Mohamed Nur

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Mohamed Nur
محمد نور
Mayor of Mogadishu
Incumbent
Assumed office
2010
Personal details
Born Somalia
Alma mater University of Westminster
Religion Islam

Abdirazak Mohamed Nur (Somali: Maxamed Nuur, Arabic: محمد نور) is a Somali politician. He is the current Mayor of Mogadishu, a position to which he was appointed in 2010.

Background

Personal life

Nur was born to a family from the Udejeen sub-clan of the Hawiye.[1]

He was raised in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia. Nur is married to Shamis, with whom he has six children.[2][3]

When the Somali Civil War broke out in the early 1990s, he and his family emigrated to London in 1993. The family initially stayed in Hackney, later relocating to the Queen's Crescent neighborhood, where they are still based.[3]

Education

Nur subsequently pursued higher education studies, graduating from the University of Westminster.[3]

Early career

Nicknamed "Tarzan",[4] Nur is a civil engineer and entrepreneur by profession.[1]

In an administrative capacity, he worked as a business advisor to the Islington Council in London.[2]

In 2006, Nur unsuccessfully campaigned for a seat as a Labour Party councillor in Fortune Green.[3]

He also established and ran the Kentish Town Somali Welfare Association, the first such Somali community organization in Kentish Town. Based in the Queen's Crescent Community Centre, it offers support and direction to new immigrants.[3]

Mayor of Mogadishu

In 2010, through his involvement with a Somali political organization in the diaspora, Nur was appointed Mogadishu's new Mayor.[2] He took on the task believing he could effect positive change by "altering the mindset of the people" in the battle-scarred city.[5]

Since taking office, Nur's administration enacted a number of reforms in a bid to improve the city's security and service delivery, including starting a garbage collection program, erecting proper streetlights and providing around-the-clock electricity, sacking corrupt public officials, and offering formal police protection. The municipal government also firmed up on traffic safety, fining motorists who drive without lights, in the wrong street lanes or carrying excessive loads.[2]

Among his more ambitious projects, Nur organized a street festival in 2011 celebrating local culture. It represented the first event of its ilk held in many years in the city, but was vulnerable to attack by Al Shabaab insurgents.[5]

Following the ouster of the Islamist rebels from Mogadishu in mid-2011, life in the city gradually began to return to normal. Nur's administration also started large-scale rehabilitation of roads and general infrastructure, with residents closely cooperating with the civil and police authorities to tighten up on security.[6]

The evicted militants periodically continue to issue death threats to Nur via text messages and by telephone. He narrowly escaped a planted car bomb in 2011 and a road-side explosive device the following year, which killed six army soldiers. Nur consequently entrusts his security detail to his cousin and travels around the city in an armoured convoy with personal guards.[4]

With the passing of a new Constitution in 2012 and the subsequent election of an inaugural President in the new Federal Government, Nur has continued to oversee Mogadishu's ongoing post-conflict reconstruction. He chairs meetings discussing business licenses in the capital's newly established Chamber of Commerce, and organizes various development projects, including the renovation of shopping malls.[4]

In January 2014, Nur was named Deputy Minister for Youth Sports in Prime Minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed's new Cabinet. Nur declined the position at a press conference, stating that he had not been consulted about the nomination.[7]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 United States Embassy in Kenya (2009). "Somalia - Conversation with President Sheikh Sharif". Wikileaks. Retrieved 9 December 2013. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 How a modest council worker from Camden came to be the Mayor of Mogadishu
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Mohamed Nur – From Fortune Green to Mogadishu mayor
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Harding, Anndrew (14 November 2012). "Meeting the mayor of Mogadishu: Somalia's Tarzan". BBC. Retrieved 21 November 2012. 
  5. 5.0 5.1 Elliot, Robert. "The Mayor of Mogadishu". Witness: Al Jazeera. Al Jazeera. Retrieved 6 December 2011. 
  6. Mogadishu City Life Returning to Normal
  7. "SOMALIA: Mogadishu Mayor rejects ministerial position". Raxanreeb. 18 January 2014. Retrieved 19 January 2014. 
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