Dey Ould Sidi Baba

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Dey Ould Sidi Baba and Haile Selassie .

Dey Ould Sidi Baba ( Arabic الداي ولد سيدي بابا, DMG ad-Dāy walad Sīdī Bābā ; * 1921 in Atar ; † September 19, 1992 in Rabat ) was a Moroccan diplomat .

Career

Sidi Baba was born in Atar, Mauritania, where he was taught the Koran and other sciences by well-known Islamic scholars. He also studied French and modern subjects in French colonial schools. He joined the independence movement against the French and supported unification with Morocco. Sidi Baba supported the expansion of the territory of Morocco from Tangier to Senegal ( Greater Morocco ). When Mohammed VI. signed the Wathiqat al-Istiqlal (founding document of the Istiqlal ), Sidi Baba decided to move to Rabat. In 1958 he was appointed advisor to Mohammed VI. involved. From 1959 he headed the Africa Department in the Foreign Ministry.

In 1961 he became the ambassador of Morocco in Conakry , (Guinea).

From 1963 to 1966 he was the permanent representative of Morocco to the United Nations. In 1964 he was a representative of Morocco to the Security Council, where he was part of the committee that examined what was going on at the borders of Vietnam and Cambodia , and was also appointed as a member of the committee that examined the policies of the apartheid government in South Africa. In 1966 he was Vice-President of the 21st, 5th Special and 5 Emergency Special sessions of the United Nations General Assembly. From 1967 to 1970 he was the royal bureau chief.

From 1971 to 1972 he was ambassador to Jeddah , Saudi Arabia .

In May 1973 Sidi Baba became Minister of Education.

In 1974 he became Minister for Islamic Affairs.

In 1977 he joined the National Collection of Independents as a member of its executive committee, as an elected member of parliament and then one of the six members of parliament.

From 1977 to 1983 he was chairman of the assembly of representatives .

Individual evidence

  1. Aomar Boum, Thomas K. Park, Historical Dictionary of Morocco, p 381
predecessor Office successor
Moroccan Ambassador in Conakry , (Guinea).
1961 to 1962
Mohamed Ait Ouali
Permanent Representative of Morocco to the UN Headquarters in New York City
1963 to 1965
2001 to early 2006: Mohamed Bennouna
Abderrahmane Baddou Moroccan ambassador to Jeddah from
1971 to 1972
Abderrahmane Baddou
Moroccan Minister of Education
May 1973 to 1974
Moroccan Minister for Foundations and Islamic Affairs
1974 to 1977
1985 to 2002: Abdelkébir Alaoui M'Daghri
Mehdi Ben Bouchta Chairman of the Assembly of Representatives (Morocco)
1977 to 1983
Ahmed Osman