciliation and repression.
workmall.com /wfb2001/pakistan/pakistan_history_ayub_khans_foreign_policy_and_the_1965_war_with_india.html   (1488 words)

  
 Pakistan - AYUB KHAN
Ayub Khan probably was selected because of his reputation as an able administrator, his presumed lack of political ambition, and his lack of powerful group backing.
In the East Wing, the landholding ceiling was raised from thirty-three hectares to forty-eight hectares.
Ayub Khan was the architect of Pakistan's policy of close alignment with the United States, and his first major foreign policy act was to sign bilateral economic and military agreements with the United States in 1959.
countrystudies.us /pakistan/18.htm   (3596 words)

  
 The Telegraph - Calcutta : Nation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub was speaking to reporters at home after the second metropolitan magistrate here granted him bail on a personal bond of Rs 5,000 yesterday.
Ayub hopes she will not be sent back as he is getting ready to begin life anew.
Ayub’s wife — also the mother of his child born in Hyderabad early last year — petitioned the state home minister and the high court for relief till her husband’s return from the US.
www.telegraphindia.com /1030102/asp/nation/story_1535752.asp   (431 words)

  
 Interview with Arshad Ayub : Cricketfundas.com
Ayub however was a stalwart for the Hyderabad Cricket Team for a long time with whom, he won the Ranji Trophy in the year 1989, by contributing to the victory with a string of decent performances.
Arshad Ayub: I think, yes in a way that you know it was unexpected in a One-Day match and especially during that time, 5-21 was a big thing and especially against a side which had Javed Miandad and the likes of Salim Malik.
Arshad Ayub: I think what he does for the normal delivery, you can call it a fair delivery, because there is a bend in his arm, he is not using the bend properly to straighten his arm he is bowling with that bend.
www.cricketfundas.com /ayub1.html   (4510 words)

  
 EEOC FILES POST-9/11 RELIGION AND NATIONAL ORIGIN TERMINATION LAWSUIT AGAINST WORCESTER ART MUSEUM
Ayub, who had emigrated to the United States in the early 1980's with his parents to escape the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, had become a U.S. citizen and had worked at the museum since 1994 as a security guard.
Ayub's employment without notice, allegedly for taking excessive time to complete security rounds on three separate occasions, and he was replaced by a non-Muslim who was not of Afghan or Middle Eastern origin.
Ayub's case, the museum failed to follow its usual and customary practice of issuing oral and written warnings, or a suspension, and it failed to follow its usual practice of issuing a memo to all employees reminding employees of the museum's expectations of them.
www.eeoc.gov /press/9-30-02.html   (536 words)

  
 Ayub Masih Acquitted   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub Masih was arrested for blasphemy in Pakpattan district in Punjab on 14 October 1996 after being accused by a Muslim cobbler, Muhammad Akram, in his home village of Arifwala of shouting insults against the Islamic prophet Muhammad.
Ayub Masih’s was the first blasphemy case to reach the Supreme Court and as such set a dangerous precedent.
The court’s decision to release Ayub in the face of conservative Muslim intimidation is a brave one.
www.barnabasfund.org /News/Archive/Pakistan/Pakistan-20020816.htm   (698 words)

  
 Pakistan Link - Letter & Opinion
Ayub Khan was a broken man by the middle of September 1965 when Operation Gibraltar which he had approved resulted in war with lndia knocking out all his assumptions.
Ayub Khan had just returned to the Kremlin after his meeting with the Soviet leaders when he was delivered a cable from Islamabad saying that Indian forces had trespassed into the disputed territory of the Rann of Kutch and necessary defensive measures were being taken by the Pakistan army.
Ayub could rely on the Commander in Chief, General Muhammad Musa, to act with discretion but there was always the possibility that the brigadiers around him might swing him to their more aggressive point of view.
www.pakistanlink.com /Opinion/99/Sept/24/01.html   (1315 words)

  
 Sudan: Aid Worker Provides Eyewitness Account of Attack, May 31, 2002   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub is the second eldest among 11 children.
Ayub’s mother, Bishera Bibi, last year expressed her frustrations to a representative of the Washington, DC based human rights organization International Christian Concern (ICC): “Our lives are always in danger and many times we had given up hope that we would ever have our son back.
Ayub’s attorney, Abid Hasan Minto, is appealing the death sentence based on a legal technicality that requires the local authorities to prove the reliability of a witnesses before charges can be filed.
www.persecution.org /news/Press_Releases/PR_2002/press2002-05-29.html   (710 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub, however, was neither registered to sell securities nor was he licensed by the state to serve as a mortgage broker.
Judge Brown characterized Ayub's conduct as a "clear abuse of trust," and said the damage to the client-victims was "staggering." Under U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, Ayub faced a range of between 27 and 33 months in prison, and Judge Brown sentenced him to the very top of the range.
In addition, Ayub issued periodic account statements which purported to show his clients the supposed growth of their investments in the form of interest accruals and automatic reinvestments.
www.usdoj.gov /usao/nj/publicaffairs/NJ_Press/files/ay0604_r.htm   (497 words)

  
 Anglican Communion News Service - 1592
Ayub Masih can appeal within 30 days in the High Court against the judgment He had pleaded not guilty and his lawyer claimed that the prosecution had relied only on the verbal testimony of the complainants and no circumstantial evidence had been provided to prove the allegation against the accused.
Ayub was accused of blasphemy during a dispute with a Muslim villager.
One of Ayub's brothers and his mother who were present at the scene identified the assailant as Mohammad Akram, one of the complainants in Ayub's blasphemy case.
www.anglicancommunion.org /acns/acnsarchive/acns1500/acns1592.html   (1051 words)

  
 Ayub Subidar of the Chitral Scouts
Ayub strenuously opposed this as being un-Islamic and said that a marriage ceremony should be a solemn occasion.
Ayub said he knew all about the situation in Moroy and that it was entirely the fault of the father and brothers of my wife there that the marriage had ended in divorce.
Had Ayub not vouched for me, the marriage ceremony to Honzagool would probably have been called off, especially since one of the uncles of Honzagool, Dinar Khan, was opposed to the marriage.
www.ishipress.com /ayub.htm   (1045 words)

  
 Tribute to Martyred Iranian From Church   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub Masih of Faisalabad was arrested in October 1996 for allegedly passing derogatory remarks against the Islamic prophet, Mohammad.
Ayub Masih was sentenced to death on 27th April 1998 for blasphemy.
Local sources report that the blasphemy charges against Ayub were false and resulted from a land dispute against Masih's family, who had applied to the government for ownership of the lands on which they had built their homes in the Pak Patan district of Punjab Province.
www.jubileecampaign.co.uk /world/pak30.htm   (436 words)

  
 Ayub  Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub Khan joined Royal Military College in Sandhurst and got commissioned in the Indian army in 1928.
In 1951 Ayub Khan was promoted to a full General and Commander-in-Chief of the army.
The 1965 war was fought during Ayub's term and Ayub Khan represented Pakistan in the subsequent Tashkent talks.
dr.abdulqadeer.8m.net /ayub.htm   (232 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub represented himself, and his company, as having expertise to provide financial consulting services, including money managing and investing, and mortgage consulting, according to Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Kirsch.
Ayub, however, was not registered to sell securities, and was not licensed by the state to serve as a mortgage broker.
In addition, Ayub issued periodic account statements which purported to show growth in the investments in the form of accrued interest and automatic reinvestments.
www.usdoj.gov /usao/nj/publicaffairs/NJ_Press/files/ay0205_r.htm   (485 words)

  
 Mohammed Ayub- Kahn
Ayub Kahn was educated in England and served in the British colonial army, serving as a battalion commander during World War II.
Ayub Khan and Military Rule in Pakistan, 1958-1969.
Ziring, Lawrence.The Ayub Khan Era; Politics in Pakistan, 1958-1969.
www.multied.com /bio/people/ayub-kahn.html   (83 words)

  
 Pakistan - Ayub Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Although Ayub Khan viewed himself as a reformer, he was predisposed to the benevolent authoritarianism of the Mughal and viceregal traditions.
Ayub's constitution, promulgated in 1962, ended martial law, established a presidential form of government with a weak legislature (now called the National Assembly) and gave the president augmented executive, legislative, and financial powers.
This constitution was abrogated in 1969 when Ayub, who by then had lost the people's confidence, resigned, handing over the responsibility for governing to the army commander in chief General Agha Mohammad Yahya Khan (see Ayub Khan).
countrystudies.us /pakistan/61.htm   (277 words)

  
 GN Online: Ayub paid the ultimate price of being a scribe
While many Jordanian journalists praised Ayub as an active reporter, they said he had been trying to move on with his career.
Before joining the Doha-based Al Jazeera Arab Satellite television in 1998, Ayub worked for several news organisations, including the Associated Press as well as the English language Jordanian daily Jordan Times, which he was still writing for until his death yesterday.
Ayub, a Jordanian citizen, was born in Kuwait in 1968 and is a father of a 14-month-old girl.
www.gulf-news.com /Articles/print.asp?ArticleID=83668   (364 words)

  
 Pakistan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
On 6th November 1997, Ayub was shot at in Sahiwal Court by the complainant.
The closed prison trial, at which Ayub was denied the right to a defense, concluded on 27th April 1998 with the Session Court judge of Sahiwal district sentencing Ayub to death by hanging.
CSW is calling for Ayub's unconditional release and for President Musharraf to honor his pledges to reform the law relating to blasphemy and to introduce key reforms to improve the status of religious minorities in Pakistan.
www.cswusa.com /Pakistan.htm   (574 words)

  
 City - Fugitive Ayub will be nailed soon: cops   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ayub, one of four men charged under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (POTA) for the December 2 Ghatkopar bomb blast, escaped early Tuesday morning while being escorted from Mumbai to Aurangabad for interrogations.
Both of Ayub’s hands were handcuffed separately to an overhead rod in the van.
Ayub is a resident of Danjaya Mohalla, Parbhani town, Parbhani district, and an instrumentation engineer by profession.
web.mid-day.com /news/city/2003/january/41090.htm   (481 words)

  
 Azhar Ayub   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Born, raised and educated in Karachi, Azhar Ayub holds such a diversified degrees as BSc, MA, LLB and MBA.
Azhar Ayub: Not only the climatic conditions are ideal but the 560 mile plus coastline offers us an unique opportunity to tap the wind energy which costs much less to install than the solar energy.
While the small ones ranging from 1 kilowatt to 20 kilowatt can be used by the individual households both in the urban and rural areas there are big wind turbines in the ranges of 50 kw to 500 kw.
www.pakistaneconomist.com /issue2000/issue16/etc1.htm   (909 words)

  
 Islamic State Pakistan, blasphemy laws, intellectual, press freedom, death penalty, torture, human rights violations
Ayub Masih's family home was also arbitrarily transferred to Muhammad Akram, who has benefited considerably after the eviction of the entire Christian populace (14 families) of the village.
Throughout the entire legal proceedings, the case was heavily influenced by intense pressure from Islamic extremists who gathered outside the court to intimidate the judge and the defense lawyers.
At a closed prison trial in April 1998, where Ayub Masih was denied the right to a defense, the Sessions Court judge of Sahiwal district sentencing Ayub to death by hanging.
india_resource.tripod.com /ifpakistan.html   (2605 words)

  
 Muhammad Ayub Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Muhammad Ayub Khan was born on May 14, 1907, in the village of Rehana near Haripur, in Hazara District.
Ayub's performance in Sandhurst was exemplary and he won several scholarships.
At the time of Independence, Ayub Khan opted to join the Pakistan Army, where as a Brigadier, he was the senior-most Muslim officer.
www.storyofpakistan.com /person.asp?perid=P017   (287 words)

  
 Bangladesh The "Revolution" of Ayub Khan, 1958-66 - Flags, Maps, Economy, Geography, Climate, Natural Resources, ...
Ayub called his regime a "revolution to clean up the mess of fl marketing and corruption."
The new constitution promulgated by Ayub in March 1962 vested all executive authority of the republic in the president.
By the mid-1960s, West Pakistan was benefiting from Ayub's "Decade of Progress," with its successful "green revolution" in wheat, and from the expansion of markets for West Pakistani textiles, while the East Pakistani standard of living remained at an abysmally low level.
workmall.com /wfb2001/bangladesh/bangladesh_history_the_revolution_of_ayub_khan_1958_66.html   (734 words)

  
 ReliefWeb » Document Preview » UNICEF laments untimely death of Dr. Ayub Sheikh Yerow in Somalia
Ayub was wounded on the evening of 15 September while travelling by road from Jowhar to Afgoi on a planning assignment for the October National Immunization Day to vaccinate approximately one million children in Somalia against polio.
Ayub was immediately taken to a hospital in North Mogadishu for surgery.
Ayub's death adds one more to a growing list of casualties involving humanitarian workers courageously seeking to carry on life-saving missions in extremely dangerous situations.
www.reliefweb.int /rw/rwb.nsf/AllDocsByUNID/41da6f581bc8e43c852567f1000242bd   (364 words)

  
 Martial Law Under Field Marshal Ayub Khan [1958-62]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
To lend legitimacy to his rule, Ayub Khan used the Basic Democrats as an electoral college, holding a referendum to seek a mandate to continue in office as President and to have the authority to frame the future Constitution of Pakistan.
The referendum held on February 14, 1960, asked the voters "if they had confidence in President Field Marshal Muhammad Ayub Khan, Hilal-i-Jurat?" With the results of the referendum, Ayub Khan was elected not only as President of Pakistan for five years, but also got the mandate to give Pakistan a Constitution of his choice.
Ayub Khan set up a Constitution Commission which was not only given the responsibility to make recommendations on the future Constitution, but was also to examine the causes of failure of parliamentary government in Pakistan.
www.storyofpakistan.com /articletext.asp?artid=A065&Pg=3   (314 words)

  
 NOVICA - Walnut statuette, 'Elephant Excursion'
Dressed in the fancy attire reserved for royal patrons, this elephant is a symbol of tradition.
Ayub hand-carves the pachyderm from walnut wood with elaborate detail.
When he finishes the statuette, Ayub rubs the wood with agate stones to achieve a shiny, well-polished surface.
www.novica.com /itemdetail/index.cfm?pid=68439   (220 words)

  
 Ayub Khawar - Full Collection of Ayub Khawar @ Love Urdu
Ayub Khawar's writings have a certain passion and intensity in them which has been aptly portrayed on our site.
Ayub Khawar writes elegantly about how life has affect him and presents hin ideas on life, society and the world.
Though Ayub Khawar has been writing poetry since he was a college student, it took him a long time to get his work published.
www.urdulove.com /poet_intros_english/Ayub_Khawar.html   (172 words)

  
 Ayub_Khan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Khan was born in the village of Rehana near Haripur Hazara, the first child of the second wife of Mir Dad Khan, who was a Risaldar Major in Hodson's Horse.
He would later go on to serve in the cabinet of Muhammad Ali Bogra, and when Iskander Mirza declared martial law on October 7 1958, Khan was made its enforcer.
Under Khan's presidency, the industrial sector of Pakistan grew very rapidly, and this in turn improved the economy, as did Khan's educational and land reforms.
www.usedmotorcoaches.com /search.php?title=Ayub_Khan   (528 words)

  
 Tribute to Dr Ayub Sh. Yerow   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Dr Ayub Sheikh Yerow, the UNICEF Central and Southern Somalia Health and Nutrition Officer, died on 16 September 1999 after being shot in a bandit attack on 15 September.
Dr Ayub was 41 years old and is survived by his spouse Sado Hassan Ahmed and five children, Zakaria, Eyni, Suleeqa, Fardowsa and Abdikarin.
The prayers were a tribute to Dr Ayub and should serve as the beginning of a process to ensure security for those who help the children of Somalia.
www.arlaadinet.com /News/September/tribute_to_dr.htm   (382 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.