Abduljalil Khalil Explained

Birth Name:Abduljalil Khalil Ibrahim Hassan
Birth Date:14 December 1961
Birth Place:Bahrain
Occupation:Politician
Organization:Al Wefaq
Spouse:Afaf al-Jamri

Abduljalil Khalil Ibrahim Hassan (also Abdul Jalil; Arabic: عبدالجليل خليل إبراهيم حسن; born 14 December 1961) is a Bahraini politician. He is former Member of Parliament of Al Wefaq political party.

Early life and career

Khalil was born in the village of Sanabis, Bahrain on 14 December 1961. He studied mechanical engineering at King Saud University earning his BSc in January 1986. In July 1999, he earned MSc building services administration from Heriot-Watt University. Between 1995 and 2006, he worked at AERMEC, advancing from a field services engineer in March 1995 to a project manager in August 1999 and finally to a general manager in September 2000. He writes regular opinion piece in Al Wasat local newspaper and is a board member of Bahrain Society of Engineers, the American Bahraini Friendship Society and al-Jamri foundation, "which seeks to foster Sunni-Shi'a dialogue." He also heads the Bahrain Society for University Students and is said to have "close associations with recent university graduates." A WikiLeaks cable described him as being known for his "intelligence, management, administrative [and oratory] skills."

Khalil is married to Afaf al-Jamri, a women's activist and writer.[1] She is the daughter of Shia cleric Abdul Amir al-Jamri, sister to Mansoor al-Jamri, editor-in-chief of Al-Wasat and Mohammed Jameel, a former member of parliament. They have two sons and a daughter.[2]

Political life

In August 1988, Khalil was arrested in connection with opposition activities related to his father-in-law, with whom he had very strong relations.[1] He was subsequently sentenced to seven years in prison.[3] He was reportedly tortured during detention.[4] He was pardoned by the Emir (now king) in 2000.[1]

Khalil was a founding member of Al Wefaq political party in 2001. He holds a senior position in the party.[5] In 2006, he was elected to the Council of Representatives, the lower house of the parliament as a representative of the Capital Governorate's 4th district.[1] He headed the parliament's finance committee and led investigations into state properties.[6] He was noted for his ability to cooperate with other blocs despite sectarian differences.[7] He won by default in 2010, becoming the head of Al Wefaq's bloc.[8] In February 2011, Khalil and 17 other Al Wefaq MPs (the largest bloc)[9] submitted their resignations in protest against the government crackdown on Arab Spring-inspired protests.[10] [11]

References

Footnotes

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: SOME POTENTIAL NEW LEADERS IN BAHRAIN'S CHIEF SHI'A OPPOSITION PARTY . WikiLeaks (via The Daily Telegraph). 18 February 2011 . 16 June 2013.
  2. Web site: ar:السيرة الذاتية لـ عبدالجليل خليل . Arabic . jalilkhalil.org . http://www.jalilkhalil.org/ . 16 June 2013 . 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130605051534/http://jalilkhalil.org/ . 5 June 2013.
  3. News: Al-Wasat . Mansoor Al-Jamri . Mansoor Al-Jamri . 12 December 2007 . 7 June 2013. ar:الشيخ الجمري أوفى لشعبه... فأوفى له . http://www.alwasatnews.com/1923/news/read/267710/1.html . Arabic.
  4. Book: Bahrain: A Brickwall: correspondence between Lord Avebury and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office of the British Government on the human rights situation in Bahrain . 50 . Eric Reginald Lubbock Avebury . Parliamentary Human Rights Group . 2006 . London . 9780957023864. 16 June 2013.
  5. News: Bahrain Braces for Report. 23 November 2011. 16 June 2013. Alex Delmar-Morgan. The Wall Street Journal.
  6. News: ar:عبدالجليل خليل. Arabic. Al-Wasat. 20 September 2010. 16 June 2013. http://www.alwasatnews.com/2936/news/read/475563/1.html.
  7. Web site: BAHRAIN'S SHIA OPPOSITION: MANAGING SECTARIAN PRESSURES AND FOCUSING ON 2010 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS . 18 February 2011. Wikileaks (via The Telegraph) . 16 June 2013.
  8. News: Bahrain activists protest for political reform. Ben Birnbaum. 14 February 2011. 16 June 2013. The Washington Times.
  9. News: Lower chamber accepts resignation of 11 Al Wefaq MPs . 29 March 2011. 17 June 2013 . Habib Toumi. Gulf News.
  10. News: Bahrain accepts resignation of opposition MPs. 17 May 2011. 17 June 2013. Al Jazeera. The resignations, approved on Tuesday, were submitted in February in protest over the government's brutal crackdown on anti-government demonstrations..
  11. News: Thousands protest in Bahrain as MPs resign. Google. Agence France-Presse. 27 February 2011. 16 June 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20110304074706/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iwY3NTSpmBl3VTOlFY08tsPi82Rw. dead. 4 March 2011. W.G. Dunlop.