Abdullahi Issa

{{Short description|Somali politician}}

{{Infobox Prime Minister

| name = Abdullahi Issa
{{Nobold|{{lang|ar|عبد الله عيسى}}}}

| image = Abdullahi Issa Mohamud.jpg

| honorific-prefix = His Excellency

| order = Prime Minister of the Trust Territory of Somalia

| president =

| deputy =

| term_start = 29 February 1949

| term_end = 7 July 1960

| predecessor = Inaugural

| successor = Muhammad Haji Ibrahim Egal

| birth_date = {{birth year|1921}}

| birth_place = Afgooye, Italian Somalia

| death_date = {{death date and age|1988|1921}}

| death_place = Rome, Italy

| party = Somali Youth League

}}

Abdullahi Issa Mohamud ({{langx|so|Cabdullaahi Ciise Maxamuud}}, {{langx|ar|عبد الله عيسى محمد}} (1921{{Cite book |last=Sachs |first=Moshe Y. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lNhWAAAAMAAJ&q=Abdullahi+Issa+Mohamud+1921 |title=Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations: Africa |date=1988 |publisher=Worldmark Press |isbn=978-0-471-62406-6 |language=en}} – March 24,{{fact|date=April 2024}} 1988) was a Somali politician. He was the Prime Minister of Italian Somalia during the trusteeship period, serving from February 29, 1949, to July 7, 1960.

Biography

Issa was born in 1921 in the southern town of Afgooye.{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Salah Mohamed|title=Huddur & the History of Southern Somalia|year=2005|publisher=Nahda Bookshop Publisher|pages=487–488|isbn=9789772004997|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UGEwAQAAIAAJ}}{{cite book|title=Somalia at the Crossroads|year=2007|publisher=Adonis & Abbey|pages=10|isbn=9781905068593|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CXUwAQAAIAAJ}}{{cite book |last=Ghalīb |first=Jama Mohamed |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vtotAQAAIAAJ |title=The Cost of Dictatorship: The Somali Experience |publisher=L. Barber Press |year=1995 |isbn=0936508302 |pages=41}}{{cite book |last=Hempstone |first=Smith |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R7oeAAAAIAAJ |title=The New Africa |publisher=Faber and Fabe |year=1961 |pages=145}}

Nicknamed "Bidaar", Issa frequented an Italian primary institution in the capital, as well as a local Qur'anic school (madrassah). When the Second World War broke out, he was still a student.Europa Publications Limited, p.925.

Issa later relocated to the port of Merca at the age of sixteen, where he would work as a postal clerk from 1939 to 1941. He thereafter returned to Mogadishu and assumed a position in the Department of Economic Affairs. Following the British military occupation of Italian Somalia in the early 1940s, Issa was relieved from his duties. He then embarked on a business career.

After the turmoil of the war years, Issa joined the Somali Youth League (SYL) at its onset. He typified the Somali political elite of the period, as he was "young (age 38), intelligent, largely self-educated, confident, and determined".African and American Institute He quickly rose through the ranks to become one of the party's leaders. In 1948, he was appointed to the SYL's central committee, and eventually as its Secretary-General.

Issa later went to Paris and New York as an SYL delegate to proclaim the right of the Somali people to independence. From 1950 to 1954, he represented the SYL at the United Nations Trusteeship Council. After being appointed to office as an SYL deputy in the political elections of 1956, he was called in the same year to form Somalia's first government, thus becoming the nation's first Prime Minister.

Re-elected in 1959, he was re-confirmed as Premier, and held for some time also the portfolios of Foreign Affairs, Interior and Grace and justice. In the government formed after Somalia's independence in July 1960, Issa was later appointed Foreign Minister.Touval, p.113 In this capacity, he took part in many international conventions, in particular the United Nations General Assembly and the conferences in Addis Abeba, among other cities. With the conclusion of the general election of March 1964, Issa returned to the National Assembly as an SYL deputy for Beledweyne.

A few years later, the Supreme Revolutionary Council (SRC) seized power. The new military government subsequently appointed Issa as Somalia's Ambassador to Sweden in 1974. He held the position until early 1983, when he resigned from public office after a long career in politics.

Issa spent his retirement years in Rome, Italy. He died there in March 1988, and was transported to Mogadishu for burial.

See also

Notes

{{reflist}}

References

  • {{cite book

| last = African and American Institute

| title = Africa report, Volumes 1-5

| publisher = African and American Institute

| year = 1971

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=f1EJAQAAIAAJ

}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Europa Publications Limited

| title = The Middle East and North Africa, Volume 17

| publisher = Europa Publications

| year = 1970

| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=mWy6AAAAIAAJ}}

  • {{cite book

| last = Touval

| first = Saadia

| title = Somali Nationalism: International Politics and the Drive for Unity in the Horn of Africa

| publisher = IUniverse

| year = 1999

| isbn = 1-58348-411-6}}

  • [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Somalia.html Somalia] - Worldstatesmen.com

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{{succession box | before = Inaugural Interim Somali Government | title = Prime Minister of Interim Somali Government Under UN trusteeship | years = 1949 – 1960 | after = Abdirashid Ali Shermarke }}

{{s-end}}

{{SomaliaPMs}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Issa, Abdullahi}}

Category:1921 births

Category:1988 deaths

Category:20th-century prime ministers of Somalia

Category:Ethnic Somali people

Category:Somali Youth League politicians

Category:Ministers of foreign affairs of Somalia

Category:Somali independence activists

Category:Somalian expatriates in the United States

Category:Interior ministers of Somalia