Quiz: Pakistan History
- Question 1 of 20
1.
Pakistan became free from British control in 1947. When was the Lahore Resolution approved, which called for a sovereign, independent Muslim state?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – 1940
In 1940, the Muslim League president Mohammed Ali Jinnah presided over the organization’s annual session, held that year at Lahore, in which the League made its first official demand for the partition of India. The Lahore Resolution called for an independent, sovereign Muslim state.
- Question 2 of 20
2.
On _____________, Pakistan became an independent nation.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – August 14, 1947
Pakistan came into existence in two parts: West Pakistan, coextensive with the country’s present boundaries, and East Pakistan, now known as Bangladesh.
- Question 3 of 20
3.
Jinnah was declared the first governer-general of Pakistan. Who was the first prime-minister?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Liaquat Ali Khan
Liaquat Ali Khan was one of the most important people involved in Pakistan’s struggle for independence.
- Question 4 of 20
4.
On September 11, 1948, Jinnah died in Karachi at the age of 72. What was the cause of his death?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Tuberculosis
Jinnah had developed tuberculosis in 1940, but he forbade his doctor to disclose that to the public, knowing that it would slower the struggle for independence. Because of his tuberculosis, one of his lungs became totally useless. At the time of his death, he weighed less than 60 lbs.
- Question 5 of 20
5.
In 1951, Liaquat was assassinated in Rawalpindi. Khwaja Nazimuddin, an East Pakistani who had succeeded Jinnah as governor-general, became prime minister. Who became governor-general?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Ghulam Mohammed
Liaquat was addressing a public gathering in Rawalpindi when he was shot twice in the chest. His last words were reported to be, “God Bless Pakistan.”
- Question 6 of 20
6.
When was Pakistan’s first constitution adopted?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – 1956
The constitution provided for a unicameral (single-chamber) National Assembly with 300 seats, evenly divided between East and West Pakistan. It also officially designated Pakistan as an Islamic republic.
- Question 7 of 20
7.
President Mirza declared martial law in October 1958, and was supported by the army commander-in-chief. Twenty days later, the latter forced Mirza to resign and became president himself. Who was this commander-in-chief who ruled Pakistan for nearly ten years?
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Ayub Khan
President Ayub ruled Pakistan almost absolutely for a little more than ten years. Although his regime made some notable achievements, it did not eliminate the basic problems of Pakistani society. Ayub’s regime increased developmental funds to East Pakistan more than threefold. This had a noticeable effect on the economy of the province, but the disparity between the two wings of Pakistan was not eliminated.
- Question 8 of 20
8.
On September 6, 1965, war broke out between India and Pakistan over Kashmir. The war was stopped after Britain and the US suspended military and economic aid to both countries. On September 23, a cease fire was arranged by the UN and the heads of both nations met in _____________ to sign a peace treaty.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Tashkent
In January 1966, Ayub Khan and India’s prime minister, Lal Bahadur Shastri, signed the Tashkent Declaration, which formally ended hostilities and called for a mutual withdrawal of forces.
- Question 9 of 20
9.
After the Civil War in 1971, East Pakistan became a separate state in the form of Bangladesh. Yahya Khan, who had become president after Ayub, resigned and _____________ became president and martial law administrator of Pakistan.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto
Under Bhutto’s leadership Pakistan began to rearrange its national life. Bhutto, essentially a socialist, nationalized the basic industries, insurance companies, domestically owned banks, and schools and colleges. He also instituted land reforms that benefited tenants and middle-class farmers. He removed the armed forces from the process of decision making, but to placate the generals he allocated about 6 percent of the gross national product to defense. In July 1972 Bhutto negotiated the Simla Agreement, which confirmed a line of control dividing Kashmir and prompted the withdrawal of Indian troops from Pakistani territory. In April 1972 Bhutto lifted martial law and convened the National Assembly, which consisted of members elected from West Pakistan in 1970. After much political debate, the legislature drafted the country’s third constitution, which was promulgated on August 14, 1973. It changed the National Assembly into a two-chamber legislature, with a Senate as the upper house and a National Assembly as the lower house. It designated the prime minister as the most powerful government official, but it also set up a formal parliamentary system in which the executive was responsible to the legislature. Bhutto became prime minister, and Fazal Elahi Chaudry replaced him as president.
- Question 10 of 20
10.
On July 5, 1977, army commander-in-chief, _____________ staged a coup and imposed a martial law regime.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Zia-ul-Haq
Zia formally assumed the presidency in 1978 and embarked on an Islamization program. Through various ordinances between 1978 and 1985, he instituted the Islamization of Pakistan’s legal and economic systems and social order. In 1979 a federal Sharia (Islamic law) court was established to exercise Islamic judicial review. Other ordinances established interest-free banking and provided maximum penalties for adultery, defamation, theft, and consumption of alcohol. On March 24, 1981, Zia issued a Provisional Constitutional Order that served as a substitute for the suspended 1973 constitution. The order provided for the formation of a Federal Advisory Council (Majlis-e-Shoora) to take the place of the National Assembly. In early 1982 Zia appointed the 228 members of the new council. This effectively restricted the political parties, which already had been constrained by the banning of political activity, from organizing resistance to the Zia regime through the election process.
- Question 11 of 20
11.
Zia was killed in an airplane crash possibly caused by sabotage in _____________.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – August 1988
Zia was killed in a mysterious aircraft accident near Bahawalpur, in Punjab, on August 17, 1988, along with the chairman of the joint chiefs committee, the United States ambassador, and twenty-seven others. A joint United States-Pakistani committee investigating the accident later established that the crash was caused by “a criminal act of sabotage perpetrated in the aircraft.” Some believe that the KGB, bitter after Pakistan’s support of bin Laden’s US-backed resistance against the Soviet Union’s invasion of Afghanistan, carried out the attack. Others blame the United States because Zia was becoming more and more of a pain for its neo-imperialist policies in the Middle East.
- Question 12 of 20
12.
After the elections in November 1988 _____________ became prime-minister, and Ghulam Ishaq Khan was appointed president.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Benazir Bhutto
Benazir Bhutto became prime minister after her Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) won the general elections in November 1988. She was the first woman to head a modern Islamic state. In August 1990, Ghulam Ishaq Khan, the president, dismissed Bhutto’s government, charging misconduct, and declared a state of emergency. Bhutto lost the October elections after she was arrested for corruption and abuse of power.
- Question 13 of 20
13.
After Bhutto’s dismissal, Sharif was elected prime-minister. Fulfilling Sharif’s election promise to make Sharia (Islamic law) the supreme law of Pakistan, the national legislature passed an amended Shariat Bill in _____________.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – 1991
Sharif also promised to ease continuing tensions with India over Kashmir. The charges against Bhutto were resolved, and she returned to lead the opposition. In early 1993 Sharif was appointed the leader of the Pakistan Muslim League. In April 1993 Ishaq Khan once again used his presidential power, this time to dismiss Sharif and to dissolve parliament. However, Sharif appealed to the Supreme Court of Pakistan, and in May the court stated that Khan’s actions were unconstitutional, and the court reinstated Sharif as prime minister. Sharif and Khan subsequently became embroiled in a power struggle that paralyzed the Pakistani government. In an agreement designed to end the stalemate, Sharif and Khan resigned together in July 1993, and elections were held in October of that year.
- Question 14 of 20
14.
In 1996, Bhutto, who was elected prime-minister in October 1993, was dismissed by President Farooq Leghari amid allegations of corruption. New elections in February 1997 brought _____________ back to power.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Nawaz Sharif
One of Sharif’s first actions as prime minister was to lead the National Assembly in passing a constitutional amendment stripping the president of the authority to dismiss parliament. The action triggered a power struggle between Sharif, Leghari, and Supreme Court Chief Justice Sajjad Ali Shah. When the military threw its support behind Sharif, Leghari resigned and Sajjad Ali Shah was removed. Sharif’s nominee, Rafiq Tarar, was then elected president.
- Question 15 of 20
15.
In early 1997 Sharif resumed talks with India over the Kashmir region; however, negotiations quickly broke down when armed hostilities erupted again. Tensions escalated further in 1998, when India conducted several nuclear tests. Pakistan responded with its own tests, first of which on _____________.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – May 28, 1998
Many foreign countries, including the United States, imposed economic sanctions against both India and Pakistan for testing nuclear devices. In the months following the explosions, the leaders of Pakistan and India placed a moratorium on further nuclear testing, and the United States initiated negotiations between the two countries aimed at reducing tensions and circumventing an arms race in the region.
- Question 16 of 20
16.
In May 1999, fighting broke out in _____________, an Indian-controlled part of Kashmir.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Kargil
In May 1999 Kashmiri separatists, widely believed to be backed by Pakistan, seized Indian-controlled territory near Kargil in the disputed Kashmir region. Fighting between Indian forces and the separatists raged until July, when Sharif agreed to secure the withdrawal of the separatists and India suspended its military campaign
- Question 17 of 20
17.
In October 1999, a bloodless coup launched by _____________, the commander-in-chief of the army, ousted Sharif and made him chief executive of Pakistan.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Pervez Musharraf
The Pakistani military accused Sharif of giving in too easily to pressure from India and for pinning the blame for the Kargil attack on army chief Pervez Musharraf. In October 1999 Sharif tried to dismiss Musharraf from his position. He attempted to prevent Musharraf’s return to Pakistan from abroad by refusing to let his airplane land. The commercial airliner carrying Musharraf, as well as dozens of civilians, was forced to circle the Karachi airport until army forces loyal to Musharraf took over the airport. Army forces also seized control of the government in a bloodless coup that lasted less than three hours. Musharraf declared himself the chief executive of Pakistan, suspended the constitution, and dissolved the legislature. He appointed an eight-member National Security Council to function as the country’s supreme governing body. Many Pakistanis, already opposed to Sharif’s increasingly autocratic rule and suffering from a sagging Pakistani economy after ten years of government excesses and corruption, welcomed the coup. Sharif was arrested, and in April 2000 he was convicted of abuse of power and other charges and sentenced to life imprisonment; his sentence was soon commuted and he was allowed to live in exile in Saudi Arabia.
- Question 18 of 20
18.
The Supreme Court of Pakistan set a deadline of _____________ for the restoration of civilian rule.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – October 2002
After assuming power, Musharraf’s military government adopted a reformist posture. It identified economic reform as the most urgent measure needed to restore the confidence of foreign and local investors. As part of this strategy, Musharraf initiated an ambitious program based on accountability, improved governance, and widening of the tax net. However, in the wake of the coup new international sanctions were imposed to oppose the military regime. Donor agencies such as the International Monetary Fund were unwilling to provide new loans or reschedule Pakistan’s foreign debt.
- Question 19 of 20
19.
Pakistan became a frontline state of high strategic importance as the U.S.-led war on terrorism unfolded in neighboring _____________.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – Afghanistan
Pakistan had been an ally of the Taliban, which had established a fundamentalist Islamic regime in Afghanistan in 1996. The Taliban was accused of harboring the suspected mastermind of the terrorist attacks, Osama bin Laden. The Taliban and bin Laden’s international terrorist network, al-Qaeda, became the target of U.S.-led air strikes in Afghanistan that began on October 7. The Musharraf government agreed to provide logistical support and use of Pakistan’s airspace for the offensive, and to share military intelligence to fight global terrorism. Formally breaking with the Taliban, Pakistan withdrew all of its diplomats from Afghanistan and officially closed its shared border. However, Pakistan faced a growing refugee crisis as many Afghans fled their country. On September 22, meanwhile, the United States lifted most of the economic sanctions it had imposed after Pakistan exploded nuclear devices in 1998, brightening prospects for Pakistan’s economy.
- Question 20 of 20
20.
Musharraf pledged to hold provincial and parliamentary elections by October 2002. In a bid to secure his position as president ahead of the elections, however, Musharraf called a referendum in April on extending his presidency for ______ years.
Correct
Wrong — Correct Answer – five
The referendum returned a majority of votes in favor of the proposal, although low voter turnout, loose voting rules, and the absence of poll monitors tinged the results. In addition, political parties denounced the referendum because under the constitution, the president is to be selected by the National Assembly.