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Mohammed Zahir Shah

 
Biography: Muhammad Zahir Shah

Muhammad Zahir Shah (born 1914), last in the 226-year dynasty of Pashtun monarchs to rule Afghanistan, emerged in the fall of 2001 as a symbol of unity for his country as its hard-line Taliban rulers were dislodged from power. In December 2001 Zahir Shah gave his blessing to Hamid Karzai, a fellow Pashtun selected as an interim leader for the troubled country.

The son of King Nadir Shah of Afghanistan, Muhammad Zahir Shah was born on October 15, 1914, in the capital city of Kabul. Educated in both his native country and France, he was thrust suddenly into power at the age of 19, only hours after his father was assassinated. On November 8, 1933, he replaced his father on the throne of the Durani dynasty, first established in 1747 by Ahmad Shah. The young monarch adopted the title Mutawakkil Ala'llah, Pairaw-I Din-I Matin-I slam ("Confident in God, Follower of the Firm Religion of Islam"). For nearly three-quarters of his years on the throne, however, he was the country's ruler in little more than name, as two of his uncles - Muhammad Hashim and Shah Mahmud Ghazi - effectively ran the government. The elder of the two, Muhammad Hashim, had been prime minister under King Nadir Shah, and he remained in that post until 1946, when he was succeeded by his younger brother, Shah Mahmud.

In the years immediately following the assassination of Nadir Shah, Hashim, who was described by insiders as a statesman of high personal integrity and impressive administrative ability, focused on two main objectives: building up the nation's army and developing Afghanistan's economy. To accomplish these goals, Hashim needed to attract foreign aid, but he desperately wanted to avoid any political entanglements with either Great Britain or the Soviet Union. Instead he turned to Germany, which had both an interest in the Afghan project and the technical expertise needed to get the job done. Limited amounts of foreign aid were also accepted from Italy and Japan. As a result of Hashim's powers of persuasion, Germany by the beginning of the 1940s had become Afghanistan's principal foreign partner.

As the winds ushering in World War II began to blow across Afghanistan, King Zahir Shah on August 17, 1940, issued a declaration of his country's neutrality in the conflict. This proved easier said than done, however. The presence in Afghanistan of large numbers of nondiplomatic German personnel was more than Britain and the Soviet Union could tolerate. The Allies demanded that the Afghan government eject all nondiplomatic personnel from the Axis countries. Although it bristled at the Allies' demand, in the end Afghanistan complied, having already seen British and Soviet forces invade neighboring Iran when that country ignored a similar demand. Although Afghanistan did cave on the issue of expelling nondiplomatic Axis personnel, a loya jirga, or grand assembly called by the king, upheld Zahir Shah's policy of neutrality.

Not long after the end of World War II, Hashim was replaced as prime minister by his younger brother, Shah Mahmud, who ushered in a period of upheaval in Afghanistan's internal and external politics. Shah Mahmud presided over the initial phase of the Helmand Valley Project, a joint venture between the Afghan government and an American company. The project was launched to harness the irrigation and hydroelectric potential of the Helmand River. More significantly, Shah Mahmud was in office during the resolution of international border issues between Afghanistan and the newly formed country of Pakistan.

In 1953 Zahir Shah's cousin, Muhammad Daoud, succeeded Shah Mahmud as prime minister. The younger members of the royal family, Daoud among them, had successfully agitated against the dominance of the king's uncles, eventually winning access to the seat of power for Daoud. Although he was western educated and was expected by many observers to push for a more open political system, Daoud proved to possess a more authoritarian bent than most anticipated. Although Daoud did little to open up Afghanistan politically, he did take steps to modernize the country, including providing continued support for the Helmand Valley Project, designed to transform life in the southwestern corner of Afghanistan. He also moved to emancipate Afghan women, allowing the wives of his ministers to appear unveiled in public for the 40th anniversary celebration of national independence, and managed to exert a degree of control over the region's tribes. However, Daoud's foreign policy resulted in an unhealthy dependence on the Soviet Union as Afghanistan's principal trade and transit link with the outside world, and he was forced from office in 1963 by the king. Zahir Shah eventually wrested total control of the government from his relatives under the constitution of 1964, which established a constitutional monarchy and barred royal relatives from all high-level government offices. The new constitution also established a two-house parliament, free elections, and freedom of the press and gave women the right to vote.

Allowed Tacit Consent for Political Parties

The 1964 constitution also provided for the formation of political parties, but the king never ratified that provision. Although not legally permitted, political parties were formed; their members kept in touch with one another through party-affiliated newspapers and periodicals. All members of the Afghan parliament were officially elected as independents, yet they all brought with them to the legislature the sharply differing philosophies of the political parties with which they were unofficially affiliated. The result was a parliament that was virtually paralyzed by political infighting.

Using foreign assistance flowing in from a number of the world's industrial countries, particularly the United States and the Soviet Union, Zahir Shah spearheaded a series of projects to help develop Afghanistan's infrastructure. However, most of the projects, which focused on irrigation and highway construction, were limited to the area in and around Kabul. Exacerbating the country's problems, particularly outside Kabul, was the drought of the early 1970s, which in time led to widespread famine and growing unrest in the countryside, particularly among some of the tribal factions along the Afghan border with Pakistan. On the plus side, one of the major accomplishments of the king's reign was his success in maintaining the country's neutrality in the increasingly divisive world of international politics.

In July of 1973 Zahir Shah traveled to England for surgery on an eye he had injured in a volleyball game. Once the surgery was complete, he continued on to Italy. As he and his family relaxed on the island of Ischia, not far from Naples, Muhammad Daoud, ousted as prime minister in 1963, staged a bloodless coup, and Afghanistan was declared a republic under Daoud's presidency. Daoud warned Zahir Shah not to attempt to return to Kabul, a warning the king apparently took seriously for he remained outside Afghanistan through the 2002 war against terrorism waged by the United States and formally abdicated on August 24, 1973. Daoud's days as the country's leader were numbered; he died in a 1978 coup that brought to power a communist government. The following year the Soviet Union, which bordered Afghanistan to the north, invaded the country and installed yet another communist government, sparking a ten-year war between Soviet forces and the mujaheddin, a rag-tag army of anti-Communist guerilla fighters. The United States supplied extensive military assistance to the mujaheddin to enable them to continue their struggle against the Soviets. Unfortunately the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1989 brought no lasting peace, for the country was soon torn apart by factional fighting. In the latter half of the 1990s the fundamentalist Taliban secured control of most of the country and imposed an oppressive rule. The Taliban's sponsorship of terrorist training camps run by terrorist leader Osama bin Laden eventually brought them into conflict with the United States, which ironically had been closely allied with many in the Taliban during their struggle with the Soviets.

During the years of turbulence in his homeland, Zahir Shah lived quietly in a villa outside Rome. Every time another government fell in Kabul, the aging king was inevitably mentioned as a possible interim ruler until a permanent new government could be established. It all came to naught, however, for events within Afghanistan always seemed to overtake the best intentions of Afghan exiles and others who hoped to see a return to stability in that country. Zahir Shah remained a potent symbol for those desiring the restoration of the monarchy, however, and in 1991 was stabbed three times by an unknown assailant in a suspected political assassination attempt. Although he remained outside Afghanistan, Zahir Shah remained connected to developments in his country. In 1993 he called upon the United Nations to allow the convocation of a loya jirga to select a new president to replace Professor Burnahuddin Rabbani, whose 1992 election the former king alleged was tainted by corruption and should be declared invalid.

In the wake of the September 11, 2001, attack on the United States and the beginning of the U.S. war on international terrorism, Zahir Shah called for another loya jirga to select an alternative to the government of the Taliban, accused of sheltering the Al Qaeda terrorist network of Osama bin Laden. In November 2001, after the liberation of Kabul, Zahir Shah called on the United States to end its bombing campaign in Afghanistan. He also urged all factions in Afghanistan "to safeguard life, property, and also be vigilant in preventing foreign designs from inflicting more harm on our people." The king threw his support behind Hamid Karzai, who was to lead Afghanistan until a grand national assembly could be convened in 2002 to select a transitional government to rule the country in the 18 months leading up to new national elections.

In January of 2002, Zahir Shah called up the government of Karzai, who like the king is an ethnic Pashtun, to guarantee women's rights. He noted that under the country's 1964 Constitution women enjoyed full rights, most of which had been revoked under the harsh rule of the Taliban. In an interview with the London-based Asharq al-Awsat newspaper, Zahir Shah said: "I firmly believe that every effort must be exerted to guarantee (women's) rights. Their active participation is a vital part of rebuilding our country." According to Reuters, the former monarch also said the new Afghan government needed "to find job opportunities to enable men and women to access resources. A whole generation has been deprived of their basic rights in education and health care."

Zahir Shah fathered seven children in all, five of whom survive. Although he was fourth in the line of succession, Prince Mir Wais was groomed as his father's heir. Like his father, Mir Wais lived near Rome, and served as his father's closest adviser. Whatever role Zahir Shah and his family might play in the political future of their troubled homeland, the former king remained intensely concerned with Afghanistan's future and was prepared to work to ensure his country's future political stability.

Periodicals

Associated Press, October 8, 2001; November 14, 2001; January 28, 2002.

Time International, November 18, 1991.

Online

"Hamid Karzai No Stranger to Leadership," CNN.com,http://cnn.worldnews.com/ (February 3, 2002).

"Mohammed Zahir Shah," Biography Resource Center Online,http://galenet.galegroup.com/ (January 20, 2002).

"Mohammad Zahir Shah: King of Afghanistan from 1933-1973,"Afghan-Info.com,http://www.afghan-info.com/ (February 3, 2002).

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Mohammed Zahir Shah
محمد ظاهر شاه
King of the God granted Kingdom of Afghanistan and its dependencies[1]
King Mohammad Zahir Shah.jpg
King Zahir Shah in his last years
Reign 8 November 1933 – 17 July 1973
Titles Father of the Nation
Born 15 October 1914[2]
Birthplace Kabul, Afghanistan
Died 23 July 2007 (aged 92)
Place of death Kabul, Afghanistan
Buried Maranjan Hill
Predecessor Mohammed Nadir Shah
Successor Monarchy abolished Mohammed Daoud Khan as President of Afghanistan
Consort Humaira Begum
Royal House Barakzai
Father Mohammed Nadir Shah
Mother Mah Parwar Begum
History of Afghanistan
Emblem of Afghanistan
This article is part of a series
Timeline
Pre-Islamic Period
Islamic Conquest
Hotaki dynasty
Durrani dynasty
British and Russian influence
Independence and civil war
Reigns of Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah
Republic of Afghanistan
Communist rule
Afghanistan since 1992
Afghan Civil War
1979–1989
1989–1992
1992–1996
1996–2001
2001–present

Afghanistan Portal
 v • d • e 

Mohammed Zahir Shah (15 October 1914 – 23 July 2007) was the last King (Shah) of Afghanistan, reigning for four decades, from 1933 until he was ousted by a coup in 1973. Following his return from exile he was given the title 'Father of the Nation' in 2002 which he held until his death.[2]

Contents

Family background and early life

Zahir Shah was born in Kabul, Afghanistan. He was the son of Mohammed Nadir Shah, a senior member of the Barakzai royal family and commander in chief of the Afghan army under former king Amanullah Khan. Nadir Shah assumed the throne after the execution of Habibullah Ghazi on 10 October 1929.[3] Mohammed Zahir's father was born in Dehradun, India, his family having been exiled following the second Anglo-Afghan war. Nadir Shah was a descendant of Sardar Sultan Mohammed Khan Telai, half-brother of Dost Mohammad Khan. His grandfather Mohammad Yahya Khan was in charge of the negotiations with the British leading to the Treaty of Gandamak. After the British invasion following the killing of Sir Louis Cavagnari in 1879, Yaqub Khan, Yahya Khan and his sons, Princes Moh.d Yusuf and Moh.d Asef, were seized by the British and transferred under custody to India, where they forcibly remained until the latter were invited back to Afghanistan by Emir Abdur Rahman Khan in the last year of his reign (1901).

Zahir Shah was educated in a special class for princes at Habibia High School in Kabul.[4] He continued his education in France where his father had been sent as a diplomatic envoy, studying at the Pasteur Institute and the University of Montpellier.[5] When he returned to Afghanistan he helped his father and uncles restore order and reassert government control during a period of lawlessness in the country.[6] He was later enrolled at an Infantry School and appointed a privy counsellor. Zahir Shah served in the government positions of deputy war minister and minister of education.[4] Zahir Shah was fluent in Pashto, Persian, and French.[7]

Rule

Zahir Khan was proclaimed King (Shah) on 8 November 1933, after the assassination of his father Mohammed Nadir Shah. Following his ascension to the throne he was given the regnal title "He who puts his trust in God, follower of the firm religion of Islam".[4] For the first thirty years he did not effectively rule, ceding power to his paternal uncles, Sardar Mohammad Hashim Khan and Sardar Shah Mahmud Khan.[8] This period fostered a growth in Afghanistan's relations with the international community as in 1934, Afghanistan joined the League of Nations while also receiving formal recognition from the United States.[9] Throughout the 1930s, agreements on foreign assistance and trade had been reached with many countries, most notably Germany, Italy, and Japan.[10]

Portrait of Zahir Shah

Following the end of the Second World War, Zahir Shah recognised the need for the modernisation of Afghanistan and recruited a number of foreign advisers to assist with the process.[11] During this period Afghanistan's first modern university was founded.[11] During his reign a number of potential advances and reforms were derailed as a result of factionalism and political infighting.[12]

Zahir Shah was able to govern on his own in 1963[8] and despite the factionalism and political infighting a new constitution was introduced in 1964 which turned Afghanistan into a modern democratic state by introducing free elections, a parliament, civil rights, liberation for women and universal suffrage.[11]

By the time he returned to Afghanistan in the twenty-first century, his rule was characterized by a lengthy span of peace, but with no significant progress.[13]

Exile

In 1973, while Mohammed Zahir Shah was in Italy undergoing eye surgery as well as therapy for lumbago, his cousin and former Prime Minister Mohammed Daoud Khan staged a coup d'état and established a republican government. As a former prime minister, Daoud Khan had been forced to resign by Zahir Shah a decade earlier.[13] In the August following this coup, Zahir Shah abdicated rather than risk an all-out civil war.[13]

Zahir Shah lived in exile in Italy for twenty-nine years in a modest four-bedroom villa[6] in the affluent gated community of Olgiata[7] on Via Cassia, north of the city of Rome where he spent his time playing golf and chess, and tending to his garden.[14] He was barred from returning to Afghanistan during Soviet-backed Communist rule in the late 1970s. In 1983 during the Soviet war in Afghanistan, Zahir Shah was cautiously involved in plans to head a government in exile. Ultimately these plans failed because he could not reach a consensus with the powerful Islamist factions.[4]

In 1991, Zahir Shah survived an attempt on his life by a knife-wielding assassin who pretended to be a Portuguese journalist.[13]

Return

In April 2002, while the country was under NATO occupation, Zahir Shah returned to Afghanistan to open the Loya Jirga, which met in June 2002.[15] After the fall of the Taliban, there were open calls for a return to the monarchy.[13] Zahir Shah himself let it be known that he would accept whatever responsibility was placed on him by the Loya Jirga.[15] However he was obliged to publicly step aside at the behest of the United States as many of delegates to the Loya Jirga were prepared to vote for Zahir Shah and block the US-backed Hamid Karzai.[15] While he was prepared to become head of state he made it known that it would not necessarily be as monarch: "I will accept the responsibility of head of state if that is what the Loya Jirga demands of me, but I have no intention to restore the monarchy. I do not care about the title of king. The people call me Baba and I prefer this title."[13] He was given the ceremonial title "Father of the Nation" in the current Constitution of Afghanistan[16] symbolizing his role in Afghanistan's history as a nonpolitical symbol of national unity. The title of the 'Father of the Nation' dissolved with his death.[17]

Mohammed Zahir Shah, seen seated at the far right, during Karzai's swearing in ceremony on 7 December 2004.

Hamid Karzai, a prominent figure from the Popalzai clan, became the president of Afghanistan and Zahir Shah's relatives and supporters were provided with key posts in the transitional government. Zahir Shah moved back into his old palace. In an October 2002 visit to France, he slipped in a bathroom, bruising his ribs, and on 21 June 2003, while in France for a medical check-up, he broke his femur.

On 3 February 2004, Zahir was flown from Kabul to New Delhi, India, for medical treatment after complaining of an intestinal problem. He was hospitalized for two weeks and remained in New Delhi under observation. On 18 May 2004, he was brought to a hospital in the United Arab Emirates because of nose bleeding caused by heat.

Zahir Shah attended the 7 December 2004 swearing in of Hamid Karzai as President of Afghanistan. In his final years, he was frail and required a microphone pinned to his collar so that his faint voice could be heard.[13] In January 2007, Shah was reported to be seriously ill and bedridden. On 23 July 2007, he died in the compound of the presidential palace in Kabul after prolonged illness. His death was announced on national television by President Karzai.[13] His funeral was held on 24 July. It began on the premises of the presidential palace, where political figures and dignitaries paid their respects; his coffin was then taken to a mosque before being moved to the royal mausoleum on Maranjan Hill.[18]

Family

He married Humaira Begum (1918-2002) on 7 November 1931 and had six sons and two daughters:[1]

  1. Princess Bilqis Begum (born 17 April 1932)
  2. Crown Prince Muhammed Akbar Khan (4 August 1933 - 26 November 1942)
  3. Crown Prince Ahmad Shah (born 23 September 1934)
  4. Princess Maryam Begum (born 2 November 1936)
  5. Prince Muhammed Nadir Khan (born 21 May 1941)
  6. Prince Shah Mahmoud Khan (15 November 1946 - 7 December 2002)
  7. Prince Muhammed Daoud Pashtunyar Khan (born 14 April 1949)
  8. Prince Mir Wais Khan (born 7 January 1957)

In January 2009 an article by Ahmad Majidyar of the American Enterprise Institute included one of his grandsons, Mostafa Zaher, on a list of fifteen possible candidates in the 2009 Afghan Presidential election.[19] However Mostafa Zaher did not become a candidate.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Royal Ark
  2. ^ a b Encyclopedia Britannica, Mohammad Zahir Shah
  3. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, Afghanistan Mohammad Nader Shah (1929–33)
  4. ^ a b c d "The King of Afghanistan". Daily Telegraph. 2007-07-24. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/07/24/db2401.xml. Retrieved 2008-03-18. 
  5. ^ "Mohammad Zahir Shah, 92, Last King of Afghanistan". http://www.nysun.com/article/59025. 
  6. ^ a b Judah, Tim (2001-09-23). "Profile: Mohamed Zahir Shah". The Observer. http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/sep/23/terrorism.afghanistan1. Retrieved 2008-03-18. 
  7. ^ a b McCarthy, Michael (2001-09-24). "War On Terrorism: Opposition - Exiled king declares himself ready to return". The Independent (London) (Look Smart: Find Articles). http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20010924/ai_n14407892. Retrieved 2007-07-23. 
  8. ^ a b Chesterman, Simon; Michael Ignatieff, Ramesh Chandra Thakur (2005). Making States Work: State Failure And The Crisis Of Governance. United Nations University Press. pp. 400. ISBN 928081107X. http://books.google.com/books?id=V7EibJ74C-UC. 
  9. ^ Jentleson, Bruce W.; Paterson, Thomas G. (1997). The American Journal of International Law. Oxford University Press. pp. 24. ISBN 0195110552. 
  10. ^ Dupree, Louis: "Afghanistan", pages 477-478. Princeton University Press, 1980
  11. ^ a b c "Profile: Ex-king Zahir Shah". BBC. 2001-10-01. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/1573181.stm. Retrieved 2008-02-01. 
  12. ^ Judah, Tim (2001-09-23). "Profile: Mohamed Zahir Shah". The Observer. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/waronterrorism/story/0,,556614,00.html. Retrieved 2008-02-01. 
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h Barry Bearak, Former King of Afghanistan Dies at 92, The New York Times, 23 July 2007.
  14. ^ Gall, Sandy (2007-07-23). "Mohammad Zahir Shah". The Guardian. http://www.guardian.co.uk/news/2007/jul/23/guardianobituaries.afghanistan. Retrieved 2008-03-18. 
  15. ^ a b c Dorronsoro, Gilles. "The Return to Political Fragmentation". Afghanistan: Revolution Unending, 1979-2002. C. Hurst & Co. pp. 330. ISBN 1850656835. 
  16. ^ "The Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan". http://president.gov.af/english/constitution.mspx#Transitional. 
  17. ^ "The late King was always fondly referred to by all Afghans, cutting across ethnic boundaries, as "Baba-e-Millat" or 'Father of the Nation', a position given to him in the country's Constitution promulgated in January 2004, about two years after the collapse of Taliban rule. The title of the 'Father of the Nation' dissolves with his death." "Last King of Afghanistan dies at 92". http://www.zeenews.com/articles.asp?aid=384525&archisec=WOR&archisubsec=. 
  18. ^ "Afghanistan's King Mohammad Zahir Shah Laid to Rest", Associated Press (Fox News), 24 July 2007.
  19. ^ Ahmad Majidyar (2009-01). "Afghanistan's Presidential Election". American Enterprise Institute. Archived from the original on 2009-09-18. http://www.webcitation.org/query?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.aei.org%2FdocLib%2F20090129-No1MEO23850g.pdf&date=2009-09-18. "Zaher is the grandson of the late King Muhammad Zaher Shah. He is currently head of Afghanistan’s environment preservation department and a member of the UNF. There has been speculation that the UNF will nominate Zaher as its candidate for the upcoming election. Despite being an heir to the royal family, he lacks a popular base." 

External links

Mohammed Zahir Shah
Born: 16 October 1914 Died: 23 July 2007
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Mohammed Nadir Shah
King of Afghanistan
1933 – 1973
Succeeded by
Mohammed Daoud Khan
President of Afghanistan
Titles in pretence
Loss of title
— TITULAR —
King of Afghanistan
1973 – 2007
Succeeded by
Crown Prince Ahmad Shah

 
 

 

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