Difference between revisions of "Mithal al-Alusi"

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'''Mithal Al-Alusi''' is a former Iraqi member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, but after he was fired from that post he postures as the founder of the [[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]].
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'''Mithal Al-Alusi''' (b. 1953, Iraq) is a former Iraqi member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, but after he was fired from that post he postures as the founder of the [[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]].
  
 
On 12 June 2008, the Henry Jackson Society announced a talk by al-Alusi at the House of Commons, and provided this profile:
 
On 12 June 2008, the Henry Jackson Society announced a talk by al-Alusi at the House of Commons, and provided this profile:
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*[[Henry Jackson Society]]
 
*[[Henry Jackson Society]]
 
*[[Democracy & Security International Conference]] panelist
 
*[[Democracy & Security International Conference]] panelist
*[[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]] – founder
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*[[Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation]] – founder (and most likely, the only member)
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*[[Fighting for Democracy in the Islamic World]] &ndash; conference participant and featured "dissident"<ref>[http://www.ffdiw.org/dissidents_e.html FFDIW Profile] (Accessed: 13 June 2008)</ref>
  
 
==Contact, References and Resources==
 
==Contact, References and Resources==

Revision as of 09:49, 13 June 2008

Mithal Al-Alusi (b. 1953, Iraq) is a former Iraqi member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives, but after he was fired from that post he postures as the founder of the Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation.

On 12 June 2008, the Henry Jackson Society announced a talk by al-Alusi at the House of Commons, and provided this profile:

Mithal al-Alusi is an elected member of the Iraqi Council of Representatives. He founded the Democratic Party of the Iraqi Nation in 2005 after he was sacked from his ministerial position by his previous party, the Iraqi National Congress, for visiting Israel and daring to express the hope that there might be peace between the countries. He regularly speaks out against extremist parties and sectarianism, and paid the ultimate price for his outspoken stand when his two sons were killed in an assassination attempt aimed at his car. Despite this horrific loss, he has courageously stuck to his convictions and refuses to back down from expressing them. Mr al-Alusi is a Sunni Arab secularist politician and previously served as the General Director of Culture and Media at the Higher National Commission for De-Baathification.[1]

Affiliations

Contact, References and Resources

Contact

Resources

References

  1. Announcement of the talk: "The Future of Iraq", House of Commons, 23 June 2008.
  2. FFDIW Profile (Accessed: 13 June 2008)