Nurul Amin was a prominent figure in the politics of Bengal. In 1946,
when Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy rose to power and became Chief Minister,
Nurul Amin was elected as the Speaker of Bengal Assembly. After
Pakistan came into being, Nurul Amin was closely associated with
Pakistan Muslim League. He was appointed as Chief Minister of East
Pakistan from September 1948 to 1952. To a great extent this period is
considered to be of sustained political stability.
Thereafter he left Muslim League and made his own party known as the
Pakistan Democratic Party. In the general elections held on December 7,
1970, when the Awami League had a sweeping victory winning 160 seats out
of 162 in East Pakistan, it was Nurul Amin who won one of the remaining
two seats, the other being obtained by Raja Tridib Roy, an independent
candidate from the Chittagong Hill Tract.
Nurul Amin was a great patriot, cherishing his love to see a strong
and healthy Pakistan. He was deeply aggrieved and agitated at the fall
of Dhaka. He was so much dejected and depressed when he observed Yahya
along with General Hameed and other generals unaffected by this
catastrophe, he said in anguish, “So Dhaka has fallen, and East Pakistan
has gone and you are enjoying…”.
On the request of Z. A. Bhutto, General Yahya Khan also designated
Nurul Amin as Prime Minister of Pakistan for a short period from
December 7 to December 20, 1971, after which Bhutto took over as the
civilian Chief Marshal Law Administrator of Pakistan.
He died in 1974.
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