Ibrahim al-Hamdi explained

Ibrahim al-Hamdi
Office:President of North Yemen
Primeminister:Mohsin Ahmad al-Aini
Abdul Latif Dayfallah
Abdul Aziz Abdul Ghani
Term Start:13 June 1974
Term End:11 October 1977
Predecessor:Abdul Rahman al-Iryani
Successor:Ahmad al-Ghashmi
Office1:Deputy Prime Minister for Internal Affairs
President1:Abdul Rahman al-Iryani
Primeminister1:Kadhi Abdullah al-Hagri
Hassan Muhammad Makki
Term Start1:1972
Term End1:1974
Party:None (Military)
Birth Date:30 September 1943
Death Date:11 October 1977 (aged 34)
Birth Place:Qa'atabah District, North Yemen
Death Place:Sana'a, North Yemen
Allegiance:
(1956–1962)

(1962–1977)
Branch: North Yemeni Army
Serviceyears:1956–1977
Rank: Lieutenant colonel
Battles:
Native Name Lang:ar

Ibrahim al-Hamdi (30 September 1943 – 11 October 1977) (Arabic: إبراهيم الحمدي|Ibrāhīm al-Ḥamdī) was a Yemeni military officer who was the President of the Yemen Arab Republic (North Yemen) from 13 June 1974 until his assassination on 11 October 1977. During his rule, he cemented the central government's control over the country, and planned to end tribal loyalty and Yemen's medieval social classes by proclaiming all Yemenis as equal.

Early life and career

Ibrahim was born in Qattab, Ibb. Hamdi's family is from Banu Hamdan.

In his early adulthood he was an associate for his father, who worked as a judge. His father taught him about Islamic law while he was studying in the Aviation College to become a pilot, but did not complete his studies and continued working with his father as a judge in the court of Dhamar in the reign of Imam Ahmed Yahya Hamid al-Din where he raised much controversy and attention.

Then, he became in the era of President Abdullah as-Sallal the commander of the commandos. Then the responsibility for the western, eastern, and central provinces to him in 1972. He was promoted to become the Deputy Prime Minister for Internal Affairs, and then appointed the higher representative Commander of the Armed Forces. On 13 June 1974 he was an effective member of the officers who ran the white military coup overthrowing the Judge Abdul Rahman al-Iryani in the revolutionary correction movement of 13 June 1974 and handed over all the president's and the members' of the republican council authorities to the military forces which represented in the leadership of the general and senior officers mentioned: Ahmad Ghashmi, Yahya Mutawakil, Mujahid Abu Shawareb, Ali Al-Shibh, Hammoud Pedder, Ali Alilla'a, AED Abu Meat, Ali Abu Lohoum, and added later Abdaziz Abdul Ghani and Abdullah Abdulalim.

Economic achievements

Colonel Ibrahim al-Hamdi led the thirteenth corrective movement. Hamdi aimed to correct the Yemeni revolutionary path, to get rid of a "legacy of decadence." He primarily sought to calm tribal feuds and regional conflicts, which had been prevalent under previous rulers. Thus, security was his top concern. He also promoted financial reforms to put an end to favoritism and bribery. He created committees to implement these reforms, saving estimated tens of millions of Riyals.

Furthermore, he initiated a large infrastructure plan, paving thousands of kilometres of dirt roads, building thousands of schools, and hundreds of clinics and health centres. He encouraged people and many non-local investors to invest in the sections of agriculture and local manufacturing. This period saw rising standards of living and much prosperity.

When al-Hamdi came to power in 1974, North Yemen lacked the most basic services and infrastructure. He created a five-year development plan supervised by a number of committees, which encouraged local communities to contribute “to road construction, school building, and water networks.”In an unprecedented move, al-Hamdi allocated 31 percent of North Yemen’s annual budget to education. Believing that education was the cornerstone to development and progress, al-Hamdi implemented a free breakfast program for pupils in remote rural areas to increase access to basic schooling.Moreover, Al-Hamdi made a number of executive decisions during his rule to increase the role of government and promote citizenship and equality. His efforts to eradicate tribal loyalty (including in the military) and establish the rule of law in a country devastated by years of civil conflict were ground-breaking in the Arab world during the 1970s.Al-Hamdi abolished the Ministry of Tribal Affairs (a body he believed was an obstacle to the country’s economic and social advancement) and established the Ministry of Local Administration. He also restructured the North Yemen army and raised the salaries of military and civilian personnel.During al-Hamdi’s rule, North Yemen witnessed remarkable economic growth, with the country’s GDP rising from 21.5 percent in 1974 to 56.1 percent in 1977. Its per capita income rose by 300 percent in the same period. Al-Hamdi was also planning to establish more democratic institutions in the country by founding what he called “popular conventions.” The purpose of these conventions was to “prepare the groundwork for eventual elections” in North Yemen, according to WikiLeaks documents.However, the tribal forces that allegedly conspired with Saudi Arabia against al-Hamdi did not allow his plans for North Yemen to come to fruition. On October 11, 1977, he was assassinated, along with his brother, in his vice president’s house in Sana’a.

This man had started his path to the presidency with arduous efforts, and was assisted by a group of young faces qualified academically to build a modern government based on law, order, and institutions. It was a difficult task, but not impossible for a commander who collected in his persona the power and the model, plus his culture and excellence through his civilian and military experiences, and what was more important is the honor that observed from his family when he worked as a judge (during his short experience in the judiciary while the absence of his father Judge Mohammed Saleh Al-Hamdi all provisions was ending to between the rivals) so he learned two rules: that justice is the base of governance, and the base of governance is the fear of Allah. Thus he proved his worth as a national leader through several works in addition to justice, including:

Under Al-Hamdi's administration, Yemen enjoyed the most prosperous economic boom since 1962, as he was responsible for a civil engineering endeavour that would usher in an era of unprecedented economic growth in Yemen's post-Imamate history. More specifically, Hamdi fostered the creation of 'Local Development Associations,' which functioned as autonomous community-based institutions focused on developing local infrastructure. Scholar Isa Blumi notes that while "Able to exclusively access the potential tax revenue under their jurisdictions, the committees created from members of the community could also solicit external funds and loans (almost exclusively drawn from local, non-banking sources) independently of the central state and bank now formally connected to the outside world."[1] In other words, during the 1970s the LDAs did the heavy lifting as far as the development of Yemen's infrastructure was concerned. What is more, the locally driven LDAs protected the Yemeni countryside from an influx of foreign finance capital (disguised as development 'aid' and often tethered to massive usury rates). The LDA system thus preserved Yemen's economic sovereignty until 1978.[2]

Military

During his rule, Al Hamdi built up the Yemeni defenses in Bab al Mandab and on Yemeni islands and modernized and expanded the Yemeni Navy. He reorganised the Yemeni army into four main forces:

Assassination

The circumstances of al-Hamdi's death remain undetermined,[3] although the perpetrator is widely assumed to be a Saudi agent.[4] Those believed to have conspired against the life of the President were the Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces, Lt. Col. Ahmad al-Ghashmi, and the head of Yemen’s Security Department, Mohammad al-Khamis, as well as Ali Abdullah Saleh, himself, who then served as commander of the Taiz Military Brigade, all of whom were present at the home of al-Ghashmi where al-Hamdi had been invited for lunch when he was assassinated.[5] His assassination came two days before his scheduled visit to the South of Yemen to negotiate the unification of the North and South of Yemen at that time. His death cleared the ground for Ali Abdullah Saleh, who sought the immediate reversal of Hamdi's local development agenda.[6]

When the Yemeni Revolution broke out, protesters gathered with the image of the late president, demanding justice and the investigation of the death of al-Hamdi.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Blumi, Isa. Yemen: What Chaos in Arabia Tells Us About the World, p. 127.
  2. Blumi, Isa. Yemen: What Chaos in Arabia Tells Us About the World, p.128
  3. Web site: Day . Stephen W. . March 26, 2020 . Yemenis still want answers about Ibrahim al-Hamdi’s assassination . 2024-01-24 . Al Jazeera . en.
  4. The Conflicts in Yemen and U.s. National Security . Terrill . W. Andrew . 2011 . Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College.
  5. Investigative Journalism,, Al Jazeera World. / Jan 29, 2020, minutes 25:05–26:23; 20:17–21:04.
  6. Blumi, Isa. Yemen: What Chaos in Arabia Tells Us About the World, p. 134.
  7. Web site: Aljamra . Helal . 2 April 2019 . Assassinated President Al-Hamdi Remains Yemen's Founder in the People's Collective Memory . https://web.archive.org/web/20200811184804/https://insidearabia.com/president-al-hamdi-yemen-collective-memory/ . August 11, 2020 . Inside Arabia.