fbpx
Wikipedia

Haneef Atmar

Mohammad Haneef Atmar (Pashto: محمد حنیف اتمر; born 10 September 1968)[4] is a Afghan politician and former KhAD agent.[5] He served as the Minister of interior until he was removed from the Ministry by Hamid Karzai in the wake of attacks on the June 2010 Afghan Peace Jirga.[6][7] Before that he worked with several international humanitarian organisations and served as Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development and Minister of Education. In 2011, he was part of the Right and Justice party. During his time in office, he has visited several countries to get funding to stabilise Afghanistan.

Mohammad Haneef Atmar
محمد حنیف اتمر
Atmar in meeting with Ali Shamkhani in Tehran, August 2016
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
4 April 2020 – 15 August 2021
Acting: 4 April 2020 – 4 February 2021
PresidentAshraf Ghani
Preceded byMohammad Haroon Chakhansuri (acting)[1][2]
Succeeded byAmir Khan Muttaqi (acting)
National Security Adviser of Afghanistan
In office
1 November 2014 – 25 August 2018
PresidentAshraf Ghani
Preceded byShaida Mohammad Abdali
Succeeded byHamdullah Mohib
Minister of Interior
In office
11 October 2008 – 6 June 2010
PresidentHamid Karzai
Preceded byAhmad Moqbel Zarar
Succeeded byBismillah Khan Mohammadi
Minister of Education
In office
2 May 2006[3] – 1 October 2008
PresidentHamid Karzai
Preceded byNoor Mohammad Qarqin
Succeeded byGhulam Farooq Wardak
Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development
In office
2002[3]–2008
Succeeded byMohammad Ehsan Zia
Personal details
Born (1968-09-10) 10 September 1968 (age 55)
Laghman, Afghanistan
Political partyPDPA (until 1992)
Truth and Justice (since 2011)
Military service
Allegiance Afghanistan
Branch/serviceKhAD
Battles/warsSoviet-Afghan War
Afghan Civil War (1989-1992)
War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)

Atmar served as the National Security Advisor to Ashraf Ghani from 2014 to 2018, when he resigned due to disagreement with Ghani on certain issues. In late 2018, Atmar announced his candidacy for the April 2019 presidential elections, indicating he firmly believes a peace deal with the Taliban is possible.[8] He later withdrew his candidature. On 4 April 2020, he was appointed as the acting foreign minister,[9] and approved on a permanent basis by the Wolesi Jirga on 21 November 2020.[10] He was sworn in on 4 February 2021.[11] He fled to Turkey after the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in August 2021.[12]

Early life edit

Atmar was born in 1968 as son of Mohammad Asef Atmar in Laghman Province of Afghanistan to a aristocratic Pashtun Family.[4][5][13] As a young adult, he was part of a KHAD special operations-unit [5] (KhAD was the Afghan security and intelligence agency with strong ties to the Soviet KGB),[14] During the Soviet–Afghan War he fought against Mujahids, and lost a leg defending Jalalabad in 1988.[5] Atmar left for the United Kingdom after the fall of Kabul.[5]

Studies and humanitarian work edit

In the UK he earned two degrees at the University of York: a diploma in Information Technology and Computers, and an M.A. in Public Policy, International Relations and Post-war Reconstruction studies, which he studied for from 1996 to 1997.[3] He speaks fluent Pashto, Dari, English, Urdu, and Hindi.[4] In 1992 Atmar began advising on Afghanistan and Pakistan for humanitarian agencies, which he would continue for two years.[3] Following that he went to the Norwegian Church Aid, where he served as Program Manager for six years until 2001.[3] That same year he was hired as the Deputy Director General of the International Rescue Committee for Afghanistan,[3] but after the September 11th attacks, the 2001 U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, and the Bonn Agreement creating an Afghan Transitional Authority under Hamid Karzai, Atmar left to join the new government.

Political career edit

Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development edit

 
Mohammad Hanif Atmar, arrives at the graduation of Afghan National Police Academy cadets

In 2002, Atmar was invited to join the Transitional Government as the Minister of Rural Rehabilitation & Development and was confirmed with the same portfolio in the cabinet of the newly elected President Hamid Karzai in December 2004. As one of the youngest members of cabinet and a technocrat, he directed his energies into transforming a dysfunctional and non-descript ministry into one of national significance that reached into every province of the country, overseeing an annual budget of nearly 500 million dollars at the end of his four-year tenure.

Ercan Murat, Country Director for UNDP in Afghanistan described Atmar in 2004 as a human development champion.[15] As head of a ministry that was considered a key consumer of international funds, his task entailed providing food security for the rural population, safe drinking water, alternatives for the drug-economy and building the necessary infrastructure for the economy in rural areas to develop.[16]

Minister of Education edit

In May 2006, Atmar was sworn in as the Minister of Education after being approved by an overwhelming majority of the National Assembly.

 
Atmar with Afghan well-known poet, author-writer and Director of the ECAR Massoud Nawabi at the Education Ministry of Afghanistan in Kabul

He was a member of the Presidential Oversight Committee.

Minister of Interior edit

 
Atmar with U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and U.S. Navy admiral Michael Mullen at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.

In October 2008, Atmar was sworn in as the Minister of Interior after being approved by a majority of the National Assembly.[17]

Later career edit

When the Truth and Justice party was founded in 2011, he became a member of the party.

Minister of Foreign Affairs edit

Atmar was appointed as the acting minister of foreign affairs by President Ashraf Ghani on 4 April 2020. Ghani also nominated him as minister on permanent basis, pending approval by the National Assembly.[9] His nomination was approved by 197 of the 246 lawmakers present in the Wolesi Jirga on 21 November, with 24 opposing, nine votes being blank and 16 being invalid.[10] He was sworn in on 4 February 2021.[11]

Collapse of the Afghan government edit

The 2021 Taliban offensive culminated in the fall of Kabul to the Taliban. Atmar was evacuated from Afghanistan on 16 August 2021 to Turkey, alongside Turkish citizens and other Afghan officials by the Turkish government.[12]

Because no foreign government accorded diplomatic recognition to the Taliban, diplomats appointed by the previous government continued to operate most of Afghanistan's 65 embassies abroad, which rejected Taliban demands to allow them to take control of Afghan foreign policy.[18][19] In exile, Atmar continued to identify himself as Afghan foreign minister.[19][20] The United Nations removed his name from its list of foreign ministers on 15 February 2022.[21]

Works edit

  • Development of Non-Governmental Organisations in Developing Countries
  • From rhetoric to reality: The role of aid in local peacebuilding in Afghanistan. York: University of York. 1998. (with Arne Strand and Sultan Barakat)
  • Humanitarian Aid, War and Peace in Afghanistan: What to Learn?
  • Politics and Humanitarian Aid in Afghanistan and its Aftermath for the People of Afghanistan
  • Afghanistan or a Stray War in Afghanistan.
  • The Challenge of Winning the Peace, chapter written together with Jonathan Goodhand. published in: Searching for Peace in Central and South Asia, 2002

References edit

  1. ^ "Haneef Atmar Appointed as Acting Foreign Minister". TOLOnews. 4 April 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Chakhansuri Officially Takes Charge as Acting FM". TOLOnews. 23 January 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f . USAID. 18 September 2006. Archived from the original on 27 May 2010. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  4. ^ a b c . Embassy of Afghanistan, Washington, DC. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e Burns, John F. (11 October 2008). "Afghan President, Pressured, Reshuffles Cabinet". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  6. ^ "Afghan officials resign over attack". 6 June 2010. Retrieved 21 July 2011.
  7. ^ "Afghan interior, intel chiefs replaced over attack"[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ "Afghanistan's Most Powerful Person Announces Bid for April Presidential Elections". The Diplomat. 28 November 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
  9. ^ a b "Haneef Atmar appointed acting Foreign Minister of Afghanistan". uniindia.com. 4 April 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  10. ^ a b "House of Representatives Gives Ten Ministerial Nominees Vote of Confidence". 8am.af. 21 November 2020. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  11. ^ a b . Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Press release). 5 February 2021. Archived from the original on 5 February 2021. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  12. ^ a b Atilla, Toygun (5 February 2021). "Turkey helps senior Afghan officials leave country". Hürriyet Daily News. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  13. ^ "Database". www.afghan-bios.info. Retrieved 23 July 2023.
  14. ^ Andrew, Christopher M.; Mitrokhin, Vasili (2005). The World Was Going Our War: The KGB and the Battle for the Third World. Basic Books. p. 408. ISBN 978-0-465-00311-2.
  15. ^ Murat, Ercan. "NAtional human Development Report 2004" (PDF). UNDP. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  16. ^ "Interview with rural development minister". IRIN. 4 July 2005. Retrieved 29 April 2017.
  17. ^ . Embassy of Afghanistan. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009. Retrieved 23 December 2011.
  18. ^ Margherita Stancati, Taliban Intensify Efforts to Take Control of Afghanistan's Overseas Embassies, Wall Street Journal (18 January 2022).
  19. ^ a b Jack Detsch & Robbie Gramer, Afghanistan's Diplomats Refuse to Represent a Terrorist Group, Foreign Policy (7 January 2022).
  20. ^ Dispute Over Afghanistan's Seat at UN Continue, TOLOnews (8 February 2022).
  21. ^ Taieb, Rajab (22 February 2022). "Ghani Removed From UN Heads of State List". TOLOnews. Retrieved 13 June 2022.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Afghan Interior Minister
11 October 2008 – 6 June 2010
Succeeded by

haneef, atmar, mohammad, pashto, محمد, حنیف, اتمر, born, september, 1968, afghan, politician, former, khad, agent, served, minister, interior, until, removed, from, ministry, hamid, karzai, wake, attacks, june, 2010, afghan, peace, jirga, before, that, worked,. Mohammad Haneef Atmar Pashto محمد حنیف اتمر born 10 September 1968 4 is a Afghan politician and former KhAD agent 5 He served as the Minister of interior until he was removed from the Ministry by Hamid Karzai in the wake of attacks on the June 2010 Afghan Peace Jirga 6 7 Before that he worked with several international humanitarian organisations and served as Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development and Minister of Education In 2011 he was part of the Right and Justice party During his time in office he has visited several countries to get funding to stabilise Afghanistan Mohammad Haneef Atmarمحمد حنیف اتمرAtmar in meeting with Ali Shamkhani in Tehran August 2016Minister of Foreign AffairsIn office 4 April 2020 15 August 2021Acting 4 April 2020 4 February 2021PresidentAshraf GhaniPreceded byMohammad Haroon Chakhansuri acting 1 2 Succeeded byAmir Khan Muttaqi acting National Security Adviser of AfghanistanIn office 1 November 2014 25 August 2018PresidentAshraf GhaniPreceded byShaida Mohammad AbdaliSucceeded byHamdullah MohibMinister of InteriorIn office 11 October 2008 6 June 2010PresidentHamid KarzaiPreceded byAhmad Moqbel ZararSucceeded byBismillah Khan MohammadiMinister of EducationIn office 2 May 2006 3 1 October 2008PresidentHamid KarzaiPreceded byNoor Mohammad QarqinSucceeded byGhulam Farooq WardakMinister of Rural Rehabilitation and DevelopmentIn office 2002 3 2008Succeeded byMohammad Ehsan ZiaPersonal detailsBorn 1968 09 10 10 September 1968 age 55 Laghman AfghanistanPolitical partyPDPA until 1992 Truth and Justice since 2011 Military serviceAllegianceAfghanistanBranch serviceKhADBattles warsSoviet Afghan WarAfghan Civil War 1989 1992 War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Atmar served as the National Security Advisor to Ashraf Ghani from 2014 to 2018 when he resigned due to disagreement with Ghani on certain issues In late 2018 Atmar announced his candidacy for the April 2019 presidential elections indicating he firmly believes a peace deal with the Taliban is possible 8 He later withdrew his candidature On 4 April 2020 he was appointed as the acting foreign minister 9 and approved on a permanent basis by the Wolesi Jirga on 21 November 2020 10 He was sworn in on 4 February 2021 11 He fled to Turkey after the fall of Kabul to the Taliban in August 2021 12 Contents 1 Early life 2 Studies and humanitarian work 3 Political career 3 1 Minister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development 3 2 Minister of Education 3 3 Minister of Interior 3 4 Later career 3 5 Minister of Foreign Affairs 3 5 1 Collapse of the Afghan government 4 Works 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editAtmar was born in 1968 as son of Mohammad Asef Atmar in Laghman Province of Afghanistan to a aristocratic Pashtun Family 4 5 13 As a young adult he was part of a KHAD special operations unit 5 KhAD was the Afghan security and intelligence agency with strong ties to the Soviet KGB 14 During the Soviet Afghan War he fought against Mujahids and lost a leg defending Jalalabad in 1988 5 Atmar left for the United Kingdom after the fall of Kabul 5 Studies and humanitarian work editIn the UK he earned two degrees at the University of York a diploma in Information Technology and Computers and an M A in Public Policy International Relations and Post war Reconstruction studies which he studied for from 1996 to 1997 3 He speaks fluent Pashto Dari English Urdu and Hindi 4 In 1992 Atmar began advising on Afghanistan and Pakistan for humanitarian agencies which he would continue for two years 3 Following that he went to the Norwegian Church Aid where he served as Program Manager for six years until 2001 3 That same year he was hired as the Deputy Director General of the International Rescue Committee for Afghanistan 3 but after the September 11th attacks the 2001 U S invasion of Afghanistan and the Bonn Agreement creating an Afghan Transitional Authority under Hamid Karzai Atmar left to join the new government Political career editMinister of Rural Rehabilitation and Development edit nbsp Mohammad Hanif Atmar arrives at the graduation of Afghan National Police Academy cadetsIn 2002 Atmar was invited to join the Transitional Government as the Minister of Rural Rehabilitation amp Development and was confirmed with the same portfolio in the cabinet of the newly elected President Hamid Karzai in December 2004 As one of the youngest members of cabinet and a technocrat he directed his energies into transforming a dysfunctional and non descript ministry into one of national significance that reached into every province of the country overseeing an annual budget of nearly 500 million dollars at the end of his four year tenure Ercan Murat Country Director for UNDP in Afghanistan described Atmar in 2004 as a human development champion 15 As head of a ministry that was considered a key consumer of international funds his task entailed providing food security for the rural population safe drinking water alternatives for the drug economy and building the necessary infrastructure for the economy in rural areas to develop 16 Minister of Education edit In May 2006 Atmar was sworn in as the Minister of Education after being approved by an overwhelming majority of the National Assembly nbsp Atmar with Afghan well known poet author writer and Director of the ECAR Massoud Nawabi at the Education Ministry of Afghanistan in KabulHe was a member of the Presidential Oversight Committee Minister of Interior edit nbsp Atmar with U S Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and U S Navy admiral Michael Mullen at the Pentagon in Washington D C In October 2008 Atmar was sworn in as the Minister of Interior after being approved by a majority of the National Assembly 17 Later career edit When the Truth and Justice party was founded in 2011 he became a member of the party Minister of Foreign Affairs edit Atmar was appointed as the acting minister of foreign affairs by President Ashraf Ghani on 4 April 2020 Ghani also nominated him as minister on permanent basis pending approval by the National Assembly 9 His nomination was approved by 197 of the 246 lawmakers present in the Wolesi Jirga on 21 November with 24 opposing nine votes being blank and 16 being invalid 10 He was sworn in on 4 February 2021 11 Collapse of the Afghan government edit The 2021 Taliban offensive culminated in the fall of Kabul to the Taliban Atmar was evacuated from Afghanistan on 16 August 2021 to Turkey alongside Turkish citizens and other Afghan officials by the Turkish government 12 Because no foreign government accorded diplomatic recognition to the Taliban diplomats appointed by the previous government continued to operate most of Afghanistan s 65 embassies abroad which rejected Taliban demands to allow them to take control of Afghan foreign policy 18 19 In exile Atmar continued to identify himself as Afghan foreign minister 19 20 The United Nations removed his name from its list of foreign ministers on 15 February 2022 21 Works editDevelopment of Non Governmental Organisations in Developing Countries From rhetoric to reality The role of aid in local peacebuilding in Afghanistan York University of York 1998 with Arne Strand and Sultan Barakat Humanitarian Aid War and Peace in Afghanistan What to Learn Politics and Humanitarian Aid in Afghanistan and its Aftermath for the People of Afghanistan Afghanistan or a Stray War in Afghanistan The Challenge of Winning the Peace chapter written together with Jonathan Goodhand published in Searching for Peace in Central and South Asia 2002References edit Haneef Atmar Appointed as Acting Foreign Minister TOLOnews 4 April 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Chakhansuri Officially Takes Charge as Acting FM TOLOnews 23 January 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 a b c d e f Minister of Education Makes First Trip to the U S for Global Literacy Conference USAID 18 September 2006 Archived from the original on 27 May 2010 Retrieved 23 March 2009 a b c Ministers of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Mohammad Hanif Atmar Embassy of Afghanistan Washington DC Archived from the original on 3 July 2009 Retrieved 23 March 2009 a b c d e Burns John F 11 October 2008 Afghan President Pressured Reshuffles Cabinet The New York Times Retrieved 23 March 2009 Afghan officials resign over attack 6 June 2010 Retrieved 21 July 2011 Afghan interior intel chiefs replaced over attack permanent dead link Afghanistan s Most Powerful Person Announces Bid for April Presidential Elections The Diplomat 28 November 2018 Retrieved 28 November 2018 a b Haneef Atmar appointed acting Foreign Minister of Afghanistan uniindia com 4 April 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 a b House of Representatives Gives Ten Ministerial Nominees Vote of Confidence 8am af 21 November 2020 Retrieved 15 May 2021 a b Foreign Minister Takes the Oath of Office Ministry of Foreign Affairs Press release 5 February 2021 Archived from the original on 5 February 2021 Retrieved 15 May 2021 a b Atilla Toygun 5 February 2021 Turkey helps senior Afghan officials leave country Hurriyet Daily News Retrieved 30 August 2021 Database www afghan bios info Retrieved 23 July 2023 Andrew Christopher M Mitrokhin Vasili 2005 The World Was Going Our War The KGB and the Battle for the Third World Basic Books p 408 ISBN 978 0 465 00311 2 Murat Ercan NAtional human Development Report 2004 PDF UNDP Retrieved 29 April 2017 Interview with rural development minister IRIN 4 July 2005 Retrieved 29 April 2017 Minister of Interior Embassy of Afghanistan Archived from the original on 3 July 2009 Retrieved 23 December 2011 Margherita Stancati Taliban Intensify Efforts to Take Control of Afghanistan s Overseas Embassies Wall Street Journal 18 January 2022 a b Jack Detsch amp Robbie Gramer Afghanistan s Diplomats Refuse to Represent a Terrorist Group Foreign Policy 7 January 2022 Dispute Over Afghanistan s Seat at UN Continue TOLOnews 8 February 2022 Taieb Rajab 22 February 2022 Ghani Removed From UN Heads of State List TOLOnews Retrieved 13 June 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mohammad Hanif Atmar Speech on Promoting Good Governance and Fighting Corruption in Afghanistan at the Brookings InstitutionPolitical officesPreceded byZarar Ahmad Moqbel Afghan Interior Minister11 October 2008 6 June 2010 Succeeded byBismillah Khan Mohammadi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haneef Atmar amp oldid 1187106273, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.