Waqas
Waqas
Waqas
But on 27 July 1948, as he moved forward with six of his men to cut their way through a
barbed wire barrier, he died when his chest was riddled by a burst of automatic fire. He
was 38 years old.
Throughout, undaunted by constant fire from enemy shell arms, tanks and artillery, he
organized the defence of the canal, directing his men to answer the fire until he was hit by
an enemy tank shell which killed him on 10 September 1965. He was 37 years old.
Knowing that it meant certin death, he damaged tha controls and forced the aircraft to
crash thirty two miles short of the border on 20 August 1971. He died at the age of 20.
Born 18th June 1949 in Dhok Pir Baksh (now Dhok Mohammad
Husain Janjua).
Enlisted as a driver on 3 September 1966.
Although only a driver in the 20th Lancers, when war broke out in
1971, Sowar Mohammad Hussein took an active part in every battle
in which his unit was engaged unmindful of any danger, no matter
how grave.
When he spotted the enemy digging in along a minefield near the village of Harar Khurd
in December 1971 on his own initiative he directed accurate fire at the enemy resulting in
the destruction of sixteen enemy tanks.
But while directing fire from recoilless rifles, he was hit in the chest by a burst of
machine-gun fire and died on 10 December 1971 at the age of 22.
6. Major Muhammad Akram Shaheed
Major Akram died during this epic battle in 1971 at the age of 33.
Although his machine gun was destroyed by an enemy shell, Mahfuz advanced towards
an enemy bunker whose automatic fire had inflicted heavy casualties. Even though
wounded in both legs by shell splinters, when he reached the bunker he stood up and
pounced on the enemy, but was hit.
Although unarmed, he caught hold of one enemy was slowly strangling him when
another bayoneted him to death during the night on 17 December 1971. He was 27 years
old.
But after he took over an anti-tank gun from his gunner in an attack was killed by a direct
hit in the afternoon of 6 December. He was 28 years old.
After many abortive attempts, the enemy on July 5 ringed the post of Capt. Sher Khan
with the help of two battalion and unleashed heavy mortar firing and managed to capture
some part of the post. Despite facing all odds, he lead a counter-attack and re- captured
the lost parts.
But during the course he was hit by the machine-gun fire and embraced Shahadat at the
same post. He is the first officer from the NWFP province to be awarded with Nishan-i-
Haider.
Hav. Lalak Jan of the Northern Light Infantry (NLI) was one of those
many who as a junior leader fought from the forefront to thwart heavy
Indian attacks. He volunteered himself to be deployed on the front
positions located at the jagged peak in May 1999.