Ali Aref Bourhan

Ali Aref Bourhan (Arabic: علي عارف برهان) (born 1934 in Tadjoura, Djibouti) is a Djiboutian politician.

Ali Aref Bourhan
علي عارف برهان
President of the Government Council of the French Territory of the Afars and the Issas
In office
Jul 7, 1967  Jul 29, 1976
Succeeded byAbdallah Mohamed Kamil
Vice President of the Government Council of French Somaliland
In office
June 1960  1966
Succeeded byAbdallah Mohamed Kamil
Personal details
Born1934 (age 8586)
Tadjoura, French Somaliland
Political partyUNI

Early years

Bourhan was born in 1934 in the coastal city of Tadjoura, situated in eastern present-day Djibouti. He hailed from a prominent local Afar family, the Abourbakers.[1][2]

As a young man in the 1950s, Bourhan began his professional career as a teacher. He also ran the town's Afar and Somali youth club.[2]

Political career

Bourhan entered politics under the aegis of Ibrahim Sultan, the then Sultan of Tadjoura. Through the latter, he was introduced to Mahmoud Harbi, the Vice President of the Government Council of French Somaliland and a former comrade of the Sultan in the French army during the World War II campaign. Bourhan would subsequently serve in the territory's representative council as a Harbist politician, strongly supporting Harbi's independence-oriented platform. In 1958, Harbi disappeared from the local political scene,[2] having been exiled to Cairo by the French authorities.[3] He died in a plane crash two years later under mysterious circumstances.[3][4]

In 1960, with the fall of the ruling Dini administration, Bourhan assumed the seat of Vice President of the Government Council of French Somaliland, representing the UNI party.[1][2] He would hold that position until 1966. In July of the following year, he was elected President of the Government Council of the French Territory of the Afars and the Issas. Bourhan served in that capacity until July 29, 1976, the eve of Djibouti's independence. He was succeeded in office by Abdallah Mohamed Kamil.[1]

Private life

Bourhan and his wife Régine in 1971.

He becomes engaged on May 15, 1971 in Carcassonne with Régine Soulé.They divorced in 1980. Ali Aref married second time on May 14, 2014 in Kempeski Palace with the young Djiboutian Ms. Aref Filsane.

gollark: It is a shame they didn't do Opus, somewhat. Although DFPWM is simple enough to implement in CC if necessary.
gollark: No.
gollark: If anyone is interested I could run `*.kst.osmarks.net` or something.
gollark: If you resolve certain subdomains of d.osmarks.net with a hostname bit including some base32-encoded data, it will send a message in an IRC channel on APIONET.
gollark: I actually *do* run a custom DNS server which does DNS→IRC bridging (unidirectionally).

See also

  • Aussa Sultanate


Notes

  1. cahoon, ben. "Djibouti". www.worldstatesmen.org. Retrieved 2018-04-09.
  2. Dubois, Colette (2002-10-30). "Jacques Foccart et Ali Aref". Les Cahiers du Centre de Recherches Historiques. Archives (in French) (30). doi:10.4000/ccrh.472. ISSN 0990-9141.
  3. United States Joint Publications Research Service, Translations on Sub-Saharan Africa, Issues 464-492, (1966), p.24.
  4. Barrington, Lowell, After Independence: Making and Protecting the Nation in Postcolonial and Postcommunist States, (University of Michigan Press: 2006), p.115

References

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