Ibrahim Hashem

Ibrahim Hashem
Prime Minister of Jordan
In office
24 April 1957  18 May 1958
Monarch King Hussein
Preceded by Husayin al-Khalidi
Succeeded by Samir al-Rifai
Prime Minister of Jordan
In office
1 July 1956  29 October 1956
Monarch Hussein
Personal details
Born 1878
Nablus, Palestine
Died 1958
Baghdad, Iraq
Religion Sunni Islam

Ibrahim Hashem (Arabic: إبراهيم هاشم, 1878 - 14 July 1958) was a Jordanian lawyer and politician of Palestinian descent who served in several high offices under Faisal I of Iraq, Abdullah I of Jordan and Hussein of Jordan.

Life and career

Hashem was born in Nablus and educated in Istanbul. In 1915 he joined the army and then the Arab government in Damascus. He taught law at Damascus University and was appointed by Faisal I of Iraq to the Court of Appeal. In 1920 he moved to Jordan following the French occupation of Syria.[1]

In 1933 he became Prime Minister, Minister of Justice and head of the Supreme Court of Trans-Jordan. Other offices include:

Hashem was assassinated in 1958 in Baghdad.[4] He was working on the newly established Arab Federation between Jordan and Iraq and traveled to Baghdad with Minister of Defense Suleiman Tukan and Minister of State for the External Affairs Khlusi Al Khairi. Their party was attacked by revolutionaries near the Baghdad airport, and Hashem and Tukan were killed.[5][6]

See also

References

  1. Preston, Paul; Michael Partridge; Bülent Gökay; Malcolm Yapp; Great Britain Foreign Office (2005). British Documents on Foreign Affairs--Reports and Papers from the Foreign Office Confidential Print. ISBN 978-0-88692-720-2
  2. Aruri, N.H. (1972). Jordan: A Study in Political Development (1923-1965). Springer, ISBN 978-90-247-1217-5
  3. Staff report (February 27, 1956). Jordan Deputy Premier Quits to Become Speaker Here. Chicago Tribune
  4. Lentz, Harris M. (1994). Heads of States and Governments: A Worldwide Encyclopedia of Over 2,300 Leaders, 1945 Through 1992. McFarland, ISBN 978-0-89950-926-6
  5. Staff report (July 23, 1958). Jordan tells slaying of two envoys in Iraq. Chicago Tribune
  6. Staff report (July 17, 1958). Cairo Reports Arrests. New York Times

External links