Nasruddin Mohseni

Sayed Nasruddin Mohseni is a politician of Afghanistan. He is a leader of the Hizb e Wahadat e Islami—a party that serves members of Hazara ethnic group, who are from Islam's Sh'ia minority.[1]

Sayed Nasruddin Mohseni
NationalityAfghanistan
Occupationpolitician
Known forServed on the Constitutional Loya Jirga

Delegate to the Constitutional Loya Jirga 2002-2004

During the 2001 Bonn Conference that selected Hamid Karzai as Afghanistan's interim leader obliged him to empower a Constitutional Loya Jirga to write a new constitution.[2] Karzai appointed Nasruddin Mohseni to be a delegate to the Loya Jirga.[3] He sat on the first of the Jirga's ten committees, chaired by Ustad Rabani. Committee one drafted 45 articles. The Jirga sat from 2002 through 2004. Popular elections to the Wolesi Jirga, the lower house of Afghanistan's national assembly followed in 2005.

Hizb e Wahadat e Islami

Eurasianet chose to quote Nasruddin while describing mounting disenchantment with Hamid Karzai's central government among the minority groups in Afghanistan's north. They described him as a "senior leader"' of the Hizb e Wahadat e Islami.[1]

References

  1. Aunohita Mojumdar (2009-09-23). "Balkh governor trumpets security warning for northern Afghanistan". EurasiaNet. Retrieved 2012-04-15. ‘The government should make some arrangement for economic help for the youth to prevent them from joining the anti-government groups,’ said Nasruddin Mohseni, a senior leader of Hizb e Wahadat e Islami, the party of the minority Shi'a Hazara community. Mohseni's party supported Karzai in the election, mainly because party supremo, Karim Khalili, is a vice president. Even so, Mohseni described Atta as a ‘good governor’.
  2. "Agreement on provisional arrangements in Afghanistan pending the re-establishment of permanent government institutions". United Nations. 2001-12-05. Archived from the original on 2011-01-17. Retrieved 2009-06-19.CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. "Members of the afghan constitutional loya jirga". 2003-12-23. Archived from the original on 2011-01-25. Retrieved 2011-01-25.
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