Hikmat Mizban Ibrahim

Hikmat Mizban Ibrahim al-Azzawi (1933 – January 27, 2012)[1] was an Iraqi politician who was a Deputy Prime Minister and twice Minister of Finance under the government of Saddam Hussein.

Hikmat Mizban Ibrahim
Governor of the Central Bank of Iraq
In office
1985–1987
PresidentSaddam Hussein
Preceded byHassan Tawfiq Al-Najafi
Succeeded bySubhi Nadhem Frankool
Minister of Finance
In office
May 1994  April 2003
PresidentSaddam Hussein
Preceded byAhmad Husayn Khudayir as-Samarrai
Deputy Prime Minister
Personal details
Born1933
Died12 January 2012
NationalityIraqi
OccupationEconomist

Azzawi originally trained as an economist. He was arrested in 1960 protesting against the government of Iraqi General Abd al-Karim Qasim.[2] He joined the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party in 1968 and was named undersecretary of state for Commerce. He was fired from all his official designations in 1982 and demised to low administrative job and expelled from the party, until the 1985 when he became Governor of the Central Bank of Iraq,[3] in April, 1987 he was humiliated in a public meeting and severely dismissed due to refusing the transfer a large sum of money at the demand of one of the President's uncles.[2]

President Saddam Hussein forced him back into the position of Minister of Finance in 1995.[4]

In July 1999, he was given the honorary title of Deputy Prime Minister.[2][4] After the United States-led Invasion of Iraq in 2003, he was listed as number 45 (8 of Diamonds) on the Iraqi most-wanted playing cards. He was peacefully detained from his house in Baghdad on April 19, 2003 by Iraqi police and handed over to the US military.[5]

He died, aged 79, in prison due to lack of his heart medications. A government spokesman said his health had been deteriorating because of aging,[1] although another cited cancer as the cause of death.[4]

References

  1. Iraqi former deputy PM dies at age of 79 Archived 2012-01-30 at the Wayback Machine, Al Sumaria, 2 February 2012
  2. Hikmat Mizban Ibrahim Al-Azzawi, Global Security, accessed 2 February 2012
  3. "المحافظين". البنك المركزي.
  4. Finance Minister of Saddam's regime passed away Archived 2014-10-06 at the Wayback Machine, All Iraq News, 27 January 2012
  5. "Saddam's Ex-Finance Minister Taken into Custody in Baghdad". Sofia News Agency (novinite.com). 19 April 2003. Retrieved 2009-01-15.
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