Rauf Fico | |
Nationality: | Albanian |
Order: | Minister of Foreign Affairs |
Term Start: | April 19, 1929 |
Term End: | April 20, 1931 |
Order2: | Minister of Internal Affairs (acting) |
Term Start2: | December 12, 1921 |
Term End2: | December 24, 1921 |
Birth Date: | March 13, 1881 |
Birth Place: | Sanaa, Vilayet of Yemen, Ottoman Empire |
Death Date: | January 23, 1944 |
Death Place: | Tirana, Albanian Kingdom |
Signature: | Rauf Fico (nënshkrim).svg |
Signature Size: | 100px |
Abdurrauf Fico (1881–1944), also known as Rauf Fitso Bey was an Albanian ambassador and politician.
Rauf Fico was born in Sanaa, to Tahmaz Fico of the Fico family of Gjirokastër and Hava Buzo from Berat. After finishing high school in Shkodra, he continued his studies in Vienna and later at the Mekteb-i Mülkiye.
In 1912, Fico joined Vlora's government as a councillor in the Ministry of the Interior. In 1916, he served as vice-prefect of Tiranë. During his tenure as vice-prefect, Fico, along with co-founders Zyber Hallulli, Mytesim Këlliçi, Luigj Shala, and Xhelal Toptani, co-founded Streha Vorfnore, the city's first public orphanage on November 28, 1917, the date of the fifth anniversary of the Albanian Declaration of Independence.[1] In 1918, he was one of the initiators of the Congress of Tiranë—together with Abdi Toptani and Ismail Ndroqi—which along with the Congress of Durrës later that same year, established the continuity of the newly created Albanian state after World War I. Fico then served as Minister of Interior Affairs in Pandeli Evangjeli's cabinet in 1921 and served two terms as deputy of Durrës.[2] His political career culminated in 1929 with a 19-month appointment as Foreign Minister of Albania—a post he was removed from in 1930 for his opposition to the Fascist Italian regime.
Fico first served as an ambassador to Turkey and Bulgaria in the late 1920s, before his time as Foreign Minister of Albania. He then served as ambassador to Yugoslavia (1933–36), Greece (1937) and Germany (1938-9), where Fico helped dozens of Jewish people escape the country on Albanian tourist visas.[3]
During the Italian invasion of Albania, Fico was arrested and interned in Italy. He died in Tirana on January 23, 1944, a few months after he returned from Italy following the country's capitulation.[4]
Throughout his political and diplomatic career Fico had been awarded various orders: