Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ibrahim al-Abdallah ran for parliament in the 1960 election as an independent candidate in the Marjeyoun-Hasbaya constituency, securing a seat. [1] [2] Ibrahim al-Abdallah ran for parliament again in the 1968 election in Marjeyoun-Hasbaya constituency. He was the running mate of As'ad al-As'ad. He obtained 5,593 votes, not enough to regain his ...
Abdallah Al Amin; Former Minster of Labour, Member of Parliament, and Leader of the Lebanese Ba'ath Party. Abdallah Mohamad Al Amin (Arabic: عبدالله محمّد الأمين; born October 30 1947) is an author and a Lebanese politician who served as Minister of Labor, [1] Member of the Parliament of Lebanon, and former leader of the Lebanese Arab Ba'ath Socialist party.
Abdallah is a Maronite Christian. [1] [4] [5] He was born in 1951, in the predominantly Maronite town of Al Qoubaiyat in northern Lebanon. [6] [7] He worked as a secondary school teacher [2] and was also a member of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party (SSNP). [1] [7] He was wounded in 1978 during Israel's invasion of Lebanon. [2]
The former head of the Lebanese Armed Revolutionary Brigade (LARB), Georges Ibrahim Abdallah was sentenced to life in 1987 for his role in the 1982 murders in Paris of U.S. military attache ...
Abdallah was killed Friday evening near the village of Alma al-Shaab in south Lebanon when an Israeli shell landed on a gathering of international journalists covering exchange of fire along the ...
Reuters video journalist Abdallah was killed while working with other journalists near the village of Alma al-Shaab, close to the Israeli border, where the Israeli military and Lebanese militia ...
Abdallah El-Yafi was born in Beirut, Ottoman Lebanon on 7 September 1901 into a Sunni Muslim family to parents Aref El-Yafi and Jamila Ostwani, a Damascene.. Raised with two brothers, he first attended Sheikh Abbas School, a Muslim elementary school, then "Pères Jésuites" (Jesuit Fathers), a Roman Catholic school, and went on to earn his French Baccalaureate Degree.
Unrelated to Syrian or Palestinian Al-Assads, El-Assaad dynasty that ruled most of South Lebanon for three centuries and whose lineage defended fellow denizens of history's [5] Jabal Amel (Mount Amel) principality – today southern Lebanon – for 36 generations, Balqa in Jordan, Nablus in Palestine, and Homs in Syria governed by Ottoman rule ...