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Zahid Hamid

Pakistani politician and lawyer

Not to be confused with Zaid Hamid.

Zahid Hamid (Urdu: زاہد حامد; born 24 October 1947) is a Pakistani politician, and lawyer. A member of Pakistan Muslim League (Nawaz), Hamid previously served as the Minister for Law and Justice and Minister of Climate Change in the Third Sharif ministry[1][3] between 2015 and 2017. He briefly served as the Minister of Law and Justice in June 2013 before being appointed as Minister of Science and Technology from June 2013 to November 2014. He again served as Minister for Law and Justice under Prime Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi from August 2017 until he resigned in November 2017.

Hamid had been a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan from 2002 to May 2018.

Family and education

Hamid was born on 24 October 1947 in Lahore, Punjab,[4][1] to Hamid Nawaz, a two-time MNA[5] who served in the Pakistan Army and retired as a Brigadier in 1975 and later served as foreign service to tenured as diplomat in various countries[6]

H

National Assembly of Pakistan

Name Zahid Hamid
Father's Name Hamid Nawaz Khan
Permanent Address House No 169-C Mohallah Alla Ud Din Road Lahore Cantt, District Lahore
Local Address E-108, Parliament Lodges, Islamabad.
Contact Number 0300-8477181, zahidhamidkhan@gmail.com
Email zahid.na114@na.gov.pk
Province Punjab
Constituency NA-114 (Sialkot-V,14th Assembly)
Party PML(N)
Oath Taking Date 01-06-2013
* Data for this profile was provided in former assembly tenure, for current information please visit appropriate link from the "Members" menu
 

Zaid Hamid

Pakistani conspiracy-theorist

Not to be confused with Zahid Hamid.

Syed Zaid Zaman Hamid (Urdu: سید زید زمان حامد), better known as Zaid Hamid, is a Pakistanifar-right, radical Islamistpolitical commentator and conspiracy theorist.[3][6]

Born to a Pakistan Army officer and a Kashmiri mother, Zaid is a supporter of Jihad and supports Kashmir-centric anti-government organizations.[7] He claims he fought in Soviet-Afghan War.[7] He is a supporter of Pakistan Army interventions in matters of state and actively campaigns against democracy in Pakistan.[7] He supports Islamic system of government.[7]

In 2019, The Muslim 500 included him in their yearly most influential Muslims in the world, as a political commentator and host of TV series on geo-politics, Islamic philosophy, Muslim history, and Dr. Iqbal’s vision for Pakistan.[4]

Historian Manan Ahmed Asif called him the leading voice of a new Pakistani revivalism, because he radicalizes young, urban men and women under the age of 30 — the larg

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