Pakistan on December 5th Saturday is remembering Major Akram Shaheed on his martyrdom anniversary today.
Nation pays tribute to Major Akram Shaheed – Nishan-e-Haider, for his valor, courage, selfless devotion and ultimate sacrifice for the defence of motherland.
“Tribute to Major Akram Shaheed, Nishan-e-Haider, for his supreme sacrifice. Displaying valor against all odds, he heroically repulsed innumerable attacks by enemy inflicting heavy losses in battle of Hilli. Such exemplary courage is hallmark of defenders of motherland,” said Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR) in its press-release paying tribute to Major Akram Shaheed.
Major Mohammad Akram Shaheed – Nishan-e-Haider
Muhammad Akram, born on April 4 1938, hailed from Dinga, a small City in Gujrat District, and belonged to Malik Awan (tribe) family. He was a military brat and his father, Malik S. Muhammad, was an enlisted personnel in the British Army who later retired as a Havildar, an army sergeant, in the Pakistan Army.
After securing his graduation from a local middle school in Nakka Kalan, Akram entered to join the Military College Jhelum– an ROTC and an army’s OCS in Jhelum, Punjab.
In 1953, he dropped out from the Military College Jhelum due to his father’s deployment, and had to take the High School equivalency exam where he took examinations in geography and intermediate education. In 1956, he was enlisted in the Pakistan Army and posted with the 8th Punjab Regiment near India-Pakistan border.
In 1959, Muhammad Akram was invited to attend the Pakistan Military Academy but only spent a semester after being deployed in East-Pakistan as a Corporal.
He received commission in the Army through his years of attendance at the army’s OCS in Jhelum in 1961, and was attached to the East Pakistan Rifles as a military advisor in 1963 till 1965. In 1965, Capt. Akram was stationed in different parts of the West-Pakistan before being deployed in East-Pakistan as a quartermaster with the Frontier Force Regiment till 1967–68.
Martyrdom
In 1968–70, Maj. Akram served with the 4th battalion posted with the Frontier Force Regiment, eventually becoming its commanding officer by 1971.
During the east Pakistan War of 1971, the 4th FF Regiment, which at that time was commanded by then Col. Muhammad Mumtaz Malik, was placed in the forward area of the Hilli Municipality (under Hakimpur Upozila, Dinajpur District), in what was then East Pakistan.
The regiment came under continuous and heavy air, artillery and armor attacks from the Indian Army. Despite enemy superiority in both numbers and firepower, Akram and his men repulsed many attacks, inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy.
He was killed in action in the attack and was posthumously awarded the Nishan-e-Haider, Pakistan’s highest military honor.
He was buried in the village of Boaldar, Thana/Upozila-Hakimpur (Banglahilly), District-Dinajpur. There is a monument, Major Akram Shaheed Memorial, in the midst of Jhelum city.