Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood (or
Bashir-ud-Din Mehmood, b.
1938) is a
Pakistani physicist, educated in
Lahore and
Britain; he has written several books on the scientific aspects of
Islam. Mahmood was a key figure in the development of the Pakistani nuclear industry since the late
1960s. He worked with
Abdul Qadeer Khan[?] on the Pakistan nuclear weapon project from 1974, and designed the
Khushab[?] plant near Lahore, a
heavy-water[?] reactor that produces
plutonium. Mahmood was awarded the
Sitara-e-Imtiaz[?] for his work. After he retired from the program he worked for a charity active in
Afghanistan, the Ummah Tameer-e-Nau (Reconstruction of the Islamic Community) and was arrested in October 2001 by Pakistani Intelligence agents on suspicion of sharing his nuclear expertise with the
Taliban regime. Mahmood was released
November 22,
2001. During the early phase of the
US invasion of Afghanistan, the American military bombed and destroyed Ummah Tameer-e-Nau's flour mill and flour godowns in
Qandahar, causing widespread starvation.
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