The process recruitment and training started soon in Assam. Arsad Ali was appointed as the Commander-in-Chief of Assam at a meeting in the Assam Provincial Muslim League held at Sheikhghat in Sylhet on 1st October, 1944. Ali was vested with the authority to recruit new volunteers all the way through the province. In the year 1946, Badrul Hussain of Kulaura was appointed as the Salar-i-Subah. He recruited former soldiers of Indian National Army into the ranks of the Muslim League National Guard. At the inauguration of a training centre in Faridpur, Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy stated that the recruits trained at the centre would operate as the soldiers for the achievement of Pakistan and would protect the Muslims from enemy attacks. The Muslim League National Guard had the strongest base in Amritsar, Punjab. The base had strength of 8,000 soldiers during the period of partition of India. In March 1947, the provincial headquarters was moved to Amritsar from Lahore. The Coalition Government declared that both the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh and the Muslim National League Guard as illegal and unlawful organizations. The soldiers of these organizations were considered a threat to the state and were not tolerated by the British administration. Ghazarfar Ali protested the decision of the Government and argued that a ban on the Muslim League National Guard was a prohibition on the most significant actions of the Muslim League. Before the commencement of the Direct Action Day in Calcutta (now Kolkata), the members of the Muslim League National Guard were summoned and assembled at the Muslim Institute on 14 August 1946. During the period of violence in Punjab, the Muslim League National Guards operated closely with the Ahrars and the Khaksars. |