Ibrahim al-Jaafari

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Ibrahim al-Ashaiqir al-Jaafari
إبراهيم الأشيقر الجعفري
Ibrahim al-Jaafari

In office
7 April 2005 – 20 May 2006
President Jalal Talabani
Preceded by Iyad Allawi
Succeeded by Nouri al-Maliki

2nd Vice President of Iraq
Sharing office with Rowsch Shaways
In office
1 June 2004 – 7 April 2005
President Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer
Preceded by Taha Yassin Ramadan
Succeeded by Ghazi Mashal Ajil al-Yawer and Ghazi al-Yawar

Born March 25, 1947 (1947-03-25) (age 60)
Al Hindiyah, Karbala, Iraq
Political party Islamic Dawa Party
Religion Shi'a Islam

Ibrahim abd al-Karim Hamzah al-Ashaiqir al-Jaafari (Arabic: إبراهيم الأشيقر الجعفري; born 1947) is the former Prime Minister of Iraq in the Iraqi Transitional Government following the January 2005 elections. He is a Shiite and was previously one of the two vice-presidents of Iraq under the Iraqi Interim Government in 2004, and the main spokesman for the Islamic Dawa Party in Iraq. He was forced to withdraw his nomination for premiership for the permanent government because of accusations of weak leadership from Kurdish and Sunni parties in Iraq.

Contents

He was born Ibrahim al-Eshaiker (إبراهيم الأشيقر) in Karbala. He is a sayyid (descendant of Muhammed) and his great grandfather, Sayyid Mahdi bin Sayyid Ali bin Sayyid Baqir al-Ushaiqir, led the al-Ushaiqir revolt in Karbala in 1876 against the Ottoman Empire. The Al-Ushaiqir family originated from the city of al-Ushaiqir in what is now Saudi Arabia. Jaafari was educated at Mosul university as a medical doctor.[1]

He joined the Islamic Dawa Party in 1968. Upon graduation from school in 1974 he worked actively for the party in Iraq which was trying to overthrow the Ba'athist secular government. He left for Iran in 1980 and became involved in the movement against Saddam Hussein there as part of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq where he represented the Islamic Dawa Party. He adopted the name al-Jaafari in exile to protect his family in Iraq from retribution by Saddam. He moved to London in 1989 where he became the al-Dawa spokesman in the UK and an important participant in the wider anti-Saddam movement. While in the UK he attended many Iraqi Events giving religious sermons.[1]

He opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq but returned to Iraq soon after.[2] He was picked in July 2003 as member of the U.S.-backed Iraqi Governing Council, and served as its first chairman and Iraq's first post-Saddam interim President for one month. On 1 June 2004, he was selected to be one of the two vice-presidents in the Iraqi Interim Government.[1]

He brought al-Dawa into the United Iraqi Alliance coalition of Shi'ite parties and was second on the party's list after SCIRI leader Abdel-Aziz Hakim.[1]

Following the January 2005 Iraqi elections the strength of the UIA in the parliament made him a likely candidate to become the nation's new Prime Minister. Only Ahmed Chalabi challenged him for the position. Chalabi later dropped out of the race, being less than a favourite for a majority of the parties in the UIA, partly tainted by several scandals, thus leaving al-Jaafari unchallenged to become the alliance's candidate for the post. He was designated as Prime Minister on 7 April 2005, following the election of a Presidency Council the day before. [3] After a long period of negotiations aimed at establishing a broad-based government, he and his cabinet were finally approved by the National Assembly of Iraq on 28 April.[4]

Further information: Government of Iraq from 2006

In the national election of December 2005, the UIA once again won the majority of the votes, which according the new Iraqi constitution, gets to pick the Prime Minister. UIA members voted for the Prime Minister with only two main candidates. Al-Jaafari was one and the SCIRI member Adel Abdul Mahdi, a secular economist. Jaafari won the vote only by one (64 - 63). His win was credited to the support of Muqtada Al Sadr's members of UIA, who all voted for him. [5]

Despite this win, however, he became increasingly associated with the failure to end the violence in Iraq and to improve services. Because of this, the Sunni, Kurdish and secular groups in the parliament refused to agree to him continuing as Prime Minister, leading to deadlock. His refusal to stand down began to alienate even those who had backed him up to that point, but it is believed that only when Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani intervened that he finally stepped down.[6] The US government had expressed dissatisfaction with him in two months earlier, with George W. Bush stating that he "doesn't want, doesn't support, doesn't accept" his retention as Prime Minister.[7]

He was succeeded by al-Maliki as Dawa Party secretary-general in May 2007. [8]

Al Jaafari is married with 5 children (3 girls and 2 boys), all of whom reside in London.[9] Al-Jaafari is known for being soft-spoken and using flowery language laced with phrases from classical Arabic and literary allusions. Tim Russert revealed that al-Jaafari's favorite current author is American professor Noam Chomsky.[10]

  1. ^ a b c d Nimrod Raphaeli Ibrahim al-Ja'fari: Iraq's Designated Prime Minister, who is he?. Free Muslims Coalition. 5 March, 2005.
  2. ^ Valentinas Mite and Kathleen Ridolfo. Iraq Looks to Jaafari. Asia Times. 9 April, 2005.
  3. ^ Martin Asser. Profile: Ibrahim al-Jaafari. BBC News. 7 April, 2005.
  4. ^ Iraq PM makes first foreign trip. BBC News. 20 May, 2005.
  5. ^ Edward Wong. Shiites Say U.S. Is Pressuring Iraqi Leader to Step Aside. The New York Times. 28 March, 2006.
  6. ^ Roger Hardy. Iraq conflict thwarts PM Jaafari. BBC News. Friday, 21 April, 2006.
  7. ^ "US envoy 'calls for new Iraqi PM'", BBC News, 28 March 2006. 
  8. ^ Sawt al-Iraq, writing in Arabic, Informed Comment, 2007-05-14
  9. ^ Profile: Ibrahim al-Jaafari. Associated Press. 22 February, 2005.
  10. ^ Noam Chomsky on Failed States: The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy. Democracy Now! 31 March, 2006.

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Preceded by
Iyad Allawi
(Interim Government / interim Prime Minister)
State Prime Minister of Iraq
April 7, 2005May 20, 2006
Succeeded by
Nouri al-Maliki
Preceded by
Coalition Provisional Authority
Vice President of Iraq
20042005
Succeeded by
Adil Abdul Mahdi and Ghazi al-Yawar
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