Mahmood Ali (Indian politician)

Mohammed Mahmood Ali (born 3 March 1952) is an MLC and the Minister of Home, Prisons, Fire Services of Telangana from 2019. He is the second Home Minister of Telangana, preceded by Nayini Narsimha Reddy, former Home Minister.[1] He was the Deputy Chief Minister and Minister of Revenue, Stamps and Registrations, Relief and Rehabilitation, Urban Land Ceiling from 2014–2018.[2]

Mohammed Mahmood Ali
Mohammed Mahmood Ali
Home Minister (Government of Telangana)
Appointed byGovernor
ConstituencyMember of Legislative Council
Deputy Chief Minister of Telangana
In office
2 June 2014  6 September 2018
Member of Legislative Council
Assumed office
2010
ConstituencyTelangana
Personal details
Born (1952-03-03) 3 March 1952
Hyderabad, India
NationalityIndian
Political partyTelangana Rashtra Samithi
ChildrenOne Son (Md Azam Ali) and Two Daughters
ResidenceMalakpet, Hyderabad, Telangana, India
Alma materOsmania University
Website

Early life

Ali was born in Hyderabad and lives in Azampura. He received his Bachelor's degree in Commerce from Osmania University. After his education he ventured in dairy farming business and succeeded well in diary business.

Political career

Ali was elected as a Member of Legislative Council Andhra Pradesh in 2010, Now he is representing as a Member of Legislative Council Telangana.[3] He belongs to Telangana Rashtra Samithi and its Minority cell president.[4][5][6] He also holds the record for serving longest time as Deputy Chief Minister of Telangana State.

Deputy Chief Minister

Mahmood Ali with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in 2017

On 2 June 2014, Ali was appointed as the first ever Deputy Chief Minister of Telangana by Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao following the party victory in the state's Legislative Assembly election.[7]

Personal life

He is married and has a son and two daughters. Lives with his wife and grand son (Mohammed Furqan ahmed) at Ministers residential colony.


gollark: How dare people suggest that you may be wrong in some way!
gollark: It clearly says "plus some salt or acid". That makes it not pure water.
gollark: *continues not being scared of giannis*
gollark: They have a regular structure, and you could store one bit per atom, which is a lot. The main problem is that you would probably need stupidly advanced technology to read and write them.
gollark: One very dense method for storing information in science fiction stuff is sticking it in patterns of isotopes in a diamond or something.

References

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