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Encyclopedia > Zahir Shah

Mohammed Zahir Shah (born October 16, 1914) was the last King of Afghanistan from 1933 to 1973. Following a coup d'tat in 1973, he lived in exile in Italy for twenty-nine years. He is seen as a symbol of unity for Afghanistan, and has been given the title "Father of the Nation." On February 3, 2004, he was flown from Kabul to New Delhi, India for medical treatment after complaining of an intestinal problem. He was hospitalized for two weeks, and remains in New Delhi under observation. On May 18 he was brought to a hospital in the United Arab Emirates because of nose bleeding caused by heat. He was reported in stable condition as of May 2004. He was next scheduled to visit France to cure his stomach disease. He attended the December 7 2004 swearing in of Hamid Karzai as President of Afghanistan in Kabul.


He instituted programs of political and economic modernization, ushering in a democratic legislature, education for women and other such changes. These reforms put him at odds with the religious militants who opposed him.


He refused to return as a puppet leader during Soviet-backed Communist rule in the late 1970s. He has remained aloof from the bloody feuds that followed the Soviet withdrawal in 1989. However, critics contend that in Afghanistan's most difficult moments, he remained comfortably secluded in Italy and refused to speak out against the Taliban.


Other criticisms include his kindness toward India and his policy toward the Durand Line, in which he has favored the break off of northwest Pakistan into a separate Afghan ethnic homeland.


In April 2002, he returned to Afghanistan to open the Loya jirga scheduled for June 2002. He moved back into his old palace in central Kabul but renounced all claim to the throne.


While in France for a medical check-up, he broke his femur by slipping in a bathroom, June 21, 2003. Rumors of his death followed both in Afghanistan and Pakistan. In an October 2002 visit to France, he had also slipped in a bathroom, bruising his ribs.


From a family of Pashtuns, the dominant Afghan ethnic group, he was also educated in the elite culture of Afghanistan's Persian-speaking minority, giving him access to both groups.



See the reigns of Nadir Shah and Zahir Shah for more detailed information on his rule.


  Results from FactBites:
 
BBC News | SOUTH ASIA | Profile: Ex-king Zahir Shah (517 words)
Born in Kabul in 1914, Zahir Shah was educated in France and was only 19 when he ascended the throne in 1933 after his father was assassinated.
Zahir Shah brought in foreign advisers, founded the first modern university, and fostered cultural and commercial relations with Europe.
Zahir Shah's youngest son, Mirwais, told the Washington Post newspaper that his family wanted to see Afghanistan "have peace and for the people to decide their government in a democratic manner, with free elections".
Zahir Shah, Muhammad - MSN Encarta (663 words)
Zahir was overthrown in a political coup that abolished the Afghan monarchy and precipitated decades of war and political chaos.
Born in the Afghan capital of Kābul, Zahir was the son of Muhammad Nadir Shah, who served Afghan king Amanullah as commander in chief of the Afghan army, leading troops in the Third Anglo-Afghan War (1919-1921).
Zahir ascended to the throne in November 1933, at the age of 19, after witnessing the assassination of his father during a public ceremony in Kābul.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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