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Mahmoud Zuabi

Mahmoud Zuabi
محمود الزعبي
Prime Minister of Syria
In office
1 November 1987 – 7 March 2000
President Hafez Assad
Preceded by Abdul Rauf al-Kasm
Succeeded by Muhammad Mustafa Mero
Member of the Regional Command of the Syrian Regional Branch
In office
7 January 1980 – 21 June 2000
Personal details
Born 1935 (1935)
Khirbet Ghazaleh, Syria
Died 21 May 2000 (aged 65)
Damascus, Syria
Resting place Khirbat Ghazalah
Political party Syrian Regional Branch of the Ba'ath Party
Other political
affiliations
National Progressive Front
Religion Islam

Mahmoud Zuabi also, Zubi or al-Zoubi (Arabic: محمود الزعبي‎‎‎; 1935 – 21 May 2000) was Prime Minister of Syria from 1 November 1987 to 7 March 2000.

Zuabi was born into a Sunni family in 1935 in Khirbet Ghazaleh, a village 75 miles south of Damascus in the Hauran region.

Zuabi was a member of the Ba'ath Party. Under the rule of then President Hafez Assad, Zuabi was appointed Prime Minister in 1987. He presided over a ramshackle purportedly socialist governmental and economic system. Military and government officials exercised immense power and continue to do so. Only oil revenues kept the economy going. Even foreign aid programmes struggled to implement under the weight of bureaucratic obduracy.

Ubiquitous regulations including price-control had the effect most observers say of stifling legitimate enterprise. Many officials are forced into corruption to supplement meager salaries. It is said that corruption extended all the way to the top Syria's government.

When President Hafez Assad was showing signs of poor health in the late 1990s, supporters of his son Bashar Assad started positioning him to succeed him as President. Hafez was also a major player in these maneuverings. Syria is a republic where there was no direct transfer of power envisaged in the constitution from father to son.

As Hafez Assad grew sick, it became clear both father and son had decided that Zuabi's days were numbered. Tackling corruption is a popular cause among most Syrians, who see the immense wealth created at their expense as a reason why the Syrian economy has struggled to grow. The dragging down of once swaggering officials, with punishments including jail and the confiscation and auction of their illegally obtained assets earned Bashar much kudos in the community.

On 7 March 2000, Zuabi was replaced as prime minister by Mohammed Mustafa Mero.


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