Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak
Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak | |
---|---|
General Secretary of the National Dialogue Conference | |
In office 2013–2014 | |
Preceded by | Hamid al-Ahmar (as General Secretary of the Preparatory Committee of the NDC) |
Personal details | |
Born |
1968 (age 47–48) Aden, South Yemen (now Yemen) |
Alma mater | Baghdad University |
Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak is a Yemeni politician who was designated as Prime Minister of Yemen on 7 October 2014 but declined the post.
Early and personal life
Mubarak was born in 1968 in Aden. He has three children.[1]
He received a PhD in business administration from Baghdad University[2] and is a professor at Sana'a University, where he heads the business administration center, which is cooperatively administrated by Sanaa University and Maastricht School of Management (MSM). Dr. Mubarak is attached as professor to the joint MBA program conducted by MSM and Sanaa University.
Previously, he served as consultant for numerous international projects in Yemen in education, employment and international development. He is also a member of the administrative board for the Youth Leaders Development Fund and had headed many administrative consultancies, training sessions and workshops for a number of public and private associations in Yemen, Bahrain, Burundi, Ethiopia, Romania, Netherlands, France and Germany.
At Science and Technology University in Sanaa, he had served as head of the administrative information technology and marketing and production administration departments, as well as being the manager of quality and development assurance from 2007 to 2009.
Politics
In March 2013, Bin Mubarak was elected as the secretary general of the national reconciliation dialogue conference, composed of representatives of all political parties and civic groups, tasked with carrying out reforms. It was disbanded in January 2014 after endorsing a federal political system for the country.[1] He was then director of the president's office.[2]
After the Saudi-backed Yemeni government bombed the north of the country, the Houthis, whose traditional homeland is in the north, near the Saudi border, protested in the capital Sanaa. Armed protesters took over government areas. This uprising led to Prime Minister Mohammed Basindwa's resignation. Ahmad Awad Bin Mubarak was promoted from Chief of Staff and appointed Prime Minister by President Abd Rabbuh Hadi despite Houthi opposition, citing a lack of an official agreement resolving the conflict.[3] However, Ahmad withdrew from the post on 9 October 2014.
Bin Mubarak was abducted by gunmen believed to be loyal Ali_Abdullah_Saleh in Sanaa on 17 January 2015.[4] Houthi and government officials reached a deal on 21 January to end a months-long military and political standoff in the capital that was reportedly to include bin Mubarak's release, but the agreement quickly collapsed as Hadi and his ministers quit under rebel pressure.[5] He was reportedly released in Shabwa Governorate on 27 January, ten days after his kidnapping.[6]
References
- 1 2 Profile: Yemeni new PM Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak
- 1 2 Yemeni Pres. assigns bin Mubarak to form new gov't
- ↑ Yemen rebels reject new prime minister
- ↑ "Yemen president's chief of staff abducted by gunmen". The Washington Times. 17 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
- ↑ "Yemen's President, Cabinet resign". CNN. 23 January 2015. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
- ↑ "Houthis free top aide to Yemen president". Al Jazeera. 27 January 2015. Retrieved 27 January 2015.