Mir Ahmad Shah (d. 1978) was an Afghan military general and Islamist intellectual who led an attempted coup d'etat against the Afghan government in December 1976. and was later executed after the 1978 communist takeover of the country. Due to his prominence and influence as a scholar, he had been brought into the government fold and given the title of Firqa Meshir, chief of the army.[1] Rizwani was a follower of Islamic scholar Muhammad Atta-ullah Faizani, and headed his own Islamist group, mainly composed of army personnel, called Qiyam-i Islami (Islamic Uprising), which plotted an abortive coup against the government of President Mohammed Daoud Khan.[2] The coup was preempted; Rizwani and 50 of his associates (such as Sayyid Ismail Pasikh and Akhtar Mohammad Sulaimankhel) were arrested on December 9, 1976, and Rizwani executed in 1978 following the communist takeover. His associates who survived fled to Pakistan.[3]

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  1. ^ Bahaudin Ghulam Mujtaba (December 2006). Afghanistan: Realities of War and Rebuilding. Ilead Academy. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-9774211-1-4.
  2. ^ Barry M. Rubin (2010). Guide to Islamist Movements. M.E. Sharpe. pp. 181–. ISBN 978-0-7656-4138-0.
  3. ^ Hafizullah Emadi (14 September 2010). Dynamics of Political Development in Afghanistan: The British, Russian, and American Invasions. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 134–. ISBN 978-0-230-11200-1.