Rahman was an instructor pilot at
PAF Base Masroor in 1971. He was planning to defect to Bangladesh with a plane to join the Bangladesh War of Independence. On 20 August 1971, Pilot Officer
Rashid Minhas was scheduled to fly with a
Lockheed T-33 jet trainer. Rahman saw Minhas about to take off and asked to join him. He jumped into the instructor's seat. He attempted to hijack the T-33 in midair to defect to India. Minhas sent a message to the control tower that he was hijacked, and wrestled with Rahman for control, which crashed the plane in Pakistani territory, causing the death of both pilots. The plane never crossed into Indian airspace and crashed near the border in Pakistan. Yawar A. Mazhar, a writer for Pakistan Military Consortium, relayed in 2004 that he spoke to retired PAF Group Captain
Cecil Chaudhry about Minhas and that he learned more details not generally known to the public. According to Mazhar, Chaudhry led the immediate task of investigating the wreckage and writing the accident report. Chaudhry told Mazhar that he found the jet had hit the ground nose first, instantly killing Minhas in the front seat. Rahman's body, however, was not in the jet, and the canopy was missing. Chaudhry searched the area and saw Rahman's body some distance behind the jet, with severe abrasions from hitting the sand at a low angle and a high speed. Chaudhry thought that Minhas probably jettisoned the canopy at low altitude, causing Rahman to be thrown from the cockpit because he was not strapped in. Chaudhry felt that the jet was too close to the ground at that time, too far out of control for Minhas to be able to prevent the crash. Minhas received the
Nishan-e-Haider award, equivalent to the Bir Shrestho award in
Pakistan for his actions in attempting to hijack the aircraft.
Grave transfer After over 30 years of negotiations, Rahman's body was finally returned to Bangladesh on 24 June 2006 for a ceremonial and highly symbolic reburial in 2006. Pakistani foreign ministry spokesperson Tasneem Aslam described it as a 'goodwill gesture'. He was buried at the Martyred Intellectuals Graveyard, in Mirpur, Dhaka, with full military honours. His original burial in a grave in a fourth-class employees' graveyard in Pakistan and the hanging of his photo at the entrance of Mashrur Airbase identifying him as a traitor had been a sore point between Bangladesh and Pakistan for decades. ==Eponyms==