Tan Sri Datuk Prof. Ahmad Mohamed Ibrahim |
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Attorney-General of Singapore | |
In office 9 Aug 1965 – 31 Jan 1967 |
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Preceded by |
Himself (as State Advocate General of Singapore) |
Succeeded by | Tan Boon Teik |
State Advocate-General of the State of Singapore | |
In office 25 June 1959 – 8 August 1965 |
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Preceded by |
E. P. Shanks (as Attorney-General of the Crown Colony of Singapore) |
Succeeded by | Post abolished and replaced with Attorney-General of Singapore |
Personal details | |
Born |
Singapore, Straits Settlements |
15 May 1916
Died | 17 April 1999 Gombak, Malaysia |
(aged 82)
Nationality | Singaporean |
Spouse(s) | Salmah Mohamed Tahir |
Relations | Cal Bellini |
Residence | Gombak, Malaysia |
Alma mater | University of Cambridge |
Tan Sri Datuk Prof. Ahmad Mohamed Ibrahim (15 May 1916 – 17 April 1999) was a Singaporean lawyer and law professor. He was the first Attorney-General of Singapore.
Ahmad was educated in Victoria Bridge School (now Victoria School), Raffles Institution, and Raffles College (now the National University of Singapore). In 1936, he received the Queen's Scholarship (now known as the President's Scholarship) to study in St John's College, University of Cambridge. He graduated in 1939 with 1st Class Economics Tripos I and 1st Class Law Tripos II, then attained the Masters in Law in 1965. He was awarded the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws (LL.D) from the University of Singapore on 5 June 1965.
In 1948, Ahmad stood as an independent candidate in the Municipal Commission Election in Singapore and won. He became Singapore's first State Advocate General in 1959, and the nation's first non-British Attorney-General in 1966. He moved to Malaysia in 1969. In 1972, he became the dean of the law faculty of the University of Malaya. There he established the first law faculty in Malaysia. He was also later made Professor of Malaysian Law, and in 1984 University of Malaya honoured Ahmad with the highest academic title it could confer - Professor Emeritus. In 1984, Ahmad was instrumental in setting up the Kulliyyah of Laws at International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), and was made the Shaikh and the Dean of the Kulliyyah. In 2000, the Kulliyyah was proclaimed as Ahmad Ibrahim Kulliyyah in honour of Ahmad as the founding father of the Kulliyyah.
Ahmad was a key person in the merger talks between Singapore and Malaysia in the early 1960s. He was also the legal expert in the Singapore delegation to the Malaysia Talks in London in 1963, which discussed independence from Britain.