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Maamun al-Kuzbari

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Syrian lawyer, academic and politician (1914–1998)

Maamun al-Kuzbari
مأمون الكزبري
Kuzbari in 1961
Vice President of Syria[1]
In office
25 February 1952 – 28 February 1954
Prime Minister of Syria
In office
29 September 1961 – 20 November 1961
Preceded byAbdel Hamid al-Sarraj (as part of theUAR)
Succeeded byIzzat al-Nuss
Speaker of the Parliament of Syria
In office
24 October 1953 – 16 February 1954
Preceded byNazim al-Kudsi
Succeeded byNazim al-Kudsi
In office
12 December 1961 – 12 September 1962
Succeeded bySaid al-Ghazzi
Personal details
Born1914 (1914)
Died2 March 1998(1998-03-02) (aged 83–84)
Political partyArab Liberation Movement

Maamun al-Kuzbari (Arabic:مأمون الكزبري,romanizedMaʾmūn al-Kuzbarī; 1914 – 2 March 1998)[2] was aSyrian literary personality, politician and acting head of state (29 September – 20 November 1961) from a prominentDamascus family.

Career

[edit]

He studiedInternational law at theUniversity of Lyon's affiliateSaint Joseph University in theLebanese capital,Beirut, and became an attorney in Damascus in 1943 and a professor atDamascus University in 1948. He entered parliament as an independent in 1953, allying himself with military strongmanAdib al-Shishakli. He was elected Speaker of parliament and chairman of the Constitutional Assembly charged by Shishakli to amend the constitution. Shishakli also appointed him secretary general of theArab Liberation Movement (ALM), Shishakli'spolitical vehicle. He also managed the party's daily newspaper,Al Tahrir al Arabi ("The Arab Liberation").

After Shishakli was overthrown, Kuzbari in his position as Speaker, and according to the constitution, was declared acting President in an emergency session of parliament on 25 February 1954. He succeeded in avoiding military confrontation among the supporters and opponents of Shishakli within the Syrian army and called the former PresidentHashim al-Atassi, whose administration was interrupted by Shishakli'scoup in 1949, to come back to Damascus in order to complete his term.

Kuzbari remained head of the ALM. He participated in the new elections and returned to parliament in October of that year. In February 1955 he was appointed minister of justice under Prime MinisterSabri al Asali and in September of that same year he became minister of education under Prime Minister Said al-Ghazzi. He kept that post until June 1956. In May 1956 he became acting president of Damascus University. In 1958, under presidentShukri al-Kuwatli, Kuzbari took part, as a member of the government, in unification talks withEgypt that resulted in the formation of theUnited Arab Republic. He was politically inactive during the union and became President of the Syrian Lawyers Bar.

Three years later he endorsed the1961 Syrian coup d'état that dissolved the UAR. One of the leading officers of that coup was Kuzbari's cousin,Haydar al-Kuzbari, and the coup leaders asked Mamoun to form the first post-UAR government. He formed a cabinet consisting mainly of technocrats and university professors. He assumed in addition to his role as prime minister, the ministry of Defense and Foreign Affairs and acted as president until his resignation in November 1961. His main objective was to re-establish an elected democratic government through a free and democratic elections.Parliamentary elections took place in December 1961. Kuzbari was elected again as a deputy in parliament and Speaker.Nazim al-Kudsi became president. On 28 March 1962 both Kuzbari and Kudsi were arrested in an attempted coup by military strongmanAbd al-Karim al-Nahlawi, but were released when it failed. He remained speaker until 12 September 1962.

He represented Syria in theNon-Aligned Movement Conferences in Bandung on 1955 and in several other international conferences.

Exile and death

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He was exiled after anothercoup on 8 March 1963 and settled for a short time inFrance before relocating toMorocco. He taught atRabat, Casablanca and Marrakech Universities. He taught and published several books in Syria and Morocco in the interpretation of civil law. He actively participated in propagation of the Arab language in the Moroccan universities and courts. His books are used as reference in the Moroccan courts.

In 1996, he moved toLebanon at the end of the country'scivil war. He died inBeirut on 2 March 1998 and was buried in Damascus.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Moubayed, Sami M. (2000).Damascus Between Democracy and Dictatorship. University Press of America.ISBN 9780761817444.
  2. ^"March 1998".
Citations
  • Sami Moubayed "Steel & Silk: Men and Women Who Shaped Syria 1900-2000" (Cune Press, Seattle, 2005).
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