Abdul qadeer khan biography in hindi
Father of Pakistan’s Nuclear Bomb Abdul Qadeer Khan dies, his notorious legacy is kept alive
New Delhi: Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan was a famous Pakistani nuclear scientist and metallurgical engineer who is regarded as the father of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme. Khan gave Pakistan the gas-centrifuge enrichment technology that it used for its nuclear deterrence programme. As the head of Pakistan’s nuclear program 25, he is considered a national hero. But while he is lauded as a hero in his home country, as per the former CIA Director George Tenet, Khan is at least as dangerous as Osama Bin Laden, the mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks on the US.
For decades Khan was involved in the black market of nuclear technology and sold and traded his expertise to countries like Iran, North Korea, Libya and many more. Khan was not only responsible for single-handedly jumpstarting Pakistan’s nuclear weapons programme but also gave the technology for weapons of mass destruction to unstable and dictatorial regimes like North Korea and Iran.
Khan didn’t start out as a nuclear spy but inevitably that is how things turned out. After Pakistan’s defeat to India in 1971, Pakistan wished to build a nuclear bomb as a future deterrent. During this time, Khan was working at a European company involved in building centrifuges to enrich uranium. Khan secretly copied the files he required and returned to Pakistan, where he set about building and enhancing Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and also spreading nuclear technologies to rogue nations. Khan was a major contributor to Iran's centrifuge programme at Natanz and also exchanged nuclear technology with North Korea in exchange for missile technology.
According to historical records, Khan had a close and cordial relationship with General Mohammad Zia-ul-Haq and the Military of Pakistan. In particular, he maintained a close relationship with Pakistan’s Air Force. After years of globe-trotting and selling nuclear technology to rogues states Through a process that began with the theft of designs and documents from a Dutch centrifuge manufacturing facility, Pakistani metallurgist A. Q. Khan (born 1936) became the father of his country's nuclear weapons program—and then a rogue scientist of historic significance who is thought to have marketed atomic bomb designs to states around the world, without oversight from his government or anyone else. Khan aided North Korea's nuclear program, which apparently culminated in the test of a small weapon in October of 2006. He has shared information with Iran, but the nature and extent of the help he gave to that country's nuclear program has been unclear, and remains an issue of vital importance in ongoing debates over Iran's intentions with regard to nuclear weaponry. Khan was finally reined in by the Pakistani government in 2004, forced to make a televised confession of illicit activities leading to nuclear proliferation, and placed under house arrest. The activities of the worldwide underground supplier network he established, however, have remained the focus of intense international investigation. Abdul Qadeer Khan was born in 1936 in Bhopal, India. Although he was not strongly religious during young adulthood, he grew up in a devoutly Muslim household in an urban atmosphere marked by Hindu-Muslim tensions. His father, a schoolteacher, was a member of the local Muslim League. But Khan as a child devoted himself mostly to his studies. His mother took him to a fortune teller who predicted, according to a Pakistani biography of Khan quoted by William Langewiesche in the Atlantic, that "he is going to do very important and useful work for his nation and will earn immense respect." Great Britain's 1947 partition of the Indian subcontinent into the new nations of majority-Hindu India and majority-Muslim Pakistan brought upheaval to Khan's life, as it did for millions of others. Several of his siblings lef Pakistani cricketer (1955–2019) Not to be confused with Abdul Kadir (cricketer). Abdul Qadir in 1990 Abdul Qadir Khan Source: ESPNcricinfo, 9 January 2019 Abdul Qadir KhanSI (Urdu: عبد القادر خان, 15 September 1955 – 6 September 2019) was an international cricketer who bowledleg spin for Pakistan. Abdul Qadir is widely regarded as a legendary leg spinner from the 1970s and 1980s and was a role model for up and coming leg spinners. His unique style of bowling consisted of a rhythmic cantering walk before the ball toss. Qadir was voted the best player in the Group B matches of the 1987 Cricket World Cup and won a car which he donated to Imran Khan for his Shaukat Khanum Memorial Cancer Hospital and Research Centre project. Later he was a commentator and Chief Selector of the Pakistan Cricket Board, from which he resigned in 2009 due to differences of opinion with leading Pakistan cricket administrators. Abdul Qadir appeared in 67 Tests and 104 One Day International (ODI) matches between 1977 and 1993, and captained the Pakistan cricket team in five ODIs. In Test cricket, his best performance for a series was 30 wickets for 437 runs, in three Test matches at home, against England in 1987. He achieved Pakistan's best bowling figures in a Test innings, which wa Indian actor, comedian, screenwriter, and producer (1937–2018) Kader Khan (22 October 1937 – 31 December 2018) was an Indian actor, screenwriter and film producer. As an actor, he appeared in over 300 Bollywood films after his debut in the 1973 film Daag, starring Rajesh Khanna, as a prosecuting attorney. He was a prolific actor and screenwriter in Hindi cinema in the period late 1970s to 90s and wrote dialogues for 200 films. Born in Afghanistan, Khan graduated from Ismail Yusuf College affiliated to Bombay University. Before entering the film industry in the early 1970s, he was a professor of civil engineering in M. H. Saboo Siddik College of Engineering, Mumbai. Kader Khan was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, on 22 October 1937 into a Sunni Muslim family. His father was Abdul Rahman Khan from Kandahar, Afghanistan while his mother was Iqbal Begum from Pishin in the Baluchistan Province of British India (now in Balochistan, Pakistan). Khan had three brothers, Shams ur Rehman, Fazal Rehman and Habib ur Rehman. He is an ethnic Pashtun of the Kakar tribe. Khan was raised in the Kamathipura neighbourhood of Mumbai after his family moved there from Kabul. He enrolled in a local municipal school and later in the Ismail Yusuf College after which he graduated in Engineering specialising in Civil engineering. Between 1970 and 1975, he taught at M. H. Saboo Siddik College of Engineering in Byculla as a professor of civil engineering. While performing in a play named Taash Ke Patey, he was noted by comedian Agha who then suggested actor Dilip Kumar to see the play. Dilip Kumar was impressed and signed him up for his next films, Sagina and Bairaag. During an interview with Rediff, Khan recalled this as the incident that started his film career. He used to write plays for Khan, A. Q.
Influence Predicted by Fortune-Teller
Abdul Qadir (cricketer)
Full name Born (1955-09-15)15 September 1955
Lahore, Punjab, PakistanDied 6 September 2019(2019-09-06) (aged 63)
Lahore, Punjab, PakistanBatting Right-handed Bowling Right-arm leg break Role Bowler Relations Sulaman Qadir (son)
Imran Qadir (son)
Usman Qadir (son)
Umar Akmal (son-in-law)National side Test debut (cap 78) 14 December 1977 v England Last Test 6 December 1990 v West Indies ODI debut (cap 43) 11 June 1983 v West Indies Last ODI 2 November 1993 v Sri Lanka Kader Khan
Early life and education