REMEMBERING DR ISHFAQ AHMAD
Dr
Ishfaq Ahmad former Chairman of the Pakisran Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) passed
away on 18 Jan 2018. He had a gilded academic and professional career that has amply been described elsewhere. This blog reminisces about his style of
scientific leadership through a rare look into the manners and traits he
provided guidance to a scientist at various stages of his development from a
junior scientist to the chief scientist in the Commission.
Although all of us have to go one day,
the news of his departure from this world came like a bolt from the blue as if
it was not supposed to happen. A paragraph of not more than a few lines in the
newspaper said it all, he was ill and admitted in the hospital quite unknown to
me and so many other scientists and engineers who worked with him and under him
for decades. It's always a misfortune to lose someone who may not have been
close enough but nearer to heart and as dear as Dr Ishfaq Ahmad was to
thousands of people in the scientific profession all over Pakistan and also to
many who lived abroad.
Here, I would rather go into my personal
experiences of working with him often not of scientific nature, as his field of
work was very different from mine then and always there after. When I joined
the PAEC at the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH),
he was already the Director of the PAEC's Lahore Centre. After only a couple of
months he was appointed the Director General of PINSTECH. I knew him since then
at first from a little distance but gradually closely and a little later very
closely. When I acquired his acquaintance he had stopped being an active
scientist and had become a scientific administrator. In most cases such a
transition is considered a career downhill but in his realm it was different. He
continued to guide scientists and their research and development work all the
time diligently. I still remember so vividly as if it was a meeting of
yesterday. I received a call in those early days from his office that he wanted
to see me urgently. That was not normal. It was rare that he would meet junior
scientists directly by-passing the heads of the group and the Division
concerned. I was then working as a member of Reactor Physics Group in the
Nuclear Engineering Division of PINSTECH. To my utter surprise he had summoned
me alone and not accompanied by any of my superiors. As bewildered, as any
young scientist of age 25 would be, I entered his office. He always had very
charming broad smile, which would put any one in distress immediately at ease.
He would speak slowly in a friendly soft tone. After I had taken a seat
directly opposite his very handsome and impressive persona. He gazed into my
eyes and slowly informed me that the PAEC had chosen me to work for one year
under a Bilateral Agreement at the Danish Atomic Energy Commission’s Research
Establishment at Roskilde near Copenhagen. I had to proceed as soon as
possible. From his talk it was obvious that he had very personal reminisces of
his own of Denmark and the Danish people both of whom he seemed to have in high
regard. He had worked earlier at the Neil's Bohr Institute of Physics, which I
found out after arriving there, was adjacent to the Establishment I was asked
to report and which was at a walking distance from the Guest House, I stayed
all through my period of research and development work at Roskilde. Dr Ishfaq
told me about the people, their etiquettes and mannerism besides their Noble
Laureate Neils Bohr as well as the accelerators and machines installed there in
great detail as if he had all the time that morning just for me.
When I returned from my year long
assignment at Roskilde, Dr Ishfaq Ahmad had already moved to the PAEC's Head
Quarters in Islamabad as its Member Technology and a little time later I too
was transferred to the Karachi Nuclear Power Plant (KANUPP) as the Physicist
responsible for Fuel Management and Nuclear Reactor Core with the additional
responsibility of the Coordinator IAEA Nuclear Safeguards at the Plant. The later
responsibility allowed me to interact with him from time to time, as he was
then not only on the IAEA's Board of Governors but also the member responsible
for all matters related to it. He accordingly needed to be abreast with the
safeguards measures at the Plant. My monthly IAEA safeguards inspection reports
were routed to him and I was always required to attend the meetings, which were
held with the visiting IAEA staff at the PAEC HQ in Islamabad. It was on those
occasions that I came to realize his in depth knowledge not only about KANUPP
but also the subsidiary safeguards agreements between the PAEC and the IAEA. He
was also well acquainted with the provisions of the Non Proliferation Treaty.
On account of his knowledge and proficiency in English he was always in command
on the basis of which he could not only negotiate well but could also steer the
meetings and ensuing dialogue as per the requirements of the time with the
profound interests of Pakistan upper most in his mind. At the conclusion of
those meetings he would smilingly look at us and enquire, "How did it go?
and on our approval, he would chuckle and give a rare audible laugh, very
obvious of the delight of having accomplished the responsibility he always thought
the nation had entrusted him with.
In spite of his mild and mellow nature,
he could be very stern and ruthless too. An example of that side of his
personality came to my notice when an IAEA safeguards inspector took an exposed
photographic film by mistake to his hotel during an on-going inspection. That
was grossly against the subsidiary safeguards agreement according to which he
was required to deposit the film inside a box under the joint seal of the IAEA
and the PAEC at the plant. The matter was reported to him by fax. He flew over
to Karachi overnight and was at the plant very first thing the morning. The
inspector in question was summoned into his presence at the office of the Plant
Manager. I was present when he entered. I can only say I have never seen such
an outpour of diplomatic burst of anger reprimanding him never to repeat, which
he acknowledged was his mistake. The poor man kept on trembling for a long time
after and I of necessity took as much time to smooth his nerves. He was
incapacitated and unable to work to say the least for a good part of the
morning that day.
Next time, I had a person to person
meeting with him was when he summoned me in his capacity of the Chairman PAEC
with the express assignment for me to negotiate with the IAEA the proposed new
installations of certain state of the art safeguards equipment at the plant. He
could always delegate the details of the assignment to me through the Member
Power and the Plant Manager KANUPP but being very careful about the sensitivity
of the matter involved, he chose to do it himself. I was impressed. The
Director International Affairs and Member Power both wished to be present in
the meeting but they were summarily asked not to bother after only a brief
enquiry whether I was being looked after during the brief visit to Islamabad
well? He wanted to have just one to one meeting with me. This was on account of
the confidentiality of the matter that he wished to discuss with me, which was in
accordance with the rules of the procedures that only those needed to be
present who were directly involved with the matter under discussion. He
understandably was very careful and all of us understood that well. The meeting
continued for well over two hours, during which he allowed me a thorough
probing into the intricacies involved. He told me without any reservation that
he had chosen me for the discussions at the IAEA, for he trusted me. I was more
than aware that his trust was the trust of my country and I felt proud of that.
During the meeting at one point he looked at his watch. It was time for lunch.
He pulled and opened his bag from under the table and brought out a sandwich,
enquiring at the same time with a smile if I would care to take a bite! I
smiled telling him politely but respectfully that he could go ahead. He then
told me that it was just a sandwich of a mashed banana in between two thin
slices of bread and that I may not like that after all. That was not the last
of the encounters with the great man that he was. On my return back to KANUPP
from Vienna, he telephoned me late in the night to learn about every single
detail of my interactions at the IAEA asking me at the end to send him a written
report, which I of course complied with forthwith.
Soon there after I was promoted as the
Chief Scientist and appointed the Director of the Institute for Nuclear Power
in Islamabad. He subsequently retired as the Chairman PAEC. Long after that I
spotted him at the Islamabad Club taking tea with a much younger person, who
could be his son. Passing by the table I was sitting with my wife, he stopped
to say hello. He asked me what I was doing. On telling him that I had retired
into the outskirts of Islamabad, where I had a small farmhouse, he gleamed with
happiness and promised me to come someday to personally see my farming skills,
which he never did in view of his advancing age and not too good a health
situation. That was the last I ever saw of him. His memories will however stay
with me till I live.