Nasri Maalouf | |
Office: | Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants |
Primeminister: | Omar Karami |
Predecessor: | Farès Boueiz |
Successor: | Farès Boueiz |
Term Start: | May 1992 |
Term End: | October 1992 |
Birth Date: | May 7, 1911 |
Birth Place: | al-Mashrah, Beirut, Ottoman Syria |
Death Place: | Abu Dhabi, UAE |
Nationality: | Lebanese |
Nasri Maalouf (ar|نصري معلوف) (May 7, 1911 – April 2, 2005) was a Lebanese politician. He was a Melkite Greek Catholic, and was known as a moderate and peacemaker in Lebanese politics.
Nasri Maalouf was also a prominent lawyer, who mediated one of his most important cases, the one involving the prosecution of Nizar Halabi's assassination.
Maalouf was born in al-Mashrah, Beirut, in modern-day Lebanon. He was educated in Syria. He was a signer of the Lebanese constitution and the Taif Accord. He was the Minister of Finance from November 1956 to July 1957.[1]
He was a long-time member of parliament from Beirut- first elected in 1968 alongside Michel Sassine- and served in the cabinet several times, including as foreign minister for a few months in 1992, as well as defense minister from 1973 to 1974,[2] and Minister of Justice. Shortly before his death, he was appointed to be a member of a council of elders which supervised parliamentary elections in June 2005.