Hussein Ali Duale
Hussein Ali Duale | |
---|---|
12th Minister of Finance of Somaliland | |
In office 28 August 2003 – 27 July 2010 | |
President | Dahir Riyale Kahin |
Preceded by | Hussein Farah Dodi |
Succeeded by | Mohamed Hashi Elmi |
Hussein Ali Duale (Template:Lang-so), commonly known as Awil (Somali: Cawil), is a Somali diplomat and politician who served as the Finance Minister of Somaliland,[1] and former ambassador of the Somali Democratic Republic to Kenya and Uganda. Duale was appointed as presidential advisor on Foreign Affairs and International Recognition to Somaliland former President, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud.
Biography
Hussein Ali Duale was born in Hargeisa and went to school in Aden. He received his training as a military cadet in the United Kingdom and returned as a commissioned officer in time for Somaliland's independence in 1960.
In 1961 along with several British trained officers, Duale took part in an aborted coup in northern Somalia (now Somaliland) to restore its sovereignty, as the result of the unbalanced union with Italian Somaliland in 1960.[2] The coup was put down by soldiers loyal to the Somali Republic and after a lengthy trail, all the officers were acquitted of treason charges and subsequently retired from active service.
However, in 1964, in the first Somalia/Ethiopia war, Duale was returned to active service and saw action in the southern sector of that particular military engagement. After the brief "war", he entered the diplomatic service and held several positions at various Somali Republic embassies.
In 1973, Duale was appointed to head the defunct Somali Democratic Republic's embassy in Kampala. This was the height of Idi Amin's reign in Uganda.
In 1977 Duale was recalled from his post in Kenya to take part in the Somali/Ethiopian war. Ambassador Awil who had opposed the war, defected to Kenya, but later returned to Somaliland in the 1990s.
He published his memoirs in 2005. On September 2nd 2016, Duale launched his third book "Raad Raac Taariikh Soomaaliyeed" in Hargeisa, Somaliland.
References
- ^ "Somaliland Minister of Finance questioned by Parliament". The Somaliland Globe. 24 March 2009. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 25 October 2010.
- ^ Hansen & Bradbury (2007), p. 474.
Works cited
- Hansen, Stig Jarle; Bradbury, Mark (2007). "Somaliland: A New Democracy in the Horn of Africa?". Review of African Political Economy (113). Routledge: 461–476. doi:10.1080/03056240701672585.
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External links
- Somaliland: Stability amid economic woe BBC News 22 March 2005, Retrieved 25 October 2010
- [1] YouTube 3 September 2016, Retrieved 6 September 2016