Zabihullah Mojaddidy

Dr. Zabihullah Mojaddidy is an Afghan politician. He served as the Governor of Kabul Province between July 2009 and until resigning in March 2011.[1][2] His resignation was due to a lack of support from development ministries and the Presidential Palace in regard to his ideas for the reconstruction of Kabul City. Prior to becoming governor, he served as the Deputy Minister of Higher Education.

Dr. Zabihullah Mojaddidy
Dr. Mojaddidy giving a speech in 2010
Governor of Kabul Province
In office
July 2009  March 2011
Preceded byDin Mohammad
Succeeded byAhmadullah Alizai
Personal details
Born1946 (age 7374)
Kabul, Afghanistan
ProfessionPolitician

Background

Mojaddidi was born in Kabul, Afghanistan, in an influential Afghan family. His father is Professor Sibghatullah Mojaddedi, the President of Afghanistan in 1992 and an elder in the politics of Afghanistan.

Zabihullah Mojaddidi served in the Mujahideen forces during the Soviet–Afghan War. He took part in international conferences, and functioning as Secretary General of Afghan National Liberation Front – a former major moderate Afghan resistance party and now a popular registered political party in the country. Dr. Mojaddidy's experience includes 8 years of volunteer work for Afghan refugees; 10 years of engineering practice in the United States in Quality Control, Project Management, Land Development and design of building, drainage and roadway structures, 12 years as university professor outside Afghanistan, one year as Deputy Minister of Higher Education and governor of Kabul Province since July 2009. He has published technical papers on nonlinear mechanics and has presented papers on the subject at the Canadian Congress of Applied Mechanics. His research on nonlinear vibrations is included in reputed textbooks on the subject.

Education

  • B.S. in Civil Engineering/Structures; 1971 – University of Hawaii, United States
  • M.S. in Civil Engineering/Structures; 1973 – Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, United States
  • PhD in Engineering Science & Mechanics; 1977 – Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University, United States

Political work

  • Secretary General; Afghan National Liberation Front
    • 1985 to 1996
    • 2004 to present time
  • Vice Premier; First Afghan Interim Government in exile, Pakistan – 1986
Dr. Mojaddidy soon withdrew from this government on the basis that it did not have a mandate from representatives of the Afghan people. His withdrawal caused the failure of this government and paved the way for the formation of the AIG, the Islamic Interim Government, elected by a 420-member council of Afghan freedom fighters and others opposed to the Soviet-backed regime in Kabul.
  • Deputy Minister of Higher Education & Vocational Training; Islamic State of Afghanistan, Afghanistan – 1992
While at the same time running the office of the minister who refused to take over his post, Dr. Mojaddidy resigned his post after hopelessly trying to rehabilitate the ministry at the face of the ensuing civil war that started with Prof. Rabbani's government.
  • Member by Proxy; Supreme Leadership Council; Islamic State of Afghanistan, Afghanistan – 1992–1993
  • Member of Staff of Afghan Resistance Leadership Delegations;
    • Islamic Conference, Islamabad -1978
    • Islamic Conference, Kuwait – 1984
  • Member of Delegation of Afghan Resistance Leaders;
    • Guests to the European Parliament, Strasburg, France – 1980.
    • United Nations 40th Anniversary, New York City, USA – 1985

Professional affiliations

  • Founding Member, Member of Board of Directors and President (2007–2009); Society of Afghan Architects & Engineers (SAAE); Afghanistan
  • Founding Member; Structural Engineering Institute (SEI); USA
  • Member; American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE); USA
  • Member; Society of Afghan Engineers (SAE); USA[3]
  • Member; International Who-is-Who of Professionals, 1997

Professional work experience

  • Professor in Civil Engineering; King Faisal University; Saudi Arabia, (1977–1987)
  • Volunteer Work with the Afghan Resistance Against Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan; Peshawar, Pakistan, (1987–1992)
  • Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Vocational Training; Islamic State of Afghanistan, (1992–1993)
  • Professor in Civil Engineering; Ahmadshah Abdali University for Afghan Refugees, Peshawar, Pakistan, (1994–1995)
  • Senior Structural Engineer; Civil Services, Inc. (Engineering Design Consultants), Jacksonville, Florida, USA, (1996–2001)
  • Project Manager – Specialist III; Department of Building & Development, Loudoun County Government, Virginia, USA, (2001–2004)
  • Director of Design, QC/QA and Capacity Building Divisions; Technologists, Inc., Kabul, Afghanistan, (2004–2009)

Publications

  • "Nonlinear Analysis of the Aperiodic Responses of Beams", Proceedings of the Sixth Canadian Congress of Applied Mechanics, 1977. Co-authors: D.T. Mook, A.H. Nayfeh.
  • "Nonlinear Detuning of Resonant Structural Vibrations", Proceedings of the Seventh Canadian Congress of Applied Mechanics, 1979. Co-authors: D.T. Mook, A.H. Nayfeh.
  • "Model Couplings in the Aperiodic Responses of Beams", Submitted to the Eighth Canadian Congress of Applied Mechanics, 1981.
  • Partial results of research on Nonlinear Vibrations included in the authoritative book on the subject titled "Nonlinear Oscillations" by A.H. Nayfeh and D.T. Mook, Wiley Interscience, N.Y., 1979.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/Frv3xkB9
gollark: You might need to explicitly spe¢ify screen size somehow?
gollark: People *can* vanish, like Yemmel.
gollark: Apparently it was exploited, and so now the enchanted book market has been totally wrecked.
gollark: Unfortunately they're kind of "lost technology" now.

References

  1. "Etisalat Afghanistan Domestic Cricket Tournament kicks off in Kabul". The Cricket Post. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  2. "Relief provided to Kabul Shopkeepers". U.S. Embassy in Kabul. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  3. "International Planning Conference for the Empowerment of Afghan Professionals(2000)Program Notes". SAE. Archived from the original on 1 January 2006. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
Preceded by
Din Mohammad
Governor of Kabul Province, Afghanistan
July 2009March 2011
Succeeded by
Ahmadullah Alizai
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.