Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference

All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference
آل جموں و کشمیر مسلم کانفرنس
AbbreviationAJKMC, MC
PresidentSardar Attique Ahmed Khan[1]
Secretary-GeneralMadam Mehrun-Nissa
Senior Vice PresidentSardar Altaf Hussain Khan
FounderSheikh Muhammad Abdullah and Chaudhry Ghulam Abbas
Founded1941 (1941)[2]
Split fromJammu & Kashmir National Conference
HeadquartersMuzaffarabad
IdeologyIslamic democracy[3]
Kashmiriyat[4]
Pakistani nationalism[5]
Kashmir unification with Pakistan[6]
Colors  Orange
AJK Assembly
1 / 53
Party flag
Website
Official website

The All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference (Urdu: آل جموں و کشمیر مسلم کانفرنس) also shortly referred as Muslim Conference (MC) is a political party in Pakistan administered territory of Azad Jammu and Kashmir.[7]

The party was founded in 1941 by Chaudhry Ghulam Abbas, and Syed Aziz Badshah of Dadyal in the former princely state of Jammu and Kashmir as a splinter group of the Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, which toke the name the National Conference went by from its founding in October 1932 until June 1939.

After the Partition of India, the party supported the accession of the princely state to Pakistan, and instigated the Poonch Rebellion against the Maharaja's government under the leadership of its legislator Sardar Muhammad Ibrahim Khan. Pakistan, after turning the rebellion into an outright invasion,[8] installed Ibrahim Khan as the President of the rebel-controlled region, called Azad Jammu and Kashmir.[9]

The Muslim Conference has ever since held the reins of power in Azad Kashmir, supported by the Government of Pakistan.

  1. ^ "AJKMC chief Sardar Attique calls on PM Imran". The Nation. 17 June 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  2. ^ Chaku, Arjan Nath; Chaku, Inder K (2016). The Kashmir story : through the ages. New Delhi: Vitasta Publishing Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 9789382711759.
  3. ^ Chudary Hussain, Gulam mehmood & others (2013). The Ideology of All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference pro-pakistan spliter faction of Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, Islamabad:Politics of kashmir article, ISBN 0-14-027825-7, pp.320–2
  4. ^ Chudary Hussain, Gulam mehmood & others (2013). The Ideology of All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference pro-pakistan spliter faction of Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, Islamabad:Politics of kashmir article, ISBN 0-14-027825-7, pp.320–2
  5. ^ Chudary Hussain, Gulam mehmood & others (2013). The Ideology of All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference pro-pakistan spliter faction of Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, Islamabad:Politics of kashmir article, ISBN 0-14-027825-7, pp.320–2
  6. ^ Chudary Hussain, Gulam mehmood & others (2013). The Ideology of All Jammu and Kashmir Muslim Conference pro-pakistan spliter faction of Jammu & Kashmir National Conference, Islamabad:Politics of kashmir article, ISBN 0-14-027825-7, pp.320–2
  7. ^ Butt, Qaiser (15 June 2013). "Bridging gaps: Efforts under way to mend PML-N-Muslim Conference ties". Express Tribune. Retrieved 10 July 2013.
  8. ^ Khan, Aamer Ahmed (1994), "Look Back in Anger", The Herald, Volume 25, Pakistan Herald Publications, p. 54, Once past Kahuta, the two leaders [of Muslim Conference] were apparently whisked away to Liaquat Ali Khan by military personnel. ... "We were told about the plan to attack Kashmir. Liaquat Ali Khan said that it would all be over within hours. The Frontier government was to mastermind the attack from Garhi Abdullah while the Punjab government would control the attack from Kahuta to Jammu."
  9. ^ Saraf, Muhammad Yusuf (2015) [first published 1979 by Ferozsons], Kashmiris Fight for Freedom, Volume 2, Mirpur: National Institute Kashmir Studies, p. 547 – via archive.org

Previous Page Next Page