Mohamed Orabi

Mohamed Orabi (Arabic: محمد العرابي, born 1951)[1] is an Egyptian diplomat and politician who was the Foreign Minister of Egypt in Essam Sharaf's cabinet from 18 June 2011 to 18 July 2011.[2]

Mohamed Orabi
Foreign Minister of Egypt
In office
18 June 2011  18 July 2011
PresidentHussein Tantawi (Acting)
Prime MinisterEssam Sharaf
Preceded byNabil el-Araby
Succeeded byMohamed Kamel Amr
Deputy Foreign Minister of Egypt
In office
6 March 2011  18 June 2011
PresidentHussein Tantawi (Acting)
Prime MinisterEssam Sharaf
Preceded byFaiza Abu El-Naga
Succeeded byNasser Hashemi
Personal details
Born1951
Cairo, Egypt
NationalityEgyptian

Career

Orabi worked in the Egyptian Army before he joined the foreign service in 1976.[3] Then he became a career diplomat.[4] He was deputy chief of the Egyptian mission in Israel from 1994 to 1998 and in the US.[5] He also served in Kuwait and in the United Kingdom as Egyptian diplomat.[6] He served as chief of the cabinet of the foreign minister in 2000 with Amr Moussa,[4] He was Egyptian ambassador to Germany from 2001 to 2008.[3] Next he acted as assistant foreign minister for economic affairs.[4]

He was appointed foreign minister in June 2011, replacing Nabil Al Arabi.[3] However, he resigned from office in July 2011.[7] Mohamed Kamel Amr replaced him as foreign minister.[8]

gollark: You start GCSEs in year 10.
gollark: As I said, I think A-level might be better, as I only do 3 (well, 4) subjects I actually like, with better teachers and not with people who don't care, but... well, based on past evidence of school stuff it might also be equally terrible?
gollark: > well, the actual purpose of schools is to teach people things, but most students do not learn anything even if they go to school. source: mean math score being about 4/40 in the university entrance exam.Exactly! It's mostly worthless!
gollark: If they run that whole cycle fast enough it'll average out as a reasonable situation!
gollark: Outside of high-level stuff (GCSE *maybe*, probably A-level) I think it's *mostly* irrelevant if you take a few weeks off.

References

  1. "Mohamed al-Orabi". Youm7. 16 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  2. Egypt's foreign minister resigns, Ahram Online, 17 July 2011
  3. "Official: Egypt's foreign minister quits after less than month on job". CNN. Cairo. 17 July 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  4. Ezzat, Dina (19 June 2011). "Meet Mohamed El-Orabi, Egypt's new foreign minister". Ahram Online. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  5. Ezzat, Dina (21 October 2012). "Morsi could have appointed diplomat to Israel differently: Former FM Orabi". Ahram Online. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  6. "Political tensions grow as former ambassador to U.S. is appointed foreign minister". Los Angeles Times. 19 June 2011. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  7. Ibrahim Badawy; Samar Samir (19 July 2011). "Orabi re-appointed as Egypt's Foreign Minister". Youm7. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  8. Li Laifang; Marwa Yehia (18 July 2011). "Egypt's new cabinet unveils". Xinhua. Cairo. Archived from the original on 2 October 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
Political offices
Preceded by
Nabil el-Araby
Foreign Minister of Egypt
2011
Succeeded by
Mohamed Kamel Amr
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