The Chief Commissioner's Province of British Baluchistan was a province of British India established in 1876. Upon the creation of Pakistan it acceded to the newly formed state. It was part of the Baluchistan Agency. It was dissolved to form a united province of West Pakistan in 1955 upon the creation of One Unit Scheme.
Chief Commissioner's Province of British Baluchistan | |||||||||||
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Province of British India & Pakistan | |||||||||||
1876–1955 | |||||||||||
Flag | |||||||||||
Capital | Quetta | ||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||
• 1901 | 139,396[1][2] km2 (53,821 sq mi) | ||||||||||
• 1903 | 140,010 km2 (54,060 sq mi) | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
• Established | 1876 | ||||||||||
• Quetta and surrounding districts placed under British administration | 1879 | ||||||||||
• Administration of Pishin and Sibi tract assumed from Afghanistan | 1879 | ||||||||||
• Bolan Pass tracts leased to British by Kalat | 1883 | ||||||||||
• Zhob and country of Khetran tribes brought under British rule from Afghanistan | 1890 | ||||||||||
• Chagai and West Sinjrani brought under British administration | 1896 | ||||||||||
• Leased Nushki from Kalat | 1899 | ||||||||||
• Leased Nasirabad from Kalat | 1903 | ||||||||||
• Disestablished | 1955 | ||||||||||
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History
editThe province was originally formed over the period 1876–1891 by three treaties between Robert Sandeman and the Khan of Kalat, Khudadad of Kalat. Sandeman became the Political Agent for the British-administered areas which were strategically located between British India and Afghanistan. A military base was established at Quetta which played a major part in the Second and Third Afghan Wars.
Balochistan was legally ceded to Pakistan by its rulers in 1947 and continued to be administered by a Chief Commissioner. It was dissolved in 1955 when most parts of the western wing of Pakistan became the new province of West Pakistan. West Pakistan was dissolved in 1970. Khan Abdul Wali Khan intended to transfer political power to the Pashtuns. The former Chief Commissioner's province was combined with the former Balochistan States Union and the enclave of Gwadar to form a new, larger Balochistan Province, with a Governor, a Chief Minister and a Provincial Assembly.
Demographics
editThe population of the province was equally split between Baloch tribes in the south and west and Pashtun tribes in the north.
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Government
editThe province was administered by a Chief Commissioner appointed by the Federal Government. Although there was no elected legislature the Chief Commissioner could consult the Shahi Jirga, an assembly of tribal leaders.
The province comprised three groups of areas – the settled districts, the political agencies and the tribal area. The settled areas were mainly the district around Quetta and Jaffarabad. The agencies were the Zhob agency to the north of Quetta and the Chagai agency to the west, which had a tenuous land link with the rest of the province. The tribal areas were the Bugti and Marri tribal agencies which would later become Provincially Administered Tribal Areas in the new Balochistan province.
Tenure | Chief Commissioner of Balochistan[3] |
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15 August 1947 – 3 October 1947 | Sir Geoffrey Prior |
3 October 1947 – 8 April 1948 | Sir Ambrose Dundas Flux Dundas |
9 April 1948 – 18 January 1949 | Cecil Arthur Grant Savidge |
19 January 1949 – 16 July 1949 | Sahibzada Mohammad Kursheed |
16 July 1949 – 18 November 1952 | Mian Aminuddin |
18 November 1952 – 13 February 1953 | Unknown |
13 February 1953 – 8 November 1954 | Qurban Ali Khan |
8 November 1954 – 19 July 1955 | Sardar Bahadur Khan |
19 July 1955 – 25 July 1955 | R.A.F. Hyride |
26 July 1955 – 14 October 1955 | R.A.M. Shaker |
14 October 1955 | Province abolished |
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Province area. Total area including dependent states – 341 503 км2 (131 855 sq mi).
- ^ The Imperial Gazetteer of India (26 vol, 1908–31), highly detailed description of all of India in 1901. online edition 1908, p. 265
- ^ Ben Cahoon, WorldStatesmen.org. "Pakistan Provinces". Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 3 October 2007.