Salem Masadeh

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Salem Masadeh
Salem Masadeh
Personal details
Alma materDamascus

Salem Masadeh (Arabic: سالم مساعده; born in the 1930s) is a lawyer and a former minister in the Jordanian government.[1]

Early life and education[edit]

Masadeh completed his high school in Jordan and graduated from Damascus University in 1954 with a law degree.

Career[edit]

Masadeh started his career as a judge in Jordan (1958-1970). He then became the governor of Amman and the deputy of the minister of Interior Affairs (1970-1972).

Masadeh served as Minister of Justice( 1972-1974) in Ahmad Louzi's government, and in the following government he was minister of Finance (1974-1976). He then served briefly in Mudar Badran's first government. In the next three years, he worked in the private sector as a lawyer.

In 1979, Masadeh was asked to serve as the minister of Finance again.[2][3] After prime minister Shareef Abed El Hameed Sharaf died three years later, Masadeh continued as the finance minister under Mudar's Badran's third administration until 1984.[4]

Masadeh returned to the private sector for five years. In 1989, an economic crisis hit Jordan, after Zaid al-Rifai's government. Masadeh was called back into Zaid ibn Shaker's government as vice prime minister,[5] and minister of Interior affairs.[6][7][8][9] Eight months later, the prime minister resigned and Mudar Badran took office as the prime minister. Masadeh was assigned again as the vice Prime minister and minister of Interior Affairs for the last time.

After retiring from the government, Masadeh served as a member of the Jordanian Senate. He also became a board of trustees member of the Islamic Bank, Jordan Steel, and Yarmouk University.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Jordan Will Loosen Curbs on Transport From the West Bank ". New York Times.
  2. ^ Islamic Development Bank (1977). The Annual Report. Islamic Development Bank.
  3. ^ Near East/North Africa Report. [Executive Office of the President], Foreign Broadcast Information Service, Joint Publications Research Service. 1982.
  4. ^ The MEED/TAIC Middle East Financial Directory. Middle East Economic Digest. 1985.
  5. ^ Defense & Diplomacy. Defense and Diplomacy, Incorporated. 1991.
  6. ^ Daphne Daume (1990). Britannica Book of the Year: 1990. Encyclopædia Britannica. ISBN 978-0-85229-522-9.
  7. ^ MEED -- Middle East Business Weekly, Vol. 34, No. 39. 1990.
  8. ^ "Martial law further eased in Jordan". Chicago Tribune, 27 December 1989.
  9. ^ MEED. Economic East Economic Digest, Limited. 1991.

External links[edit]