He received his early education from Polytechnic College and graduated from Government Gordon College. Ahmad was a leader of the student union at Gordon College.[7] He completed his Bachelor of Laws at the University of Punjab in 1973.[6][2] He later earned his Master's in political science from the same university in 1982.[8]
Political career
Early Career
Ahmad began his political career during his student years and was actively involved against the military regime of Ayub Khan.[2]
He was elected to the National Assembly eight times. In the 1985 Pakistani general election, which was held on non-party basis, he was elected as a member of the National Assembly for the first time[9] from Rawalpindi.[2] Rasheed was re-elected to the National Assembly for the second time in the 1988 Pakistani general election, this time campaigning on the Islamic Democratic Alliance ticket.[2] In 1990, he campaigned again on the IDA ticket and was re-elected a third time to the National Assembly, later becoming the Minister of Sports. Under his tenure, Pakistan won the Cricket World Cup in 1992 under the captaincy of Imran Khan. In the 1993 election, he was re-elected, this time on the Pakistan Muslim League (N) ticket. Rasheed was re-elected in 1997, and in 2002 the PML-N refused to allot a ticket to him. He decided to run as an independent,[10] and secured a sixth re-election.
Musharraf Administration
Later, Rasheed joined PML-Q,[11][12] and because he was a close friend of then-president Pervez Musharraf, he was appointed as Federal Minister for Information and Broadcasting in the Zafarullah Khan Jamali cabinet in November 2002.[11][12][13][2][14] As minister for information, Ahmed, on public places, had assumed the role of the spokesman of Musharraf[15] and an advocate of the government of Jamali.[16]
In May 2006, he was made Federal Minister for Railways.[11][2][17][18] In the 2008 Pakistani general election, Ahmad ran for the seat of National Assembly on a Pakistan Muslim League-Q ticket, losing the election for the first time[10][9][19] from both the Rawalpindi constituencies he contested, NA-55 and NA-56, to PML-N.[15][20][2] He won the election from NA-56 for multiple times.[21] There were rumours that Ahmad had fled to Spain following the defeat.[9] However, these allegations were later found to be false.[19] In an interview, Ahmad said his defeat in the election was due to a raid on Lal Masjid and that "he had promised to quit politics after the 2008 elections but his defeat had changed his mind."[19]
He later left PML-Q where he was a senior vice-president and created his own political party Awami Muslim League (AML)[11] and appointed himself as president of the party.[2][22]
In February 2010, when Ahmad was in the run for the National Assembly seat during a by-election in NA-55, Rawalpindi, he lost the election to Malik Shakeel Awan by an enormous margin. Ahmad earlier supported Musharraf's military operation against the militants in Federally Administered Tribal Areas and the Siege of Lal Masjid[2][13] and has been on the hit list of militants.[11] He was left devastated by this embarrassing loss and was spotted smoking his cigar alone at times.[23]
Alliance with PTI
In the 2013 Pakistani general election, Ahmad made an electoral alliance with Imran Khan to support each other in their respective constituencies in the election.[24][25][2] It was reported that Ahmad has requested for a merger between his party and Imran Khan's PTI,[26] however, the PTI decided not to go for an alliance with any political party.[27] He was re-elected as a member of the National Assembly for the seventh time from Rawalpindi.[24] In public circles, he is known for making witty remarks and political predictions. He is also known for switching political allegiances from one party to another.[2] In July 2017, he was chosen by the PTI as a candidate for the post of prime minister, following the resignation of outgoing Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif after the Panama Papers case decision.[28] He secured 33 votes in the 342-seat parliament and was unsuccessful.[29] He was re-elected to the National Assembly as a candidate of AML from NA-62 (Rawalpindi-VI) constituency in the 2018 Pakistani general election.[30]
On 10 April 2022, Ahmad was removed from his ministry after former Prime Minister Imran Khan was ousted after losing a no-confidence vote.
He submitted his nomination papers for National Assembly, from NA-57 Rawalpindi-VI but after Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf announced for various constituencies in Rawalpindi, including the ones on which Rashid was already contesting, the disappointed former interior minister withdrew his nomination papers from one of the two constituencies that he had been vying for.[35]
He ran the election from NA-56 Rawalpindi-V as a candidate of AML, but was unsuccessful he received only 5,725 votes and lost his previous seat to Muhammad Hanif Abbasi, a candidate of PML-N received 96,649 votes.[36]
Controversies
In 2004, during his tenure as Minister for Information, Sheikh Rashid Ahmad was replaced with Shaukat Aziz as minister-in-waiting who would receive then visiting Prime Minister of India Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ji after the Indian External affairs ministry's objection to the nomination of Ahmad as the minister-in-waiting.[37]
In 2005, India Today reported that Yasin Malik claimed that Ahmad had run a jihadi camp at Fateh Jung in Punjab, where around 3,500 jihadis were trained. Ahmad denied running such a camp.[38] Later it was reported that Yasin Malik retracted his statements and denied he had ever said that Ahmad had run such a camp.[39][40]
In 2005, during Ahmad's tenure as Minister for Information, he applied for a permit to travel to Srinagar, in his personal capacity to visit the graves of his grandparents and meet his relatives in Jammu & Kashmir.[41] However India denied Ahmed's request to travel to Srinagar.[39]
In 2012, Ahmad was detained at Houston airport over suspected links with Lashkar-e-Taiba and Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, an alleged mastermind of the 2008 Mumbai attacks. He was released after five hours of questioning after official protest by the Pakistani Ambassador to the United States.[42][43]
In 2014, Ahmad was off-loaded from a Toronto-bound PIA flight due to non-issuance of clearance by the Canadian authorities.[44]
In 2018, Ahmad was accused by Malik Shakeel Awan of concealing and failing to mention in his electoral papers possession of 100 kanal (12.5 acres) of land. Ahmad won the legal case regarding the allegation, and later confessed that he had forgotten to mention the land in his electoral papers. The decision was considered extremely biased in favour Ahmad and had remained disputed.[45]
Books
Farzand-e-Pakistan [Son of Pakistan], 1995, 200 p. His first book, it was a best-seller, having gone through at least 13 editions.[46]
Lal Haveli Sey Akwaam-e-Mutthahida Tak [From Lal Haveli to the United Nations], 2020, 352 p.[47]
^Viswam, Deepa (2010). Role of Media in Kashmir Crisis. Kalpaz Publications. p. 153.
^"Detail Information". 11 October 2007. Archived from the original on 11 October 2007. Retrieved 9 July 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
^Tariq, Aamir (13 February 2023). "Profile: Sheikh Rashid Ahmed". Daily Pakistan. His first book, Farzand-e-Pakistan (Son of Pakistan), was an instant hit and 13 editions of this book have been sold so far.