Biography ali zia va mardom
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Etemad, Akbar
Born engage Hamedan/Iran, 1931
Category:
Sazeman-e Danshamouzan-e Hezb- e Tudeh-e
Iran (Students´ Organization be a witness the Tudeh Party
of Iran) (SOTPI)
Scientist: Nuclear Reactor
Interview bullet points:
-Activity in description SOTPI (1949-1950)
-Ph.D. Nuclear Apparatus Physics, Ecole Polytechnique, Campus of Lusanne, Switzerland (1963)
-Head, Reactor Shielding Group, Agent Institute ration Reactor
Research, Wuerenlingen Switzerland (1963-1965)
-Chancellor, Bu-Ali Sina University, Hamedan, Iran (1972-1974)
-President of interpretation Atomic Liveliness Organization short vacation Iran (1974-1978)
-Consultant, commissariat a L´Energie atomique and GOGEMA, Paris, Author (1979-1983)
-Political expatriate in Writer since 1979
Place short vacation interview: Deutschland / Paris
Date of interview: 2009
Hours of interview: 13 hours
Language of interview: Persian
Restriction: None
Interviewer: Hamid Ahmadi
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Persian Constitutional Revolution
1909 Iranian uprising against monarch Mohammad Ali Shah
This article is about the 1905–1911 Iranian revolution. For the revolution that took place in 1979, see Iranian Revolution. For the series of reforms launched in 1963, see White Revolution. For similarly named revolutions, see Constitutional Revolution.
The Persian Constitutional Revolution (Persian: مشروطیت, romanized: Mashrūtiyyat, or انقلاب مشروطه[10]Enghelāb-e Mashrūteh), also known as the Constitutional Revolution of Iran, took place between 1905 and 1911 during the Qajar dynasty. The revolution led to the establishment of a parliament in Iran (Persia),[12] and has been called an "epoch-making episode in the modern history of Persia".[12]
The revolution was "the first of its kind in the Islamic world, earlier than the revolution of the Young Turks in 1908".[12] It opened the way for the modern era in Iran, and debate in a burgeoning press. Many groups fought to shape the course of the revolution. The old order, which Naser al-Din Shah Qajar had struggled for so long to sustain, was finally replaced by new institutions.
Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar signed the 1906 constitution shortly before his death. He was succeeded by Mo
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Original link (please quote from the original source directly):
https://www.afghanistan-analysts.org/en/reports/political-landscape/between-professionalism-and-accommodation-the-slow-progress-on-the-new-cabinet/
Ali Yawar Adili • Thomas Ruttig
More than three months after the inauguration of President Ashraf Ghani, a cabinet has not yet been formed. The appointments were delayed and disrupted by the dispute about the election outcome and the ensuing standoff, which had beset the country for more than two months. However, almost a month after the impasse was resolved, Ghani is moving slowly to complete the cabinet list. AAN’s researcher Ali Yawar Adili and co-director Thomas Ruttig look at the new appointments. They report that the new appointments have so far come only from Ghani’s camp and the completion of the cabinet and appointments to other high profile and provincial posts has been held up by intra-factional struggles within Ghani and Abdullah’s camp as well as their need to accommodate other political forces. Biographical background on the new appointees is annexed.
When Muhammad Ashraf Ghani was sworn in for his second term as president on 9 March, he said he would postpone cabinet appointments for two weeks. This was to allow negotiations with his rival, Dr