Said Ibrahim of Grand Comore

Prince Said Ibrahim (1911-04-17, Antananarivo, Madagascar - 1975, France) was a politician in the Comoros islands of the western Indian Ocean. He was the son of Sultan Said Ali, sultan of Grande Comore.

Said Ibrahim was educated at the Myre de Villers School in Antananarivo, Madagascar, with the view that he would be part of the local administration of the Comoros. He initially became an interpreter, and in 1938, after several requests, he obtained the post as Head of Administration to Grande Comore, then later the High Commissioner to Madagascar.

After World War II, in 1946 he was appointed Governor. He made a pilgrimage to Mecca, remaining in Cairo where he met King Farouk, and visiting Al-Azhar University. In 1947/1948 he sought to organize an Arab League struggle against Israel. In 1951 he stood down, arguably to devote himself entirely to politics. He became the leader of the opposition Parti Blanc (White Party), later reconstituted as the Democratic Assembly of the Comoran People (Rassemblement Démocratique du Peuple Comorien-- RDPC),[1] in league with the Comorienne Agreement Party (CEP) of his half brother Prince Said Houssein, and in agreement with the Party of General Charles de Gaulle. He tried twice to become a member of the French National Assembly: In 1951, his application was invalid, and in 1957 he lost. Finally, he was appointed Minister of Finance from 1957 to 1958. In 1959, Comoros got two seats in the French National Assembly, while remaining a single electoral district, and in 1962 and 1967, he teamed up with Mohamed Ahmed in elections. From 1958 to 1970 he was elected and reelected president of the Territorial Assembly and the Chamber of Deputies of the Comoros.

After the death of Sheikh Mohamed Said, he became for a time the strongest politician in the Comoros. He was elected President of the Governing Council on 2 April 1970, and was re-elected on 28 June 1971. Amid calls from all sides of the political elite demanding independence, he maintained that there was "no political independence without economic independence" which implied cooperation between the Comoros and France.

In 1971 the Legislature was hostile to him and he sought and obtained from France the dissolution of the Legislature, but the new assembly sought to overthrow the government in June 1972.

He died in 1975 in France, as a result of disease, after giving evidence about the coup of 3 August 1975.

He remained unmarried.

Legacy

Prince Said Ibrahim is commemorated by the Prince Said Ibrahim International Airport (IATA: HAH; ICAO: FMCH), the international airport serving Moroni, capital of Comoros.

The Prince Said Ibrahim Mosque,[2] named for him, is in Ngazidja, Comoros.

References

  1. ^ Comoros: The Break with France, Helen Chapin Metz, accessed 2009-07-02
  2. ^ Photo: three-foiled arches at Prince Said Ibrahim mosque, accessed 2009-07-01