Ali Mohamed Daoud

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Ali Mohamed Daoud (born August 28, 1950 in Djibouti ) is a politician of the Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy FRUD (Front pour la Restoration de l'Unité et de la Démocratie) from Djibouti .

Life

After attending secondary school, Daoud completed vocational training as a medical technician in Paris between 1973 and 1976 and then worked in this profession. In the meantime he was involved between 1975 and 1977 as a member of the Politburo of the Parti du Mouvement Populaire (PMP) in what was then the French Afar and Issa territories .

After he was not politically active in the following years , he joined the FRUD, founded in 1991 in 1991, which led the government of President Hassan Gouled Aptidon and his unity party Rassemblement Populaire pour le Progrès between 1991 and 1994 during the Djiboutian civil war (RPP) fought. Immediately after joining, he also became President of FRUD in 1994.

After the end of the civil war and the formation of a coalition between the RPP and FRUD, Daoud became Minister of Public Health and Social Affairs (Ministre de la Santé Publique et des Affaires Sociales) in the cabinet of Prime Minister Barkat Gourad Hamadou on June 8, 1995 . After a government reshuffle, he then took over the post of Minister for Agriculture, Livestock and the Sea and Minister Commissioner for Water Resources (Ministre de l'Agriculture, de l'Élevage et de la Mer, chargé des Ressources hydrauliques) .

On December 19, 1999, he was elected as a FRUD candidate for the first time as a member of the National Assembly and has been a member of the National Assembly since then, following re-elections on January 10, 2003, February 10, 2008 and February 20, 2013. While he was a member of parliament he was part of the parliamentary committees for national defense and for legislation and general administration as well as a member of the Supreme Court (Haute Cour de Justice) .

Web links

  • Entry ( memento of February 22, 2012 in the Internet Archive ) on the homepage of the National Assembly
  • Entry on the homepage of the National Assembly (page accessed December 5, 2014)