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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Education  





3 Prime minister  





4 Notes  














Mohammad Musa Shafiq







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Muḥammad Mūsá Shafīq
محمد موسی شفيق
Prime Minister of Afghanistan
In office
12 December 1972 – 17 July 1973
MonarchMohammed Zahir Shah
Preceded byAbdul Zahir
Succeeded byNur Muhammad Taraki
asChairman of the Ministers of Council
Personal details
Born1932
kabul Province, Kingdom of Afghanistan
Died1979
Kabul, Democratic Republic of Afghanistan
Resting placeUnknown
Political partyIndependent
Alma materAl-Azhar University, Columbia University
OccupationPolitician, poet

Muḥammad Mūsá Shafīq (Pashto: محمد موسی شفيق;‎ 1932–1979) was Prime Minister of Afghanistan for eight months. He was an Afghan politician and poet. He became Foreign Minister in 1971 and Prime Minister in December 1972. He lost both positions when Mohammed Zahir Shah was overthrown on July 17, 1973. He survived throughout the regime of Mohammed Daoud Khan, but was arrested after the 1978 communist coup d'état and executed along with many other anti-communist politicians in 1979.

Early life[edit]

Mohammad Musa Shafiq was born in Kama district, Nangarhar province, Afghanistan in 1932. Son of prominent Afghan politician, civil servant and religious leader Mawlawi Mohammad Ibraheem Kamavi.

Education[edit]

Mohammad Musa Shafiq was graduated from Kabul Arabic Religious High School. He earned his Master's degree from Al-Azhar UniversityinEgypt after which he earned an additional Master's degree from Columbia University in New York, United States of America.[1]

The last prime minister under the monarchy, Muhammad Musa Shafiq (1972-1973) appeared to many, in both the modernizing government camp and the traditional Islamic camp, to embody the compromise jurist who would ease the problem of shari'a versus statutory law. Shafiq had trained with a mawlawi and then had studied at the Shari'at Faculty, followed by al-Azhar and then Columbia University, where he studied Islamic and comparative law. His career was cut short by the Da'ud coup of 1973, and he was taken from arrest to execution by the Nur Muhammad Taraki regime.

— Ralph H. Magnus & Eden Naby, "Traditional Afghan Islam", Afghanistan: Mullah, Marx, and Mujahid (2002)

Prime minister[edit]

As Prime Minister, Shafiq supported reforms of the largely conservative society of Afghanistan. He also sought closer ties with the United States and promised a crack-down on opium growing and smuggling. Other than that, he was also responsible for solving the then ongoing water dispute with Iran on diplomatic terms.[2] Shafiq was prime Minister for seven months.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Biography of Mohammad Musa Shafiq, TasvirAfghanistan.com. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  • ^ Anderson, Jack (2 March 1973) "The Afghanistan Connection" The Syracuse Post-Standard (Syracuse, New York) page 5, column 3

  • t
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  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mohammad_Musa_Shafiq&oldid=1228889121"

    Categories: 
    Prime ministers of Afghanistan
    Columbia University alumni
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    1932 births
    1979 deaths
    Executed Afghan people
    20th-century executions by Afghanistan
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