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Mir Ahmedyar Khan

Ahmad Yar Khan
Khan of Kalat
Khan of Kalat
Titular
Pretender
1933–1947
1947–1955
Predecessor Mir Mohammad Azam Jan Khan
Successor Mir Dawood Jan (as pretender)
Born Ahmad Yar Khan Ahmedzai
1902
Khanate of Kalat, British India (present-day Balochistan, Pakistan)
Died 1979 (aged 77)
Kalat, Balochistan, Pakistan
Urdu
Pashto
احمد یار خان احمدزی
احمد يارخان احمدزى

Mir Sir Ahmad Yar Khan Ahmedzai GCIE (1902–1979) was the last Khan of Kalat, a semi-autonomous state within Britain's Indian Empire, serving from 10 September 1933 to 14 October 1955.

Mir Ahmad Yar assumed his throne in 1933, and was decorated by the British in the 1936 New Year Honours as a Knight Grand Commander of the Most Eminent Order of the Indian Empire (GCIE).

He declared Kalat's independence from the British Empire on 15 August 1947, hoping British Prime Minister Clement Attlee would honour his pledge to respect the self-determination of the Princely States. Yar Khan had served as an agent of British intelligence services in the 1920s, reporting on Russian influence and the spread of pro-Marxist sympathy among the poorer Baloch subjects. He appointed Douglas Fell, a Briton, Foreign Minister of Kalat in an effort to curry favour with the British government. Kalat was recognised by the UK and India but not Pakistan. Despite his nationalist aspirations, Muhammad Ali Jinnah was Yar Khan's legal adviser in the early 1940s. Jinnah pressured Yar Khan to accept Pakistani rule but the Khan stalled for time. Out of impatience, on 27 March 1948, Pakistan formally annexed Kalat. In April, the military invaded, conquering the territory in a month. Yar Khan signed a treaty of accession, submitting to the federal government. His younger brothers, Princes Agha Abdul Karim Baloch and Muhammad Rahim, refused to lay down arms, leading the Dosht-e Jhalawan in unconventional attacks on the army until 1950. Jinnah and his successors allowed Yar Khan to retain his title until the province's dissolution in 1955.

He briefly declared himself Khan again in defiance of the Pakistani state from June to October 1958. On 6 October 1958, the Pakistani government arrested and imprisoned Yar Khan on sedition charges during the coup d'état against President Iskander Mirza but later released and briefly restored his title in 1962. His arrest triggered an insurgent uprising led by Nauroz Khan in 1959.


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