The youngest recipient of Nishan e Haider
Pilot Officer Rashid Minhas or Rashid Minhas Shaheed, راشد منہاس شہید) (February 17, 1951 – August 20, 1971) was a Pilot Officer in the Pakistan Air Force
(PAF) during the 1971 Pakistan-India War. Minhas, a newly commissioned
officer at that time, is the only PAF officer to receive the highest
valour award, the Nishan-e-Haider.
He is also the youngest person and the shortest-serving officer to have
received this award. He is remembered for his death in 1971 in a jet trainer crash while struggling to regain the controls from a defecting pilot: flight instructor Matiur Rahman.
Having joined the air force, Minhas was commissioned on March 13,
1971, in the 51st GD(P) Course. He began training to become a pilot. On
August 20 of that year, in the hour before noon, he was getting ready to
take off in a T-33 jet trainer in Karachi, his second solo flight in that type of aircraft. Minhas was taxiing toward the runway when a Bengali instructor pilot, Flight Lieutenant Matiur Rahman, signalled him to stop and then climbed into the instructor's seat. The jet took off and turned toward India.
Minhas radioed PAF Base Masroor with the message that he was being hijacked.
The air controller requested that he resend his message, and he
confirmed the hijacking. Later investigation showed that Rahman intended
to defect to India to join his compatriots in the Bangladesh Liberation War,
along with the jet trainer. In the air, Minhas struggled physically to
wrest control from Rahman; each man tried to overpower the other through
the mechanically linked flight controls. Some 32 miles (51 km) from the Indian border, the jet crashed near Thatta. Both men were killed.
Minhas was posthumously awarded Pakistan's top military honour, the Nishan-E-Haider, and became the youngest man and the only member of the Pakistan Air Force to win the award. Similarly, Rahman was honoured by Bangladesh with their highest military award, the Bir Sreshtho.
Minhas's Pakistan military citation for the Nishan-E-Haider states
that he "forced the aircraft to crash" in order to prevent Rahman from
taking the jet to India.
This is the official, popular and widely known version of how Minhas
died. Yawar A. Mazhar, a writer for Pakistan Military Consortium,
relayed in 2004 that he spoke to retired PAF Group Captain Cecil Chaudhry
about Minhas, and that he learned more details not generally known to
the public. According to Mazhar, Chaudhry lead the immediate task of
investigating the wreckage and writing the accident report. Chaudhry
told Mazhar that he found the jet had hit the ground nose first,
instantly killing Minhas in the front seat. Rahman's body, however, was
not in the jet and the canopy
was missing. Chaudhry searched the area and saw Rahman's body some
distance behind the jet, the body found with severe abrasions from
hitting the sand at a low angle and a high speed. Chaudhry thought that
Minhas probably jettisoned the canopy at low altitude causing Rahman to
be thrown from the cockpit because he was not strapped in. Chaudhry felt
that the jet was too close to the ground at that time, too far out of
control for Minhas to be able to prevent the crash
After his death, Minhas was honoured as a national hero. In his memory the Pakistan Air Force base at Kamra was renamed PAF Base Minhas, often called Minhas-Kamra. In Karachi he was honoured by the naming of a main road, Rashid Minhas Road شاہراہ راشد منہاس). A two-rupee postage stamp bearing his image was issued by Pakistan Post in December 2003; 500,000 were printed.[
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