Said Akbar Babrak

Said Akbar Babrak
سعید اکبر ببرک
Born1921 or 1922
Died16 October 1951 (aged 29)[1]
Cause of deathGunshot
Other namesSaid Akbar Khan Babrakzai
Known forAssassinating Pakistani prime minister Liaquat Ali Khan
SpouseMusammat Malmal Bibi (c. 1940s)
Children2
FatherBabrak Khan
Military career
AllegianceRebels of Mazrak Zadran
Battles / warsAfghan tribal revolts of 1944–1947

Said Akbar Babrak (Pashto: سید اکبر ببرک; 1921 or 1922 – 16 October 1951) was an Afghan militant who assassinated the first Pakistani prime minister Liaquat Ali Khan in the city of Rawalpindi on 16 October 1951. Khan, who had become the country's prime minister immediately after the partition of India in 1947, was addressing a crowd of more than 100,000 people at Rawalpindi's Company Bagh when Babrak approached him and shot him twice in the chest; Khan later succumbed to his injuries at a local hospital. As Babrak was shot dead by police officers at the scene shortly after the shooting, his motives for the assassination remain unclear.[2] An ethnic Pashtun, he had previously taken part in the Afghan tribal revolts of 1944–1947, fighting against the governments of both Afghanistan and British India.

  1. ^ Muñoz, Heraldo (2014). Getting Away with Murder: Benazir Bhutto's Assassination and the Politics of Pakistan. W. W. Norton & Company. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-393-06291-5. The killer was a twenty-nine-year-old Afghan by the name of Said Akbar
  2. ^ "A tale of 'political martyrs' in Pakistan". Pakistan Today. 15 August 2018.