Pakistan Day Parade

The Pakistan Day Parade also known as the National Day Joint Services Parade is an annual event held at Shakarparian in the Pakistani capital of Islamabad on the occasion of the Pakistan Day. It specifically celebrates the anniversary of the Lahore Resolution of 1940. It is overseen by the President of Pakistan as well as the Prime Minister of Pakistan.

Pakistan Day Parade
Sherdil Aerobatic Team performing at Pakistan Day Parade
GenreNational patriotic parade
BeginsMarch 23
EndsMarch 23
FrequencyAnnual
Location(s)Shakarparian Parade Ground, Islamabad, Pakistan
Most recent2022
Next eventMarch 23, 2024
Soldiers from the Mujahid Force Regiment during the parade in 2016.

The two are accompanied by Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee (JCSC), the Army Staff Chief, Naval Staff Chief, and Air Force Staff Chief as well as foreign guests on occasion. It is organised by Joint Staff Headquarters (JS HQ).

History

A group photo of the Frontier Force Regiment prior to the parade in 1974.

Between its inception and 2008, the parade was held at various venues in the country. These include Constitution Avenue,[1] Jinnah Avenue and the Race Course Grounds in Rawalpindi.[2] Over two weeks prior to the parade in 1980, a conspiracy to assassinate President Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq by Major General Tajammul Hussain Malik during the ceremony was foiled.[3] In 2008, the parade was suspended for an extended period of time due to the growing terrorism in the country and fears that an attack on the parade was imminent.[4][5]

After a 7-year break, it was reconstituted in 2015 on the 75th anniversary.[6] This decision was made in part to the anniversary's significance as well as the success of Operation Zarb-e-Azb by the Pakistan Army.[7][8] As a precaution however, phone networks were blocked to thwart militants mobile cellular signals that could trigger bombs.[9][10]

The parade was cancelled due political situation in the country in 1969 and 1971. In 1972 and 2002 the parade was not held due to military’s deployment on the borders. In 2003 and 2004 the parade was not held once again due to regional situation, including war in Iraq and Afghanistan and sudden spike in terrorism in Pakistan

In 1975 and 1994 the parade was cancelled due to inclement weather.

The parade was cancelled in 2020 due to the outbreak of the coronavirus in Pakistan, with the cancellation being an attempt to mitigate the fall out from the pandemic.[11]

The 2021 parade was postponed due to "inclement weather and rain" and was rescheduled to March 25.[12]

In early March 2023, it was announced that the 2023 parade will be held in a limited scale in Aiwan-e-Sadar due to the ongoing economic crisis in the country.[13] On 23rd of March, the parade was postponed to March 25 due to "inclement weather", but it was cancelled the next day.[14]

Details

Members of the Pakistani Air Force during a parade rehearsal in 2016.

The first Republic Day parade, as it was then called, was held on 23 March 1956 to mark the day when Pakistan became a republic on the same day. The parade was held at Karachi where newly appointed President of Pakistan Iskander Ali Mirza took salute. Simoultaneously the parades were held in other major cities and military garrisons. Commander-in-Chief of the Pakistan Army General Ayub Khan took salute in Rawalpindi. Local Governors or military commanders took salute in Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, Multan, Bahawalpur, Rahim Yar Khan and Jhelum.

The central parade where the President took salute continued to be held at Karachi till 1960 while C-in-C of the army took salute at Rawalpindi. In 1961, the Republic Day was named Pakistan Day. The central Joint Services parade was held for the first time at Dhaka Race course where President Ayub Khan took salute. In 1963 the central parade was held at Fortress Stadium Lahore.

The central parade has been held at Rawalpindi from 1964 to 1989. The parade was shifted to Islamabad in 1990. The parade is led by a Parade Commander who is an officer from the Pakistan Army holding the rank of a Brigadier, usually a Brigade Commander or a Station Commander.


The Sherdils from the Pakistan Air Force Academy at Risalpur take part in the ceremony annually, performing formation aerobatics. On the planes used by the group, the Hongdu JL-8, has been showcased at the parade since 1994.

Other aircraft such as the CAC/PAC JF-17 Thunder have also been unveiled at the parade.[15][16]

Bands from the armed forces that are present include the Pakistan Military Academy Band (PMA Band),[17] the Pakistan Armed Forces Band and the Pakistan Air Force Band.

Accidents and Incidents

During the rehearsals for the planned parade on 23 March 2020, a Pakistani Air Force Wing Commander flying in an F-16 jet was killed when it crashed in a wooded area.[18][19][20] On March 13, 2020, A missing man formation would later be flown by the PAF on 13 March to honor the pilot.

Ironically PAF lost an aircraft during rehearsals in 1975 while the parade was later cancelled due to inclement weather on the morning of 23 March 1975.

On March 23 1987, a Mirage aircraft crashed on approach to the parade ground. Flight Lieutenant Saeed Iqbal was killed on impact.

Parade commanders

The following officers from the army have led the joint services parade (incomplete list):

YearOfficerUnitNotes
1958Brigadier Abdul Qayyum Sher16 Baluch RegimentPresident Iskander Mirza took salute. Parade commander Brig AQ Sher was Comd 51 Brigade. In 1965 he commanded 22 Brigade and was awarded Hilal-e-Jurrat.
1960Colonel SM Mustafa Khan5 Horse & Guides CavalryBrig SM Mustafa was Station Commander Rawalpindi. C-in-C Gen Musa took salute. (At Rawalpindi. The central parade was held at Karachi, parade commander is not known.
1961Colonel SM Mustafa Khan5 Horse & Guides CavalryBrig SM Mustafa was Station Commander Rawalpindi. Brigadier Ata Muhammad took salute. The central parade was held at Dhaka where President Ayub took salute, parade commander is not known. General Musa Khan took salute at a parade in Kharian, Brigadier RG Hyder was parade commander)
1963Brigadier Sadiqullah Khan13th Frontier Force RiflesFor the first and only time the central parade was held at Lahore, capital of West Pakistan. However, President was unable to attend due to ill health. Nawab of Kalabagh took salute. At similar event at Dacca, Governor EP Abdul Munim Khan took salute
1964Brigadier Azmat HayatCommander 10 BdeFather of Yawar Hayat (PTV). Led 10 Brigade during Chammb offensive. Fly Past was led by Air Marshal Asghar Khan in a B-57 light bomber
1965Brigadier Amir Abdullah Khan Niazi2 Punjab and 5 Punjab Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
1966Brigadier Zafar Ali Khan, HJCommander 102 BdeHistoric parade post 1965 War. Brig Zafar Ali Khan led 102 Bde during Chammb offensive and was awarded Hilal-i-Jurrat. All contingents were led by gallantry award winners.

Prior to the parade the President distributed 153 gallantry awards to 152 recipients (two awards for Sarfaraz Rafiqui), including 35 posthumous awards. Included 1 x NH, 13 x HJ, 135x SJ and 2 x SBt.

1967Brigadier Agha Ali Ibrahim Akram1 FF Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
1970Brigadier Iqbal Muhammad Khan
1973Brigadier Akram Hussain Syed5 H, 15 L, 22 C, 26 CSpecial Service Group participated for the first time. Also for the first time, the Baluch Regiment contingent was dressed in the new camouflage smock.
1976Brigadier Saadullah Khan, HJ14 Punjab Regt.Brig. Saadullah was recommended for the award of Nishan-i-Haider for valour during 1971 war and was awarded HJ. The new camouflage smock was worn by the entire parade.
1978Brigadier Mustafa Anwar Hussain2FF, 9FF & 11FF Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
1979Brigadier Khawaja Rahat Latif1 FF Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
1980Brigadier Zafar HayatFF Regt.Cultural and Industrial floats were included in the parade for the first time.
1982Brigadier Rehmdil BhattiFF Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
1983Brigadier Nasir Mehmood1 Punjab Regt.
1985Brigadier Sultan MehmoodBaluch Regt.
1987Brigadier Afzal Janjua, SJ7 Punjab Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
1989Brigadier Yasub Dogar2 FF Regt. (Guides)
1990Brigadier Jamshed Gulzar22 Baluch Regt.Later Lt. Gen.

For the first time the parade was held in Islamabad.

1991Brigadier Kamal Alam, TJ12 Baluch Regt.
1993Brigadier Abdul Qadir Baluch41 Baluch Regt.Later Lt. Gen. Governor of Baluchistan
1995Brigadier Hamid RabnawazFF Regt.later Lt. Gen.
1996Brigadier Naveed Nasr17 Punjab Regt.Also commanded 70 Punjab Regt.
1997Brigadier Javed Iqbal14 Field Regt.MS to Nawaz Sharif in 1999
1998Brigadier Akram SahiPunjab Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
1999Brigadier Khalid Nawaz Janjua3 Baluch Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
2000Brigadier Sardar Mahmood Ali Khan19 Punjab Regt.Later Lt. Gen.
2001Brigadier Badar Munir5 AK Regt.Also appeared in Sunehre Din and Alpha Bravo Charlie), Pakistani TV series produced by ISPR
2005Brigadier Naushad KianiPunjab Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
2007Brigadier Tariq Ghafoor20 FF & 11 FF Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
2008Brigadier Ihsan ul Haq25 FF Regt.Later Maj. Gen.
2015Brigadier Khurram Sarfaraz27 Baluch Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2016Brigadier Amir Majeed29 AK Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2017Brigadier Amer Ahsan Nawaz3 Baluch Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2018Brigadier Amer Amin19 FF Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2019Brigadier Naseem Anwar19 FF Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2021Brigadier Azhar Yasin23 Sind Regt.Now Maj. Gen.
2022Brigadier Muhammad Arsalan Tariq Ali6 Punjab Regt.

Foreign representation

Foreign dignitaries who have attended the parade

From 1985 to 2022, the following foreign dignitaries attended parade:

YearForeign dignitary
Guest of Honour
CountryNotes
1964Abdul Salam ArifIraqPresident of Iraq
1965Prince PhilipUnited KingdomDuke of Edinburgh
Abbas Aram IranMinister of Foreign Affairs of Iran
1985General Rudini[21]Indonesia IndonesiaChief of staff Indonesian Army
1987Robert MugabeZimbabwe ZimbabwePresident of Zimbabwe
1996Cassam Uteem[21]Mauritius MauritiusPresident of Mauritius
1997 OIC Heads of States OIC Members To attend Extra-Ordinary OIC Summit
2005 Hamid Karzai  Afghanistan President of Afghanistan[22]
2018Maithripala Sirisena[23]Sri Lanka Sri LankaPresident of Sri Lanka
2019Mahathir Mohamad[24]Malaysia MalaysiaPrime Minister of Malaysia
Colonel General Zakir Hasanov[25] AzerbaijanMinister of Defence
2022Hassoumi MassoudouNiger NigerForeign Minister of Niger
Faisal bin Farhan Al SaudSaudi Arabia Saudi ArabiaForeign Minister of Saudi Arabia
Wang YiChina ChinaForeign Minister of China
Don PramudwinaiThailand ThailandForeign Minister of Thailand
Othman JerandiTunisia TunisiaMinister of Foreign Affairs of Tunisia
Ismail Ould Cheikh AhmedMauritania MauritaniaForeign Minister of Mauritania
Raşit MeredowTurkmenistan TurkmenistanMinister of Foreign Affairs of Turkmenistan
Tahsin ErtuğruloğluNorthern Cyprus Northern CyprusMinister of Foreign Affairs of Northern Cyprus

Foreign contingents

YearContingentCountry
1956Janissary Military BandTurkey Turkey
Iran Military ContingentIran Iran
Iraq Military ContingentIraq Iraq
Turkish Military ContingentTurkey Turkey
1956Janissary Military BandTurkey Turkey
Iran Military ContingentIran Iran
Iraq Military ContingentIraq Iraq
Turkish Military ContingentTurkey Turkey
1967Imperial Iranian Air Force (IIAF)Iran Iran
1982Janissary Military BandTurkey Turkey
1997Janissary Military BandTurkey Turkey
2017Beijing Garrison Honor Guard BattalionChina China
Janissary Military band[26]Turkey Turkey
2018Saudi Arabian Special ForcesSaudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
UAE elite unit[27]United Arab Emirates UAE
Jordanian Armed Forces BandJordan Jordan
2019Azerbaijan Army Azerbaijan
People's Liberation Army Air ForceChina China
Turkish Air ForceTurkey Turkey
Saudi Arabian Army (Paratroopers)Saudi Arabia Saudi Arabia
Royal Bahraini Army (Paratroopers)Bahrain Bahrain
Royal Brunei Land Forces (Paratroopers)Brunei Brunei
Sri Lanka Army (Paratroopers)Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
2022[28]Bahrain National Guard (Special Operation Unit)Bahrain Bahrain
Armed Forces of the Republic of UzbekistanUzbekistan Uzbekistan
Special Forces of Azerbaijan[29]Azerbaijan Azerbaijan
Turkish Armed ForcesTurkey Turkey
Royal Saudi Land ForcesSaudi Arabia Saudi Arabia[30]

See also

References

  1. "Pakistan Day parade". 24 February 2005.
  2. "Relive Pakistan Day: 1940 – 2000". 23 March 2015.
  3. "'Coup crushed' in Pakistan", Vancouver Sun, March 11, 1980, p1
  4. DAWN.com (23 March 2015). "Pakistan holds first Republic Day parade in seven years". Dawn News, 2015. Dawn. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  5. "Pakistan holds first national day parade for seven years". BBC News. 23 March 2015.
  6. "Pakistan Plans to Hold Republic Day Parade in March". Wall Street Journal. 2 February 2015.
  7. "Pakistan marks National Day with first military parade in seven years". The Guardian. 2015-03-23. Archived from the original on 2023-03-23.
  8. In the face of terror: Pakistan shows off military prowess
  9. "Pakistan military holds first Republic Day parade in seven years". Reuters.
  10. "Pakistan Holds First Republic Day Parade in Years".
  11. "Pakistan Day Parade cancelled amid coronavirus fears". 13 March 2020.
  12. Siddiqui, Naveed (2021-03-22). "Pakistan Day parade postponed due to 'inclement weather and rains': ISPR". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2021-03-23.
  13. "Pakistan Day parade to be held on limited scale amid austerity drive". Dunya News. 2023-03-10. Retrieved 2023-05-27.
  14. "Pakistan Day Parade cancelled". www.geo.tv. Retrieved 2023-05-27.
  15. "PAF to seek more Chinese aircraft, says air chief". The News International. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 21 March 2010.
  16. JF-17 Thunder main focus of attention at Pak Day fly-past Archived 27 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine. Pak Tribune, 24 March 2007.
  17. "HISTORY OF ARMY SCHOOL OF MUSIC". 2016-12-20. Archived from the original on 2016-12-20. Retrieved 2022-03-27.
  18. "Pakistan pilot dies after F-16 jet crashes during rehearsal".
  19. "Pakistani fighter jet crashes during parade rehearsal; pilot killed".
  20. "Shocking Video Shows Pakistani F-16 Crashing in Islamabad during rehearsal for the Pakistan Day Parade". 11 March 2020.
  21. Dawn.com (24 March 2015). "Relive Pakistan Day: 1940 – 2000". Dawn archives, 2015. Dawn archives. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  22. "Pakistan Parade 3 | AP Archive".
  23. "Nation celebrates Pakistan Day 2018 with military parade, gun salutes". Dawn. March 23, 2018.
  24. "Pakistan Day celebrations: Civil-military leaders, foreign dignitaries attend military parade in Islamabad". Dawn. March 23, 2019.
  25. "Azerbaijani Military contingent attended Pakistan Day Parade along with Defence Minister Colonel General Zakir Hasanov". 23 March 2019.
  26. "Saudi Arabia, Chinese and Turkish Military contingents to participate in Pakistan Day parade on". Timesofislamabad.com. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  27. "UAE troops to participate in Pakistan Day parade". Arab News. 20 March 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  28. "Pakistan Day: Armed forces show off military might as OIC officials watch". Dawn. 23 March 2022.
  29. "Azerbaijani servicemen took part in military parade on Pakistan Day".
  30. "Pakistan Day Parade - 23 March 2022 - YouTube". YouTube.
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