Rashid Qureshi

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Major General

Rashid Qureshi
Native name
راشد قریشی
Birth nameRashid Qureshi
BornLahore, Pakistan
AllegianceFile:Flag of Pakistan.svg Pakistan
Service / branchFile:Flag of the Pakistani Army.svg Pakistan Army
Years of service1971–2005
RankMajor General
Commands Comd 2AK Bde As A Brig.1996-97
Battles / wars
Awards
Other work
Director General of the ISPR
In office
November 1998 – May 2003

Major General Rashid Qureshi, (Urdu: راشد قریشی) SI(M), SBt, is a retired two-star general.[1]

Military career

Qureshi was commissioned in the Pakistan Army on 17 April 1971 in the 44th PMA Long Course.[2] During the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, he was stationed at the Lahore Sector. After the war, Qureshi's company was stationed at the Rawalpindi sector where he became a staff officer at the General Headquarters (GHQ). In 1987, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel, and was made general officer commanding of the 10th Battalion. In 1991, he became a colonel in the Army, and was made military secretary to General Pervez Musharraf at the Joint Chief of Staff Committee Secretariat.[3]

Inter-services public relations

In 1996, Qureshi joined the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR). In 1997, he was promoted as one-star general (brigadier-general) in the Army. In 1998, he was made director-general of the ISPR. He was also a principal military spokesperson of General Pervez Musharraf.[4] He retired from the Pakistan Army in 2005 and currently resides in Islamabad, Pakistan.

2007 helicopter crash

On 9 October 2007, in a helicopter crash which killed four people, and injured five, Qureshi was amongst those who were injured. The helicopter was one of three escorting Pervez Musharraf to Azad Kashmir.[5]

References

  1. Rashid Qureshi posted as DG National Guards Dawn (newspaper), Published 12 May 2003, Retrieved 27 March 2019
  2. 44th PMA Lahore chapter holds get together DailyTimes, Published 18 April 2011, Retrieved 27 March 2019
  3. "Here is Why Pakistan Became America's Ally in War on Terror Post 9/11". YouTube.
  4. Pakistan Says India Tensions Peaking Again After Soldier's Death Agence France Presse, Published 23 June 2002, Retrieved 27 March 2019
  5. Masood, Salman (9 October 2007). "Copter Escorting Musharraf Crashes". The New York Times.
Military offices
Preceded by
Ghazanfar Ali
Director General of the ISPR
1998–2003
Succeeded by