Mohammad Hanif Atmar

Mohammad Hanif Atmar
Mohammad Hanif Atmar
Atmar at a 2009 conference in Kabul, Afghanistan
Minister of Interior
In office
October 11, 2008 – June 06, 2010
President Hamid Karzai
Preceded by Ahmad Moqbel Zarar
Succeeded by Bismillah Khan Mohammadi
Minister of Education
In office
May 2, 2006[1] – October 2008
President Hamid Karzai
Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development
Incumbent
Assumed office
early 2002[1]
Personal details
Born 1968
Nationality Afghan

Mohammad Hanif Atmar (محمد حنیف اتمر; born 1968)[2] was the Interior Minister of Afghanistan.[3] He was removed from MOI by Hamid Karzai in the wake of attacks on the June 2010 Afghan Peace Jirga.[4][5] Before that he worked with several international humanitarian organizations and served as Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development and Minister of Education.

Contents

Early life

Atmar was born in 1968 as son of Mohammad Asef Atmar in Laghman Province of Afghanistan.[2] He is an ethnic Pashtun.[3] As a young adult, he worked for the KHAD, an Afghan security and intelligence agency with strong ties to the Soviet KGB,[6] including with a special-operations unit.[3] During the Soviet-Afghan War he fought against the Afghan mujahideen, and lost a leg defending Jalalabad in 1988.[3] Atmar left for the United Kingdom after the fall of Kabul.[3]

Studies and humanitarian work

In the UK he earned two degrees at the University of York: a diploma in Information Technology and Computers, and an M.A. in Public Policy, International Relations and Post-war Reconstruction studies, which he studied for from 1996 to 1997.[1] He speaks fluent Pashto, Dari, English, and Urdu.[2] In 1992 Atmar began advising on Afghanistan and Pakistan for humanitarian agencies, which he would continue for two years.[1] Following that he went to the Norwegian Afghanistan Committee, where he served as Program Manager for six years until 2000.[1] That same year he was hired as the Deputy Director General of the International Rescue Committee for Afghanistan,[1] but after the September 11th attacks, the 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, and the Bonn Agreement creating an Afghan Transitional Authority under Hamid Karzai, Atmar left to join the new government.

Political career

Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development

In 2002, Atmar was invited to join the Transitional Government as the Minister of Rural Rehabilitation & Development and was confirmed with the same portfolio in the cabinet of the newly elected President Karzai in December 2004. As one of the youngest members of cabinet and a technocrat, he directed his energies into transforming a dysfunctional and non-descript ministry into one of national significance that reached into every province of the country, overseeing an annual budget of nearly 500 million dollars at the end of his four year tenure.

Minister of Education

In May 2006, Atmar was sworn in as the Minister of Education after being approved by an overwhelming majority of the National Assembly. As one of the very few who has served in successive cabinets under President Karzai, he went equipped with valuable institutional experience and memory to take on challenge of making available one of the most basic rights denied to a generation of Afghans - education.

As a member of the Presidential Oversight Committee, Atmar provides valuable advice and input into the development of the Afghanistan National Development Strategy and the represents government on the Joint Monitoring and Coordination Board that tracks the implementation of the Afghanistan Compact.

Works

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Minister of Education Makes First Trip to the U.S. for Global Literacy Conference". USAID. 2006-09-18. http://afghanistan.usaid.gov/en/Article.106.aspx. Retrieved 2009-03-23. 
  2. ^ a b c "Ministers of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan: Mohammad Hanif Atmar". Embasy of Afghanistan, Washington, DC. http://www.embassyofafghanistan.org/atmar.html. Retrieved 2009-03-23. 
  3. ^ a b c d e Burns, John F. (2008-10-11). "Afghan President, Pressured, Reshuffles Cabinet". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/12/world/asia/12afghan.html. Retrieved 2009-03-23. 
  4. ^ "Afghan officials resign over attack". 06 Jun 2010. http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia/2010/06/201066131227815482.html. Retrieved 2011-07-21. 
  5. ^ "Afghan interior, intel chiefs replaced over attack"
  6. ^ Andrew, Christopher M.; Mitrokhin, Vasili (2005). The World Was Going Our War: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World. Basic Books. p. 408. ISBN 9780465003112. 

External links

Preceded by
Zarar Ahmad Moqbel
Afghan Interior Minister
October 11, 2008 - June 06, 2010
Succeeded by
Bismillah Khan Mohammadi

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