Nasri Maalouf
Nasri Maalouf | |
---|---|
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants | |
In office May 1992 – October 1992 | |
Prime Minister | Omar Karami |
Preceded by | Farès Boueiz |
Succeeded by | Farès Boueiz |
Personal details | |
Born | (1911-05-07)May 7, 1911 al-Mashrah, Beirut, Ottoman Syria |
Died | April 2, 2005(2005-04-02) (aged 93) Abu Dhabi, UAE |
Nationality | Lebanese |
Nasri Maalouf (Arabic: نصري معلوف) (May 7, 1911 – April 2, 2005) was a Lebanese politician. He was a Melkite Greek Catholic, and was known as a moderate and peacemaker in Lebanese politics.
Nasri Maalouf was also a prominent lawyer, who mediated one of his most important cases, the one involving the prosecution of Nizar Halabi's assassination.
Maalouf was born in al-Mashrah, Beirut, in modern-day Lebanon. He was educated in Syria. He was a signer of the Lebanese constitution and the Taif Accord. He was the Minister of Finance from November 1956 to July 1957.[1]
He was a long-time member of parliament from Beirut- first elected in 1968 alongside Michel Sassine- and served in the cabinet several times, including as foreign minister for a few months in 1992, as well as defense minister from 1973 to 1974,[2] and Minister of Justice. Shortly before his death, he was appointed to be a member of a council of elders which supervised parliamentary elections in June 2005.
References
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- Pharaoun (1945)
- Frangieh (1945–46)
- Abu Shahla (1946)
- Pharaoun (1946–47)
- Frangieh (1947–49)
- Takla (1949–51)
- Al Oweini (1951)
- Helou (1951–52)
- Takla (1952)
- Akkari (1952)
- Moubarak (1952–53)
- Chehab (1953)
- Hakim (1953)
- Naqqache (1953–55)
- Frangieh (1955)
- Lahoud (1955–57)
- Malik (1957–58)
- Takla (1958)
- Al Oweini (1958–60)
- Takla (1960–64)
- Ammoun (1964)
- Takla (1964–65)
- Al Oweini (1965)
- Hakim (1965–66)
- Takla (1966)
- Hakim (1966–68)
- Boutros (1968)
- Al Oweini (1968–69)
- Karami (1969)
- Salem (1969)
- Majdalani (1969–70)
- Abou Hamad (1970–73)
- Babikian (1973)
- Naffah (1973–74)
- Takla (1974–75)
- Dahdah (1975)
- Takla (1975–76)
- Chamoun (1976)
- Boutros (1976–82)
- Salem (1982–84)
- Karami (1984–87)
- Hoss (1987–90)
- Boueiz (1990–92)
- Maalouf (1992)
- Boueiz (1992–98)
- Hoss (1998–2000)
- Hammoud (2000–03)
- Obeid (2003–05)
- Hammoud (2004–05)
- Salloukh (2005–09)
- Al Shami (2009–11)
- Mansour (2011–14)
- Bassil (2014–20)
- Hitti (2020)
- Wehbe (2020–21)
- Akar (interim) (2021)
- Bou Habib (2021–present)
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