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The President of the National Council of Human Rights, Mohamed Fayiq, cried in sorrow, one of the founders of the human rights movement in Iraq and the Arab nation, Adib Al-Jader , who died yesterday in Geneva, Switzerland.
Fayek confirmed that with the departure of the deceased, the Arab homeland had lost one of the human rights and human rights, which had greatly contributed to the service of the Iraq, Arabism, Humanity and Human Rights for six decades, on different professional and political sites.
Adib Al-Jader was born in Mosul in 1927. After graduate studies in Istanbul and the United States, he worked in the oil sector as a director and then as president of the National Oil Company. In 1961, he was elected Iraqi engineer,.
A member of the joint presidency of Iraq and Egypt, he became Minister of Industry (1964-1965), then Minister of the Economy in 1967. He was arrested after the Events of July 17, 1968. After his release, he left Iraq and worked as a consultant to the United Nations. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Center for Studies on Arab Unity and President of the Arab Organization for Human Rights, which he co-founded in 1983 in Limassol (Cyprus).
via via Egypt News
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