Hamoodur Rahman

Hamoodur Rahman
حمود الرحمن
হামুদুর রহমান
Chairman of the Council of Islamic Ideology
In office
2 February 1974 – 1 February 1977
PresidentFazal Ilahi Chaudhry
Preceded byAllama Allauddin Siddiqui
Succeeded byMohammad Afzal Cheema
7th Chief Justice of Pakistan
In office
18 November 1968 – 31 October 1975
Nominated byAlvin Robert Cornelius
Appointed byAyub Khan
Preceded byFazal Akbar
Succeeded byYaqub Ali
Senior Justice of the Supreme Court of Pakistan
In office
15 December 1960 – 31 October 1975
Appointed byAyub Khan
9th Vice-Chancellor of the Dhaka University
In office
11 May 1958 – 14 December 1960
ChancellorPresident of Pakistan
Preceded byMuhammad Ibrahim
Succeeded byMahmud Hussain
Personal details
BornHamoodur Rehman
(1910-11-01)1 November 1910
Died20 December 1981(1981-12-20) (aged 71)
Islamabad, Pakistan
CitizenshipBritish subject (1910–1947)
Pakistan (1947–1981)
ChildrenHameedur Rahman Mahfoozur Rahman
Alma materUniversity of Calcutta
University of London
Inns of Court School of Law
ProfessionJurist
Awards Nishan-e-Imtiaz (1976)
Hilal-i-Imtiaz (1974)
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Chief Justice Hamoodur Rahman (Urdu: حمود الرحمن; 1 November 1910 – 20 December 1981), NI. HI, was a Pakistani Bengali jurist and an academic who served as the Chief Justice of Pakistan from 18 November 1968 until 31 October 1975.

Educated in law and trained as a jurist in the United Kingdom, he chaired the War Enquiry Commission to investigate the causes of the Bangladesh Liberation War that led to the creation of Bangladesh. In addition, Rahman served as a law professor in the faculty of Karachi University and vice-chancellor of the University of Dhaka while remaining active in promoting literacy across the country. After the independence of Bangladesh, Rahman's family retained Pakistan's citizenship, and his son served as the Chief Justice of Islamabad High Court.

Chief Justice Rahman remained a respected figure in Pakistan's judiciary, and is hailed for his honesty and patriotism. Senior Justice Khalil-ur-Rehman Ramday once publicly noted that "his Commission was the most honourable commission that was investigated by a Bengali Chief Justice, in spite of East-Pakistan disaster." His findings, which exposed the Bangladesh genocide and recommended charges for senior Pakistani officials, were never made public, as the report was muzzled by the Bhutto administration under the guise of harming civil-military relations.