Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Al-Zoubi, El-Zoubi, Zoubi, or Al-Zubi, (Arabic: الزعبي) is a prominent Levantine family [1] [2] whose members can be found throughout the Arab world, but are most concentrated in Northern Jordan and Southern Syria.
2000–2003: Rostom Al-Zoubi [citation needed] 2004–2011: Imad Moustapha [citation needed] 2012–2014: Zuheir Jabbour (Chargé d'affaires) [citation needed] 18 March 2014–present: Diplomatic relations ended due to the Syrian civil war. [5] [7]
Ahmed Zoubi, Libyan volleyball player; Assad al Zubi (born 1956), Free Syrian Army general; Ghaleb Zu'bi (born 1943), Jordanian lawyer and politician; Mahmoud Al-Zoubi (1935–2000), Syrian politician; Musa Al-Zubi (born 1993), Jordanian professional footballer; Omran al-Zoubi (1959–2018), Syrian politician and government minister
Al-Zoubi's assets were frozen by the Syrian government. [6] Al-Zoubi and several senior ministers were officially accused of receiving illegal commissions of the order of US$124 million in relation to the purchase of six Airbus 320-200 passenger jets for Syrian Arab Airlines in 1996. The indictment alleged that the normal cost of the planes was ...
The Syrian Free Army (SFA) (Arabic: جيش سوريا الحرة), previously known as the Revolutionary Commando Army (RCA) (Arabic: جيش مغاوير الثورة), [23] and the New Syrian Army (NSA) (Arabic: جيش سوريا الجديد), is a United States Army-trained Syrian opposition faction which controls territory near Syria's border with Iraq and Jordan and north into part of the ...
A loving father of two, a former college football player, and a student from the University of Alabama were among the 14 people killed when a rented pickup truck plowed into a crowd celebrating ...
The Southern Front is an alliance of over 50 rebel groups, ranging from secularist to moderately religious. [11] Bashar al-Zoubi, head of the Yarmouk Army, said to the BBC in 2014 that the groups or factions of the Southern Front are militarily coordinated by a moving command center with a unified leadership but with no overall commander and no centralised command—which is contradictory.
Family members and friends have begun identifying the 14 people who died in the truck-ramming attack early Wednesday morning on Bourbon Street in New Orleans. The suspect, Shamsud-Din Jabbar, was ...