Naji Shawkat

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Template:Short description Template:More citations needed Template:Infobox officeholder Muhammad Naji Shawkat Bey (Template:Langx) (May 26,Template:Fact 1891 – May 11,Template:Fact 1980) was an Iraqi politician who served as the prime minister of Iraq under King Faisal I.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref>

Early life

Muhammad Naji Shawkat was born to an Arabized family of Georgian<ref>Ghareeb, Edmund A. (2004), Historical Dictionary of Iraq, p. 220. Scarecrow Press, Template:ISBN.</ref> origins in the Iraqi town of al-Kut where his father was stationed as provincial governor. He had three brothers: Saaib, Sami and Rifat and a sister. Concurrent with Naji's conclusion of his school education in Baghdad, his father was elected to the Ottoman parliament of 1909, thereby providing him with the opportunity to join the Ottoman Law School in Istanbul.<ref name=":0" />

Military service

Naji Shawkat was the assistant general prosecutor in the Iraqi city of al-Hila when World War I broke out, upon which he interrupted his legal career and joined the Ottoman Army as a reserve officer. After two years of involvement in the Ottoman military defense of Iraq, Shawkat was captured by the advancing British troops in March 1917.<ref name=":0" /> He was subsequently taken to a British Indian prison camp where he, like many other detained Arab Ottoman officers, was offered the choice of joining the Arab Revolt, an offer he promptly accepted.

Political career

Naji Shawkat Ministry

The Ministry of Naji Shawkat consisted of the following ministers:<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

  • Finance Minister, Nusrat Al-Farsi
  • Minister of Justice, Jamil Al-Wadi
  • Minister of Economy and Communications, Jalal Baban
  • Minister of Defense, Rashid Al-Khoja
  • Foreign Minister, Abdul Qadir Rashid
  • Minister of Education, Abbas Mahdi

Prime Minister of Iraq

In 1932, Shawkat was called on by Faisal to head a non-partisan government that was intended to clear the political congestion which accompanied the signing of the Anglo-Iraqi treaty. Faced with strong opposition from within the Iraqi political establishment and the anti-treaty campaign, Shawkat's government lasted only five months. Thereafter, he was appointed as representative of Iraq in Ankara where he cultivated strong relations with the Turkish ruling circles and developed a sense of admiration for modern Turkey.

Afterwards, Shawkat worked as a minister in Ankara. During the 1941 Iraqi coup d'état, he was appointed at the Minister of Interior. Following the fall of the regime in the Anglo-Iraqi War, Shawkat fled to Iran, then to South Africa. He was later brought to trial in Iraq and sentenced to 15 years in prison for treason by a military court. Shawkat was pardoned in 1948.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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