Mohammed Hadid

Mohammed Hadid (January 1, 1907 August 3, 1999) was an Iraqi economist, cabinet minister and democracy advocate.[1]

Early years and family

Mohammed Hadid was born into a rich Mosulite family[2] at the beginning of the 20th century. He married Wajeeha Sabonji, with whom he had three children; Haithem,[1] the writer and accountant, Foulath[3], and the noted architect Zaha Hadid.[4]

Years of study

Hadid attended the London School of Economics between 1928 and 1931, and achieved a degree in Economics. It was there that he is said to have been influenced by the ideas of Professor Harold Laski, a "widely known socialist and agnostic".[5] He was also influenced by the works of Sidney Webb, Hugh Dalton, John Maynard Keynes and other economists and socialists whose Fabian ideas held the promise for a new social order to be constructed in the aftermath of the Ottoman Empire.

Politics

In 1931, Hadid returned to Baghdad and joined the Iraqi Ministry of Finance. More importantly, he became a founding member of the politically progressive Ahali group which embraced the ideals of Britain's Labour Party and attracted other leading personalities such as Abd al-Fattah Ibrahim, Jafar Abu-Timman, Kamel Chadirchi and Hikmat Sulayman.

Ahali group

In 1936, the Ahali group was involved in a coup d'état that was led by army general Bakr Sidqi. When Sidqi sought dictatorial power at the expense of the group's plans for public welfare and reform, the group resigned en bloc in 1937. In 1946, Hadid became Vice-President of the National Democratic Party. The party, essentially the social democratic wing of the Ahali group, championed agrarian reform, workers' rights and state control of Iraq's nascent oil industry.

International voice

While representing Mosul in the Chamber of Deputies, Hadid became a leading member of the Council of the Federation of Iraqi Industries. British influence was still immense in Iraq. During visits to the United Kingdom he supplied the press with calls for genuine parliamentary Iraqi democracy. He also opposed Iraqi participation in the pro-Western defence organisation known as the Baghdad Pact. In 1956, when Britain joined France and Israel in attacking Suez, he spearheaded the Front of National Union through which Iraq's political parties united in demanding "the combating of imperialist encroachments".

Another coup

Following a 1958 coup, Hadid became Minister of Finance in the government formed by the leading rebel, Brigadier Abd al-Karim Qasim[6], who became Prime Minister and Minister of Defence. As Minister of Finance, Hadid used credit loans from the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe to foster industry and pay for ambitious schemes to alleviate the suffering of the Iraqi masses. He served in that capacity until 1960. In 1963, another coup put the Ba'ath Party briefly into power, and Hadid was put on trial, interned and deprived of his assets.[1]

The graves of Mohammed Hadid (left), Zaha Hadid (centre) and Foulath Hadid (right) in Brookwood Cemetery

Later years

After the third coup, he focused on business rather than politics. In 1995, he relocated to London, where he died on August 3, 1999.[1]

gollark: Mentioning ████████ is not to be permitted. In fact, don't even reference other servers, even not by name. In fact, don't even imply or suggest that those might exist.
gollark: It's the 18th anniversary of it, yes.
gollark: No, it's the 9/11 terrorist attack he seems to not want to refer to by name.
gollark: Massively insane overreaction to terrorist attacks has *not only* resulted in significantly curtailed freedoms (border control, interwebbernet monitoring/heightened surveillance generally, airports, etc.) but also sucked horrendous amounts of resources which probably could have been used to help with that.
gollark: Meanwhile there's more than *one death per second* worldwide.

References

  1. "Mohammed Hadid, 92, an Iraqi Who Long Backed Democracy". The New York Times. 6 August 1999.
  2. "Minwathaiq al-hizbal-shuyui, kitabatal al-rafiq Al-Shabibi", Al-Rafiq Al-Shabibi, 1974
  3. Eugene Rogan (12 October 2012). "Foulath Hadid: Writer and expert on Arab affairs". The Independent. Retrieved 22 December 2018.
  4. Deyan Sudjic (1 April 2016). "Dame Zaha Hadid obituary". The Guardian. Guardian Media Group. Retrieved 22 Dfecember 2018. Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  5. Stansfield, Gareth (2007), Iraq: People, History, Politics, Cambridge: Polity, ISBN 978-0-7456-3226-1
  6. Historical Dictionary of Iraq - Beth K. Dougherty
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.