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Salah Omar Al-Ali

Salah Omar al-Ali
صلاح عمر العلي
Member of the Regional Command of the Iraqi Regional Branch
In office
October 1966 – 1970
Minister of Culture and Information
In office
1968–1970
Iraqi Ambassador to the United Nations
In office
1978–1981
Succeeded by Ismat T. Kittani
Iraqi Ambassador to Spain
In office
1976–1978
Iraqi Ambassador to Sweden
In office
1973–1976
Personal details
Born (1938-07-17) 17 July 1938 (age 78)
Tikrit, Iraq
Political party Iraqi Regional Branch of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party

Salah Omar Al-Ali (born on 17 July 1938) was a member of the Iraqi Revolutionary Command Council, Iraqi Minister of Culture and Information from 1968 to 1970, and subsequently ambassador to Sweden, Spain and the United Nations from 1973 to 1981. He is currently a leading member of the Iraqi opposition.

Although he was formerly a leading member of the Ba'ath Party, and was therefore very close to individuals such as Saddam Hussein who were subsequently accused of having committed a number of atrocities. Al-Ali is popular in Iraq, he resigned twice from high ranking governmental positions in protest.

Al-Ali was born in Salah ad Din Governorate, in a village near the city of Tikrit. His father, Omar, was a small landowner who was involved in agricultural production. Al-Ali eventually migrated to Baghdad where he attended law school and became active in politics. At the time, the two major political parties that were popular amongst Iraqi youth were the Iraqi Communist Party and the Ba'ath Party, both of which expounded socialist principles relating to the redistribution of wealth and the eradication of the old social classes that dominated Iraqi society at the time, and both of which were violently opposed to the British. In that context, Al-Ali joined the Ba'ath party. His activism generated a certain amount of hostility from the government.

By 1968, Al-Ali was a leading member of the Ba'ath Party. When the Ba'ath seized power in the July Revolution of 1968, Al-Ali was appointed to the Iraqi Revolution Command Council (the "RCC"), a group of six leading Baath party officials who held joint executive authority over the entire country. Each member of the RCC also held governmental posts; Al-Ali was appointed Minister of Culture and Information. As such, Al-Ali was responsible for cultural affairs and for managing the government's official information campaign.


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