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Mohammad Hasan Sharq
Prime Minister of Afghanistan

Mohammad Hasan Sharq

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Prime Minister of Afghanistan
Work field
Gender
Male
Religion(s):
Place of birth
Anar Dara District, Afghanistan
Age
99 years
Education
Kabul University
Mohammad Hasan Sharq
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Mohammad Hasan Sharq (Pashto: محمد حسن شرق‎, born 17 July 1925) was an Afghan politician during the communist government of Afghanistan. Sharq became Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet-backed government, the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan. He was selected as a compromise candidate after the loya jirga ratified a new constitution in 1987. However, the power of his office was relatively small compared with the ones of the Presidency.

Career

Sharq served as spokesman for earlier Chairman of the Council of Ministers Mohammad Daoud Khan during the Kingdom of Afghanistan. When Daoud took over the Cabinet Posts of Prime Minister, Defense Minister and Foreign Minister, He appointed Sharq as his Deputy Prime Minister. In March 1986 Afghan foreign minister Abdul Wakil invited mujahideen leaders, former King Zahir Shah and ex-ministers from previous governments to join a government of national unity to rebuild the war-torn country.

The new parliament that convened on May 30, 1989, two weeks after the Geneva Accords became effective and the beginning of the Soviet troop withdrawal in 1989, consisted of 184 lower house deputies and 115 senators; 62 house and 82 senate seats were left vacant for the resistance "opposition." As a compromise candidate, Sharq was selected by President Mohammad Najibullah to be the newChairman of the Council of Ministers, replacing Sultan Ali Keshtmand. The appointment was intended dramatically to reinforce the point that the People's Democratic Party of Afghanistan (PDPA) was going to take a back seat. The new constitution, however, vested key powers in the Presidency and Najibullah did not give up that central role.

Sharq had served as the regime's Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers since June 1987 and before that as its Ambassador to India. Sharq's association with the Parcham faction, dating back to the Daoud government, made the "non-PDPA" appellation meaningless. Likewise, on June 7, when Sharq announced his cabinet, consisting of 11 new members and 10 former ones, the non-party credentials of the "new" ministers were undermined by the fact that most had served the regime government previously in other capacities. Furthermore, the powerful ministries of interior, state security, and foreign affairs remained in PDPA hands. The major exception was the effort to enlist a resistance commander or a respected retired general from an earlier era to become minister of defense. This post remained open for some time, but in August it was finally given to Army Chief of Staff General Shahnawaz Tanai of the Khalq faction.

Thus, almost two years after he announced the national reconciliation policy in January 1987, Najibullah was unable to attract a single major figure of the resistance or prominent Afghan refugee to join the government. During 1988 two new provinces were created - Sar-e Pol in the north and Nuristan in the northeast - by carving out territory from adjoining provinces. In each case, the purpose appears to have been to create a new entity where an ethnic minority, the Hazaras and Nuristanis respectively, would dominate. This readjustment would guarantee representation in the new parliament for these ethnic groups.At the same time, the Sharq government abolished the special ministry for nationalities that carried connotations of a Soviet-style system. In February 1989 Sharq resigned from the government of Najibullah, a move underscoring the failure by Afghans to establish a government of national reconciliation. A resident of the Anar Dara district in the western Farah province, Sharq was prime minister in the Najibullah government from 1986 to 1990. He also served as spokesman for then prime minister Daud Khan and his Milli Ghurzang Party.

Cabinet

OfficeIncumbentTook officeLeft office
Chairman of the Council of MinistersMohammad Hasan Sharq16 June 198821 February 1989
Minister of Foreign AffairsAbdul Wakil16 June 1988
Minister of DefenceLieut. Gen. Shahnawaz Tanai16 June 1988
Minister of InteriorMaj. Gen. Sayed Mohammad Gulabzoy16 June 1988
Minister of State SecurityGen. Ghulam Faruq Yaqubi16 June 1988
Minister of FinanceHamidullah Tarzi16 June 1988
Minister of JusticeMuhammad Bashir Baghlani16 June 1988
Permanent Representative to the United NationsShah Muhammad Dost16 June 1988
Minister of CommunicationsGeneral Mohammad Aslam Watanjar16 June 1988
Minister of CommerceMohammad Khan Jalallar16 June 1988
Minister of Returnees AffairsAbdul Ghafur16 June 1988
Minister of Tribal AffairsSulaiman Layeq16 June 1988
Minister of PlanningSultan Husain16 June 1988
Minister of Rural DevelopmentMohammad Asef Zaher16 June 1988
Minister of Agriculture, Land ReformMuhammad Ghofran16 June 1988
Minister of Public HealthAbdul Fatah Najm16 June 1988
Minister of EducationGhulam Rasul16 June 1988
Minister of Higher EducationNur Ahmad Barits16 June 1988
Minister of Mines, IndustryMuhammad Ishaq Kawa16 June 1988
Minister of TransportMuhammad Aziz16 June 1988
Minister of ConstructionNazar Muhammad16 June 1988
Minister of Civil AviationPacha Gul Wafadar16 June 1988
Minister of Light Industry, FoodstuffsDost Muhammad Fazl16 June 1988
Minister of Water, PowerRaz Muhammad Paktin16 June 1988
Minister of InformationAhmad Bashir Ruigar9 July 1988
Minister without PortfolioNematullah Pazhwak16 June 1988
Gen. Ghulam Faruq Yaqubi
Fazl Haq Khaliqyar
Shah Muhammad Dost
Sarjang Khan Jaji
Adamec, Ludwig (2011). Historical Dictionary of Afghanistan. Scarecrow Press. pp. 80–81. ISBN 978-0-8108-7815-0.
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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