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Topic: Sultan Ali Keshtmand


  
  Sultan Ali Keshtmand Information
Sultan Ali Keshtmand (born 1935) was an Afghan communist politician.
Keshtmand, a Parchami, soon became one of the most important leaders of the Communist regime.
In his speech to the group, Keshtmand said that the government was going to set up several new provinces in the Hazarajat that would be administered by the local inhabitants.
www.bookrags.com /Sultan_Ali_Keshtmand   (643 words)

  
  Sultan Ali Keshtmand at AllExperts
Keshtmand, a Parchami, soon became one of the most important leaders of the Communist regime.
In his speech to the group, Keshtmand said that the government was going to set up several new provinces in the Hazarajat that would be administered by the local inhabitants.
He served as Prime Minister from 1981 to 1988 and 1989 to 1990, and as vice-President from 1990 until 1991, when he was dismissed shortly before the fall of the Communist government.
en.allexperts.com /e/s/su/sultan_ali_keshtmand.htm   (735 words)

  
 Political Role of Hazaras in Afghanistan
Although a limited number of Shiites were admitted to colleges for their further education, after graduation they were not able to secure employment within the state bureaucracy, except a few Hazaras who were hired as professors and staff at the Kabul University.
Waeiz, Qurban Ali Muhaqqiq and Mir Hussain Sadiqi.
Two prominent Hazara senators were Ali Akbar Nargis and Nadir Ali.
boozers.fortunecity.com /jerusalem/47/Political_Role/political_role.html   (6306 words)

  
 Discover the Wisdom of Mankind on Blinkbits.com
Sultan al-Ghazi al-Hasan 'Izz ud-din Sri Kula Ranmiba Danala Kirti Kattiri Buwana Maha Radun (en)
Sultan Al-Haj Muhammed Ghiya'as ud-din Iskandar Sri Kula Sundara Maha Radun (en)
Sultan Azlan Muhibbudin Shah ibni Almarhum Sultan Yusuff Izzudin Shah Ghafarullahu-lahu (en)
www.blinkbits.com /wikifeeds/SU?from=10500   (298 words)

  
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 wikingo.org on List Of State Leaders In 1982
Salim Ben Ali, Prime Minister of the Comoros (1978-1982)
Ali Mroudjae, Prime Minister of the Comoros (1982-1984)
Prime Minister - Sultan Ali Keshtmand, Prime Minister of Afghanistan (1981-1988)
www.wikingo.org /?title=list-of-state-leaders-in-1982   (1560 words)

  
 Guardian | Kabul's loss
Unfortunately, the open-mindedness with which John Major's government gave refuge to Sultan Ali Keshtmand and his wife Karima (who used to run the country's kindergarten programme) is not so evident when it comes to inviting skilled Afghans to go home now that peace is in the air.
The Keshtmands are two among hundreds of thou sands of Afghan men and women who served their country or graduated from medical, teacher training and engineering faculties in the 1980s.
Yet one thousand male and female doctors were graduating annually, equal to the number in the entire 50 years of Zahir Shah and his cousin, Mohammed Daoud, who followed.
www.guardian.co.uk /print/0,,4363168-108920,00.html   (963 words)

  
 Index Ke-Ki
While abroad, Keshtmand, who belongs to the Hazara ethnic group, charged that Afghanistan had been ruled by the Pashtuns and that the minorities had been underrepresented in past Afghan governments.
Although he had the support of the outgoing moderate, Hojatolislam Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, in the May 1997 presidential election, Khatami's principal opponent, Ali Akbar Nateq-Nouri, the speaker of the assembly, had the tacit support of Iran's political and religious leader, Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Khamenei.
This alienated the goodwill of the Europeans whose support was essential for him to fight against the intrigues directed against him and he was dismissed in 1877.
rulers.org /indexk2.html   (19100 words)

  
 The Afghan Civil War
By early 1980, several regional groups, collectively known as mujahideen (from the Persian word meaning "warriors"), had united inside Afghanistan, or across the border in Peshawar, to resist the Soviet invaders and the Soviet-backed Afghan Army.
Friction among the Banner and People's members heightened in 1980 when Karmal removed Assadullah Sarwari, a member of the People's Party, from his position as first deputy prime minister and replaced him with a Banner leader, Sultan Ali Keshtmand.
Banner Party dominance was broadened again in June 1981 when Karmal, retaining his other offices, resigned as prime minister and was succeeded by Keshtmand.
www.geocities.com /hawcaa/acivilwar.htm   (1090 words)

  
 Embassy of Afghanistan, Canbera, Australia
The Ghaznavid Empire flourishes under the leadership of Sultan Mahmood (998-1030), who defeats Abu Nasr Samani in 1001 and launches several successful military expeditions in India.
It is said that some 900 scholars served in the court of Sultan Mahmood, among them al-Biruni, Firdausi, and al-Utbi.
10 June – Sultan Ali Keshtmand becomes the new Prime Minister of the Communist regime.
www.afghanembassy.net /history.php   (9146 words)

  
 RADIO FREE EUROPE/ RADIO LIBERTY
Afghan Interior Minister Ali Ahmad Jalali on 8 April accused General Dostum of misusing the Afghan National Army by mobilizing troops from Jowzjan Province, which he said was against the Afghan Constitution, Radio Free Afghanistan reported.
Afghan Interior Minister Ali Ahmad Jalali on 8 April accused Dostum of misusing the Afghan National Army by mobilizing troops from Jowzjan Province, which he said represents an infringement of the Afghan Constitution (see above).
Dostum called the accusations "inaccurate propaganda [that] cannot have any other aims." Jalali and Defense Minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim are involved in the creation of problems in northern parts of the country, Dostum charged on 8 April, accusing Habibi of having ties to the Taliban and Al-Qaeda.
www.rferl.org /reports/afghan-report/2004/04/15-140404.asp   (3397 words)

  
 Past Forward
No Hazara has ever served as Afghanistan's ruler and none is expected to do so in the future.
Sultan Ali Keshtmand, a Shia Hazara communist, occupied the highest ever position from his community as prime minister in the pro-Moscow PDPA regime that tenuously ruled Afghanistan in the 1980s.
Most Pashtuns and Tajiks would see to it that the Hazaras, who were oppressed by past Afghan monarchs, remain subservient.
www.newsline.com.pk /Newsoct2004/newsbeat4oct.htm   (1983 words)

  
 Jonathan Steele: Kabul's Loss
Unfortunately, the open-mindedness with which John Major's government gave refuge to Sultan Ali Keshtmand and his wife Karima (who used to run the country's kindergarten programme) is not so evident when it comes to inviting skilled Afghans to go home now that peace is in the air.
The Keshtmands are two among hundreds of thousands of Afghan men and women who served their country or graduated from medical, teacher training and engineering faculties in the 1980s.
Yet one thousand male and female doctors were graduating annually, equal to the number in the entire 50 years of Zahir Shah and his cousin, Mohammed Daoud, who followed.
www.counterpunch.org /steele1.html   (1133 words)

  
 Mohammad Hasan Sharq - Afghanan Dot Net
The new parliament that convened on May 30, 1989, 2 weeks after the Geneva accords became effective and the beginning of the Soviet troop withdrawal, consisted of 184 lower house deputies and 115 senators; 62 house and 82 senate seats were left vacant for the resistance "opposition."
As a compromise candidate, Sharq was selected by President Mohammad Najibullah to be the new prime minister, replacing Sultan Ali Keshtmand.
The appointment was intended dramatically to reinforce the point that the PDPA was going to take a back seat.
www.afghanan.net /index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=88&Itemid=69   (603 words)

  
 Den Xiaoping not gains the power timeline - Page 2 - Alternate History Discussion Board
The iranian foreign minister Ali Junesi signs a serie of accords to strengthen the cultural and economic relations between
From june 1995 Mohammad Karim Khalili was replaced by Sultan Ali Keshtmand as foreign minister, Khalili would be now the minister of Infrastructures.
Keshtmand as Khalili is a hazara although while Khalili is a militant of the Hezb-e-Wahdat, Keshtmand is a member of the socialist PDPA (from october 1998 with the new name Hezb-e Demokratik-e Milli, HDM or in english version Democratic Revolutionary Party of Afghanistan DRPA)
www.alternatehistory.com /discussion/showthread.php?p=985738#post985738   (3033 words)

  
 Macedonia Amnesty Appears Ill-defined, Sows Doubts Egypt and Saudi Arabia Under Attack in US Afghans Seek New Leaders ...
Compounding the confusion, the decree does not say whether former NLA commander Ali Ahmeti and 10 aides will be released from a politically charged indictment for 'war crimes' issued by Skopje last summer during the heat of battle
Ambiguous language in the decree hints that any guerrilla possibly involved in five incidents of deadly ambush and abduction, "among others", will face war crimes charges, although the victims were primarily combatants, not civilians.
Compounding the confusion, the decree did not say whether former NLA commander Ali Ahmeti and 10 aides would be released from a politically charged indictment for "war crimes" issued by Skopje last summer during the heat of battle.
www.turkishdailynews.com.tr /archives.php?id=25436   (3827 words)

  
 Jonathan Fox (
It is mostly Hazara and is led by Abdul Karim Khalili and Abdul Ali Mazari.
January 14, 1990: A mujaheddin radio station reports intra-Parcham (a faction of the PDPA) (P) clashes in Kabul between supporters of Najibullah and Sultan Ali Keshtmand, Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Council of Ministers.
March 13, 1995: Hizb-i-Wahdat leader Abdul Ali Mazari dies in a helicopter crash while being held by the Taliban (P).
members.tripod.com /~ismat/civilwar.htm   (18178 words)

  
 LIST OF STATE LEADERS IN 1981 : Encyclopedia Entry
Prime Minister - Salim Ben Ali, Prime Minister of the Comoros (1978-1982)
Sultan Ali Keshtmand, Prime Minister of Afghanistan (1981-1988)
Prime Minister - Mohammad Ali Rajai, Prime Minister of Iran (1981-
bibleocean.com /OmniDefinition/List_of_state_leaders_in_1981   (3000 words)

  
 Countries Ab-Am
1929) 21 Jan 1929 - 23 May 1929 Amanullah Shah (s.a.) (in rebellion, at Kandahar) 28 Jan 1929 - 29 Mar 1929 Sardar Ali Ahmad Khan (b.
Sardar Ali Ahmad Khan (s.a.) (in rebellion, at Kandahar) 1929 - 17 Oct 1929 Mohammad Nadir Khan (b.
1925) 21 Feb 1989 - 8 May 1990 Sultan Ali Keshtmand (2nd time) (s.a.) 8 May 1990 - 15 Apr 1992 Fazal Haq Khaliqyar (b.
www.rulers.org /rula1.html   (4049 words)

  
 khorasan.de
In 1929, Habibullah, Bacha-e Saqaw, issued a decree on the names of the renown Shiites of Kabul such as Mohammed Ali Jauntier Chandawali, Qazi Shuhaab, Khalifa Mohmmed Hussein, Ustad Gholam Hassan, and
They were asked to travel to Dai-Zangi and obtain the support of the Hazara populace in that area.
While abraod, Keshtmand, who belongs to the Hazarah ethnic group, has charged that Afghanistan has been ruled by the Pashtuns and that the minorties have been under-represented in past Afghan governments.
www.khorasan.us /K.htm   (1581 words)

  
 Afghan History
Islamabad in which Daud and Zulfaqar Ali Butto
of the 27th April coup, and also that of Sultan Ali
Keshtmand, key member of political burue and central
www.afghanhero.com /FAQNEW/HISTOR~1.HTM   (4084 words)

  
 Afghanistan
1801 - 1817 Sardar Fath `Ali Khan (b.
28 Jan 1929 - 29 Mar 1929 Sirdar Ali Ahmad Khan (b.
11 Jun 1981 - 26 May 1988 Sultan Ali Keshtmand (1st time) (b.
www.worldstatesmen.org /Afghanistan.htm   (2147 words)

  
 Paradox Interactive Forums - View Single Post - Ministers
Sultan Ali Keshtmand (June 11, 1981 - May 26, 1988)
Mohammad Hassan Sharq (May 26, 1988 - February 21, 1989)
Sultan Ali Keshtmand (February 21, 1989 - May 8, 1990)
www.europa-universalis.com /forum/showpost.php?p=4084625&postcount=7   (305 words)

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