Sadiq Abdulkarim Abdulrahman

Sadiq Abdulkarim Abdulrahman is a Libyan physician and politician who served as first deputy prime minister between 14 November 2012 and 29 August 2014.

Sadiq Abdulkarim Abdulrahman
First Deputy Prime Minister of Libya
In office
14 November 2012  29 August 2014
PresidentMohammed Magariaf
Juma Ahmad Atigha (Acting)
Nouri Abusahmain
Prime MinisterAli Zidan
Abdullah al-Thani
Preceded byHimself
Personal details
Born1966 (age 5354)
NationalityLibyan

Early life and education

Abdulrahman was born around 1966.[1] He received a bachelor's degree in general surgery in 1993.[1] Then he obtained a master's degree in medicine in 2001 and a PhD again in medicine in 2005.[1]

Career

Abdulrahman worked as a physician in public hospitals and private clinics. Then he served as a deputy prime minister in the transitional government of Libya.[1][2] He was appointed first deputy prime minister on 14 November 2012 to the cabinet headed by Ali Zidan.[3] Abdulrahman also held the portfolio of acting interior minister temporarily.[4][5] On 29 January 2014 he escaped an assassination attempt unhurt in Tripoli.[4]

Abdulrahman's term as deputy prime minister ended on 29 August 2014.[6]

gollark: I doubt that would work for training very well.
gollark: Yes. It seemed easiest.
gollark: The 350M one doesn't seem to exist and I can't really work with anything bigger.
gollark: This is annoying, apparently 6GB of VRAM isn't enough to finetune the 125M GPT-Neo even with a batch size of 1. I might just use Colab.
gollark: Geese are fearsome beings.

References

  1. "Curriculum Vitae of Ali Zeidan's government ministers". Libya Herald. 3 November 2012. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  2. Whitaker's Shorts 2015: International. Bloomsbury Publishing. 20 November 2014. p. 678. ISBN 978-1-4729-1484-2. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  3. "Events in November 2012". Rulers. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  4. "Deputy Prime Minister escapes assassination attempt". Opemam. 29 January 2014. Retrieved 19 March 2015.
  5. George Grant (26 November 2012). "Government now says deputy ministers to stay in place until replacements appointed". Libya Herald. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  6. "Libya government resigns to allow new cabinet". Al Jazeera English. 29 August 2014. Retrieved 28 August 2014.
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