Mujawar Cabinet
Cabinet of Yemen
Mujawar Cabinet | |
---|---|
Cabinet of Yemen | |
Date formed | 5 April 2007 |
Date dissolved | 20 March 2011 |
People and organisations | |
Head of state | Ali Abdullah Saleh |
Head of government | Ali Mohammed Mujawar |
History | |
Predecessor | Bajamal Cabinet 2003 |
Successor | Basindawa Cabinet |
The cabinet of Yemeni prime minister Ali Mohammed Mujawar took the constitutional oath before president Ali Abdullah Saleh on 7 April 2007.[1] The cabinet was made up of 33 ministers.[2]
This article is part of series on |
Politics of Yemen |
---|
Member State of the Arab League |
Constitution |
Executive
|
Legislature
|
|
|
Yemen portal |
|
| ||
---|---|---|
| ||
|
List of ministers
← Government → ( 6 April 2007 – 20 March 2011) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Office | Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Alliance/party |
Prime Minister | Ali Mohammed Mujawar | ||||
Deputy Prime Minister | Rashad Mohammed al-Alimi | GPC | |||
Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs | Abdul-Karim Ismail al-Arhabi | GPC | |||
Minister of Foreign Affairs | Abu Bakr al-Qirbi | GPC | |||
Minister of Defense | Mohammed Nasser Ahmed | GPC | |||
Minister of Interior | Rashad Mohammed al-Alimi ( 7 April 2007 - 9 May 2008) Mutaher al-Masri ( 9 May 2008 - 7 December 2011) | GPC | |||
Minister of Finance | Noaman al-Suhaibi | ||||
Minister of Information | Hassan Ahmed al-Lawzi | GPC | |||
Minister of Electricity and Energy | Mustafa Yahya Buhran | ||||
Minister of Youth and Sport | Hamoud Mohammed Ubad | GPC | |||
Minister of Civil Service and Insurance | Hamoud Khalid al-Soufi | GPC | |||
Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs and the Shura Council | Adnan Umar al-Jafri | ||||
Minister of Health | Abdul-Karim Rase | ||||
Minister of Justice | Ghazi Shaif al-Aghbari | ||||
Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research | Saleh Ali Ba Surrah | ||||
Minister of Public Works and Highways | Umar Abdullah al-Kurshumi | ||||
Minister of Social Affairs and Labour | Amat al-Razzaq Ali Hamad | ||||
Minister of Tourism | Nabil Hasan al-Faqih | GPC | |||
Minister of Oil and Minerals | Khalid Mahfoud Bahah | GPC | |||
Minister of Religious Endowments and Guidance | Hamoud abdul-Hamid al-Hitar | ||||
Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation | Mansour Ahmed al-Hawshabi | ||||
Minister of Technical Education and Vocational | Ibrahim Umar Hajri | ||||
Minister of Culture | Mohammed Abu Bakr al-Maflahi | ||||
Minister of Transport | Khalid Ibrahim al-Wazir | ||||
Minister of Human Rights | Huda Abdul-Latif al-Ban | ||||
Minister of State and Mayor of Sana'a | Yahya Mohammed al-Shaibi | GPC | |||
Minister of Legal Affairs | Rashad Ahmed al-Rassas | GPC | |||
Minister of Local Administration | Abdul-Qadir Ali Hilal | GPC | |||
Minister of Fisheries Wealth | Mahmoud Ibrahim al-Saghiri | ||||
Minister of Planning and International Cooperation | Abdul-Karim Ismail al-Arhabi | GPC | |||
Minister of Telecommunications & Information Technology | Kamal Hussein al-Jabri | ||||
Minister of Industry and Trade | Yahya al-Mutawakel | ||||
Minister of Water and Environment | Abdul-Rahman Fadhl al-Iryani | ||||
Minister of Education | Abdul-Salam Mohammed al-Jawfi | GPC | |||
Minister of Expatriates Affairs | Saleh Hasan Sumai | GPC |
See also
References
This article about government in Yemen. is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e