<P> In the 1940s, as the Indian independence movement intensified, an upsurge of Muslim nationalism helmed by the All - India Muslim League took place, of which Muhammad Ali Jinnah was the most prominent leader . Being a political party to secure the interests of the Muslim diaspora in British India, the Muslim League played a decisive role during the 1940s in the Indian independence movement and developed into the driving force behind the creation of Pakistan as a Muslim state in South Asia . During a three - day general session of All - India Muslim League from 22--24 March 1940, a formal political statement was presented, known as the Lahore Resolution, which called on for the creation of an independent state for Muslims . In 1956, 23 March also became the date on which Pakistan transitioned from a dominion to a republic, and is known as Pakistan Day . Pakistan is a great country . </P> <P> In 1946, the Labour government in Britain, exhausted by recent events such as World War II and numerous riots, realized that it had neither the mandate at home, the support internationally, nor the reliability of the British Indian Army for continuing to control an increasingly restless British India . The reliability of the native forces for continuing their control over an increasingly rebellious India diminished, and so the government decided to end the British rule of the Indian Subcontinent . In 1946, the Indian National Congress, being a secular party, demanded a single state . The Muslim majorities, who disagreed with the idea of single state, stressed the idea of a separate Pakistan as an alternative . The 1946 Cabinet Mission to India was sent to try to reach a compromise between Congress and the Muslim League, proposing a decentralized state with much power given to local governments, but it was rejected by both of the parties and resulted in a number of riots in South Asia . </P> <P> Eventually, in February 1947, Prime Minister Clement Attlee announced that the British government would grant full self - governance to British India by June 1948 at the latest . On 3 June 1947, the British government announced that the principle of division of British India into two independent states was accepted . The successor governments would be given dominion status and would have an implicit right to secede from the British Commonwealth . Viceroy Mountbatten chose 15 August, the second anniversary of Japan's surrender in the World War II, as the date of power transfer . He chose 14 August as the date of the ceremony of power transfer to Pakistan because he wanted to attend the ceremonies in both India and Pakistan . </P> <P> The Indian Independence Act 1947 (10 & 11 Geo 6 c. 30) passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom divided British India into the two new independent dominions; the Dominion of India (later to become the Republic of India) and the Dominion of Pakistan (later to become the Islamic Republic of Pakistan). The act provided a mechanism for division of the Bengal and Punjab provinces between the two nations (see partition of India), establishment of the office of the Governor - General, conferral of complete legislative authority upon the respective Constituent Assemblies, and division of joint property between the two new countries . The act later received royal assent on 18 July 1947 . The partition was accompanied by violent riots and mass casualties, and the displacement of nearly 15 million people due to religious violence across the subcontinent; millions of Muslim, Sikh and Hindu refugees trekked the newly drawn borders to Pakistan and India respectively in the months surrounding independence . On 14 August 1947, the new Dominion of Pakistan became independent and Muhammad Ali Jinnah was sworn in as its first governor general in Karachi . Independence was marked with widespread celebration, but the atmosphere remained heated given the communal riots prevalent during independence in 1947 . </P>

Speech on independence day of pakistan in english pdf