Glory: Lost in combat
Having lost her loving husband on the very first night of the 17-day Indo-Pak war of 1965, Shahnaz Alam is a woman on a mission: she wants military recognition for the selfless valour of her husband, Sqn Ldr Shabbir Alam Siddiqui, who was then flying with Pakistan Air Force’s No. 8 Squadron of 31 Bomber Wing at Mauripur (Masroor) base.
“On the morning of Sept 6, he left for the squadron earlier than usual. After Ayub Khan’s speech, he came back to explain that he’d be away for an important night mission,” recalls Shahnaz, who has only recently returned to Karachi from Sydney, where she is based.
Shabbir advised then 21-year-old Shahnaz where to take cover with their children, one-year-old Adnan, and five-week-old Saqib, in case there was an air strike on the base. “Seeing his cheerful attitude, the thought that it could be the last time I was seeing him didn’t cross my mind even for a second.”
From dusk that day till dawn the next morning, the young pilot flew three bombing missions over the airfield at Jamnagar in India, but did not return from the third. He and his companion, Sqn Ldr Aslam Qureshi, the navigator of the B-57 bomber aircraft, were both declared missing in action.
Two wartime widows of the 1965 war return to seek the recognition that their martyred husbands’ valour commands
“According to Alam’s colleagues and official records, the third flight was assigned to another senior officer, who for some reason backed out so Alam and Aslam volunteered to go on this additional mission,” recalls Shahnaz. “For many years afterwards I was haunted by the thought that what if Alam was still languishing as a POW while I was trying to lead a normal life…?”