Mohammad-Ali Najafi

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Mohammad Ali Najafi while lecturing at Sharif University, before Tehran City Council election
Mohammad Ali Najafi while lecturing at Sharif University, before Tehran City Council election

Mohammad Ali Najafi (In Persian: محمدعلی نجفی) (born January 13, 1952) is an Iranian politician and university professor in mathematics. He has been a minister and later a vice president for planning and budget, and has also run for a seat in Tehran city council in Iranian City and Village Councils elections, 2006.

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[edit] Academic career

Najafi earned his B.Sc. in mathematics from Sharif University of Technology (then Aryamehr University). He then attempted to receive a Ph.D. in mathematics at MIT in Cambridge United States, but dropped out[1] in 1978[2] during the 1979 revolution and returned to Iran. As of December 2006, he is an instructor[2] at the Department of Mathematic Science at Sharif University of Technology, having served there since 1979[3] and working on representation theory[2].

[edit] Political career

After the Iranian revolution of 1979, Najafi immigrated to Iran, immediately beginning his political career. Starting as a consultant to Mostafa Chamran and later the president of Isfahan University of Technology (19801981),[3] Najafi served as the Minister of Culture and Higher Education from 1981 to 1984[2][3] in the cabinet of then Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi. In 1988 he became the Minister of Education under President Hashemi Rafsanjani and served until 1997[2][3]. In 1997, he was appointed by President Mohammad Khatami as Vice President and Head of the Planning and Budget Organization, but after a merge of the his organization with another and a rename to Organization for Management and Planning, he was succeeded by Mohammad Reza Aref. Najafi was an advisor to President Khatami and also the senior advisor to the Minister of Industries from 2001 to 2005.[3]

[edit] Candidacy for Tehran City Council

In the Iranian City and Village Councils elections, 2006, Najafi ran for a seat in Tehran city council. He headed a list named "The Union of reformists" (ائتلاف اصلاح‌طلبان). This is the first time Najafi is running in a general election in Iran.

[edit] Presidential ambition

During the Autumn of 2004, Najafi was a common guess as the reformists candidate for 2005 presidential election but he denied his interest in favor of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's candidacy and was then guessed to possibly become as the First Vice President for Rafsanjani. َAfter Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's victory in the election, Najafi has been suggested as a presidential candidate for a future election again.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mohammad Ghouchani (محمد قوچانی) (2006-11-26). Why Najavi? (چرا نجفی؟) (Persian) (HTML). Retrieved on 2006-12-17.
  2. ^ a b c d e Faculty (HTML). Website of the Department of Mathematical Science of Sharif University of Technology. Retrieved on 2006-12-17.
  3. ^ a b c d e Paper publicity leaflet distributed by Setād-e Entexābāti-e Mohammad Ali Najafi (ستاد انتخاباتی محمدعلی نجفی), December 2006.

[edit] External links

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