Zahid Hussain (author) - meaning and definition. What is Zahid Hussain (author)
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What (who) is Zahid Hussain (author) - definition


Zahid Hussain (author)         
BRITISH WRITER AND POET
Zahid Hussain (born 6 March 1972) is a British fiction writer and poet of Kashmiri and Pashtun origin. Photograph and first four pages available on Google boks His debut novel, The Curry Mile, was published by Suitcase Press, a Manchester-based publishing house.
Zahid Husain (banker)         
PAKISTANI ACADEMIC AND JOURNALIST
Zahid Hussain (banker)
Zahid Husain (1895 – 1957) was the founder and the first governor of State Bank of Pakistan from June 1948 to July 1953.Profile of Zahid Hussain State Bank of Pakistan Museum website, Retrieved 8 September 2021 He also served as Pakistan's first High Commissioner to India from August 1947 to April 1948.
Murder of Zahid Mubarek         
2000 MURDER IN ENGLAND
Zahid Mubarek Inquiry; Zahid Mubarek
Zahid Mubarek was a British Pakistani teenager who was murdered by his cellmate, Robert Stewart, on 21 March 2000 at the Feltham Young Offenders' Institution in West London. He was already inside Feltham when his murderer was transferred to his cell.

Wikipedia

Zahid Hussain (author)
Zahid Hussain (born 6 March 1972) is a British fiction writer and poet of Kashmiri and Pashtun origin. Photograph and first four pages available on Google boks His debut novel, The Curry Mile, was published by Suitcase Press, a Manchester-based publishing house.
Examples of use of Zahid Hussain (author)
1. "Militant groups target Karachi because it‘s a big city and security has been quite lax here for some time, while the city‘s biggest (religious school) had close links to the Taliban," said Zahid Hussain, author of "Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle with Militant Islam" and a native of Karachi.
2. In January 2002, American reporter Daniel Pearl was abducted in Karachi while researching Islamic militancy, and his remains were found in a shallow grave in the city‘s eastern outskirts. Militant groups target Karachi because it‘s a big city and security has been quite lax here for some time, while the city‘s biggest (religious school) had close links to the Taliban,‘‘ said Zahid Hussain, author of Frontline Pakistan: The Struggle with Militant Islam‘‘ and a native of Karachi.