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Ismaïl Omar Guelleh

Ismaïl Omar Guellé
إسماعيل عمر جيله
Guelleh in 2023
2nd President of Djibouti
Assumed office
8 May 1999
Prime MinisterBarkat Gourad Hamadou
Dileita Mohamed Dileita
Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed
Preceded byHassan Gouled Aptidon
Personal details
Born (1946-11-27) 27 November 1946 (age 77)
Dire Dawa, Ethiopian Empire
Political partyPeople's Rally for Progress
SpouseKadra Mahamoud Haid
RelationsRidwan Ismaïl Saalah
ChildrenHaïbado Ismaïl Omar
Fatouma-Awo Ismaïl Omar
Nasir Omar Ismaïl Saalah (1st line)
Ahmad Shaheer Mappingé (2nd line)

Ismaïl Omar Guellé (Somali: Ismaaciil Cumar Geelle; Arabic: إسماعيل عمر جيله; born 27 November 1946)[1][2] is a Djiboutian politician who has served as the President of Djibouti since 1999, making him one of the longest-serving rulers in Africa.[3] He is often referred to by his initials, IOG.

Guelleh was first elected as President in 1999 as the handpicked successor to his uncle, Hassan Gouled Aptidon, who had ruled Djibouti since independence in 1977.[4] Guelleh was re-elected in 2005, 2011, 2016 and in 2021. The elections were largely boycotted by the opposition amid complaints over widespread irregularities.[5][6] Guelleh has been characterized as a dictator, and his rule has been criticized by human rights groups and governments, such as the United States.[7] He is, at the international level, a close ally of France.

He was awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India's second-highest civilian award, on 25 January 2019 for his role in the safe evacuation of Indian citizens from Yemen.[8]

Early life and political beginnings

Guelleh was born in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia, into the politically powerful Mamassan subclan of the Ciise Dir clan of the Somali ethnic group.[9] The father of Ismaïl Omar Guelleh, son of Guelleh Batal, is Omar Guelleh, one of the first native teachers in the 1930s before working, following his father's path, on behalf of the Franco-Ethiopian Railway Company (CFE) which built the line connecting Djibouti to Addis Ababa and whose head office was in Dire Dawa. When Guelleh was younger he attended a traditional Islamic school. In 1960, Guelleh migrated to Djibouti before finishing high school. In 1964, at the age of 18, Ismail Omar Guelleh began working in the General Information of the French Territory of the Afars and the Issas, because he spoke Amharic, Somali, Arabic, French, Italian and English.[10]

In 1975, he was suspended from his duties because he was suspected of transmitting information to the independence movement. He then became involved in the African People's League for Independence (LPAI) chaired by Hassan Gouled Aptidon, who campaigns for independence. Guelleh was elected into the LPAI’s Central Committee in 1983 and subsequently became the director of a cultural commission in Paris. In 1987, he became a member of the party leadership.[11]

After Djibouti became independent, he became head of the secret police and chief of the cabinet in the government of his uncle Hassan Gouled Aptidon, for whom he also served as chief of staff for more than two decades.[11] He received training from the Somali National Security Service and then from the French Secret Service, and was intended to become his uncle's successor. He became President of Djibouti in 1999.

Presidency

Rise to power and first term, 1999 to 2005

Guelleh in 1999

Djibouti is one of four countries in Africa that have experienced instances of immediate successions from one family member to another.[12]

On 4 February 1999, President Gouled Aptidon, uncle of Ismail Guelleh, announced his retirement at the time of the next election, and an extraordinary congress of his party, the ruling People's Rally for Progress (RPP), chose Guelleh as its presidential candidate, handpicked by Aptidon.[13][4] As the joint candidate of the RPP and moderate wing of the Front for the Restoration of Unity and Democracy (FRUD), Guelleh won the presidential election held on 9 April 1999 with 74.02% of the vote, defeating his only challenger, the independent candidate Moussa Ahmed Idriss.[14][15] He took office on 8 May.[16] Moussa Ahmed Idriss was arrested the following September for "threatening the morale of the armed forces" and detained at an undisclosed location.[17]

In December 2000, Guelleh sacked the chief of staff of the National Police Force, Yacin Yabeh, prompting policemen loyal to Yabeh to unsuccessfully rebel following his dismissal.[18] Guelleh is credited with brokering a permanent peace agreement that year that brought to an end the country’s post-independence ethnic conflict.[11]

Second term, 2005 to 2011

Guelleh with US Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld at the Presidential residence in Djibouti in 2002.

Guelleh was nominated by the RPP as its presidential candidate for a second time on 7 October 2004, at an Extraordinary Congress of the party. He was backed by several other parties[19] and was the only candidate in the presidential election held on 8 April 2005.[20] Brief protests against the elections erupted but were quickly suppressed by police.[21] Without a challenger, Guelleh won 100% of the ballots cast and was sworn in for a second six-year term, which he said would be his last, on 7 May.[22]

However, in 2010, Guelleh persuaded the National Assembly of Djibouti to amend the nation's Constitution, allowing him to stand for a third term.[23][24] This cleared the way for him to place his name on the ballot in Djibouti's 2011 election. It also resulted in large protests beginning in 2010 similar to the larger movement for democracy in the Arab countries.[25] The protests were quickly put down, opposition leaders arrested and international observers expelled or arrested.[26][27][28]

Third term, 2011 to 2016

Opposition parties boycotted the election, leaving only one little-known candidate against him on the ballot. Guelleh won almost 80% of the vote.[29] Human Rights Watch questioned the fairness of the election given that opposition leaders were jailed twice prior to polling.[30] Guelleh again said that he would not run for another term.[31]

Guelleh was also the winner of the 2016 election with about 87% of the popular vote.[32] As in previous elections, the opposition had called for a country-wide boycott and demanded Guelleh conduct "transparent, free, fair and just elections."[33] Opposition leaders and human rights groups complained of repression and police brutality in the run-up to the polls.[34] After interviewing an opposition leader, a BBC team was arrested and expelled shortly before the vote.[33]

Fourth term, 2016 to 2021

He was re-elected for a fifth term in the 2021 landslide election.[35][36] One opposition candidate ran in the election, political newcomer Zakaria Ismail Farah, who accused the government of "ballot-box stuffing" and barring his delegates from accessing polling stations to monitor the voting process.[37] Other with major opposition parties opted not to run candidates, accusing Guelleh of ruling via a dictatorship.[38]

Fifth term, since 2021

In June 2021, Guelleh made vaccination against COVID-19 compulsory for both citizens and foreign residents.[39]

Throughout that same month, Guelleh reshuffled of his diplomatic corps, recalling seven ambassadors and appointing new ones to several countries across the Middle East.[40]

Succession

George W. Bush and President Guelleh of Djibouti during a meeting in the Oval Office, 2003

Guelleh’s long-time rule has opened questions about his eventual succession, with a trusted, hand-picked candidate chosen from within his inner circle being almost a certainty.[12][41] For the longest time, the president’s son in law and minister of health, Djama Elmi Okieh, seemed to be Guelleh’s designated successor, but since 2018 he has fallen out of favor after an alleged affair with an employee and subsequent divorce.[42][43] The new favored candidate since then seems to be Naguib Abdallah Kamil, a son of First Lady Kadra Mahamoud Haid from a previous marriage.[42]

By retaining Djibouti’s main political players in their respective government position, Guelleh has increased the risk for internal power struggles.[44] Prime Minister Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed and Finance Minister Ilyas Moussa Dawaleh are considered prime contenders for leadership struggles in the run-up to the next elections in 2026. Another possible candidate involved in intra-governmental fights for power includes Foreign Minister Mahamoud Ali Youssouf.[44]

Political assessment

Governance

Guelleh cuts the inaugural ribbon at the new Defense Fuel Supply Point (DFSP) at the Port of Doralleh in February 2006.

Throughout his presidency, Guelleh has worked to install members of his family in important political and economic positions. A central role is occupied by his wife, Kadra Mahamoud Haid, who acts as the de facto vice-president, and his two daughters: Haibado, functioning as an important advisor to Guelleh, and Fatouma-Awo, heavily involved in the country’s business activities.[45] His son in law, Djama Elmi Okieh, is the Minister of Health.[43]

One of the President’s half-brothers, Saad Omar Guelleh, is the General Manager of the economically paramount Port of Djibouti, while first cousin Djama Ali Guelleh has been the Director General of state-owned utilities company Electricité de Djibouti (EDD) since 1986, more than a decade before Guelleh came to power.[45][46]

Owing to this intricate blurring of state functions and the ruling clan, Guelleh has been able to exercise strict control over the country’s political, economic and judiciary affairs, aided by his strong grip on the police, military and other security forces. This has guaranteed that "the Guelleh clan’s domination of all public affairs prevailed."[42]

A message sent from the US Embassy in Djibouti in 2004 and published on WikiLeaks described Djibouti as "less a country than a commercial city state controlled by one man, Ismail Omar Guelleh."[47]

In its 2020 country report on Human Rights Practices, the US government identified "unlawful or arbitrary killings", "cases of cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment by the government", and "arbitrary or unlawful interference with privacy; serious restrictions on free expression, the press, and the internet, including violence", among others, as "significant human rights issues" in the country.[48]

Closer relations with China

Guelleh arriving at the London Conference on Somalia in February 2012

Guelleh has made use of his country’s strategic position for years, marked by large infrastructure investments, especially in ports and logistics.[4][49] Since 2013, Guelleh has pursued closer economic and political relations with China, which coincided with Beijing’s growing strategic interest in the Middle East and Africa through the launch of the Belt and Road Initiative that year.[50]

The ensuing great power competition for the country has increased Djibouti’s scope for maneuver, but China’s influence has also grown over Djibouti, having established a naval base there in 2017 and triggering concerns among Djibouti’s traditional Western allies that Beijing’s authoritarian governance style is encouraging more autocratic behavior on Guelleh’s part as well.[51][52]

Ismail Omar Guelleh with Obamas on 5 August 2014.

The influx of Chinese investments into the country has furthered Guelleh’s development plan based on the Singapore model. It is often understood as "as an authoritarian government delivering national prosperity through rigid planning and a singular focus on economic development at the expense of democracy, human rights, and basic freedoms."[53] Guelleh has frequently made references to following Singapore’s path in official speeches, hoping to transform Djibouti into the "Singapore of Africa" by capitalizing on the Port of Djibouti’s growing role as a strategically located maritime trading hub.[54][55]

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Guelleh shake hands at the AMISOM Heads of State Summit, 2016

However, experts regard Djibouti’s continued government corruption and favoring of Chinese investors as a hindrance to that development strategy paying off.[56][53] For example, in 2012 the Djibouti government sold its Doraleh Container Terminal concession of the Port of Djibouti to a Chinese competitor of concession partner DP World, an UAE-based port operator.[57] In February 2018, Ismaïl Guelleh revoked DP World’s concession by presidential decree, transferring its assets to a state-run company.[58][59] Using Chinese funding, that same year Djibouti also opened a long-term project to build what is projected to be Africa’s greatest free trade zone.[58]

In 2020, the London Court of International Arbitration ruled Djibouti’s expropriation illegal and ordered the original concession rights are to be restored.[60] The Court had previously ordered the country to pay $533 million in compensation to the DP World company. Djibouti rejected the Court’s ruling and handed a quarter of the port's stake to China Merchants Ports Holdings.[61]

Economy

Indian President Ram Nath Kovind and Ismail Omar Guelleh in October 2017

While the FDI-driven policy into port and logistics infrastructure pursued by Guelleh has been responsible for steady economic growth, it has created a service-dependent and capital-intensive economy with low exports and opportunities for job creation.[62] Indeed, unemployment remains an enduring issue that disproportionally affects the young. According to a 2015 employment survey, Djibouti’s unemployment rate was at 39 percent, where only 25 percent of working age people were employed.[62] A more recent[when?] estimate puts unemployment of the young at 80 percent.[citation needed]

Furthermore, the investment projects behind the country’s economic growth throughout the years were financed by external debt, which has led to high levels of debt ownership by foreign actors, particularly China.[63][64] Overall, the country’s economy was ranked as "mostly unfree" by the Heritage Foundation’s 2021 Index of Economic Freedom.[65]

The expansion of the Berbera port in Somaliland by DP World, which would reduce landlocked Ethiopia’s dependence on Djibouti for large parts of its trade, has been speculated to pose a threat to the port of Djibouti’s regional dominance.[66] Guelleh has dismissed such claims.[67]

Regional security

Guelleh with President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev at the 18th Non-Aligned Movement summit in Baku, October 2019.

Djibouti under Guelleh’s rule has remained a stable country within a conflict-ridden region. Guelleh’s presidency has seen the signing of a peace agreement between warring ethnic tribes in 2000 and the resolution of a decade-long border dispute between Djibouti and Eritrea in 2018.[68][69] The 2018 peace treaty between Ethiopia and Eritrea is expected to reduce Djibouti’s port revenues in the long-run and could in turn lead to Guelleh becoming unable to maintain his stringent control over the country.[70]

In 2020, Guelleh hosted the leaders of Somalia and its break-away Republic of Somaliland as well as Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed for peace talks.[71]

Guelleh expressed strong support for Ethiopia's Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed in the Tigray War between the government and the rebels, saying that he had chosen to "restore law and order at the federal level, and punish those seeking to break up the country" and dismissed the prospect of negotiations, saying that the Tigray People's Liberation Front had "structured itself so as to bring the central government to its knees" and that talks could "only lead to the partition of Ethiopia", setting a precedent for secession by other groups in the region.[72]

Personal life

Ismail Guelleh is married with four children.[11]

Following a visit of Guelleh and his entourage to Paris in late 2018, France’s National Financial Prosecutor's Office opened a preliminary investigation into the alleged fraudulent acquisition of several properties in the city.[73] The investigation, launched after a complaint from anti-corruption NGO Sherpa and focusing on Guelleh’s wife, eldest daughter and son in law, is ongoing as of July 2021.[74]

References

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  71. ^ "Somali, Somaliland Leaders Resume Talks in Djibouti | Voice of America - English". www.voanews.com. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
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  74. ^ Welle (www.dw.com), Deutsche. "France-Djibouti : l'entourage d'Ismaël Omar Guelleh visé par une enquête sur des biens mal acquis | DW | 11 March 2019". DW.COM (in French). Retrieved 8 July 2021.
Political offices
Preceded by President of Djibouti
1999–present
Incumbent
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Town in North Rhine-Westphalia, GermanyOerlinghausen TownA view of Oerlinghausen FlagCoat of armsLocation of Oerlinghausen within Lippe district Oerlinghausen Show map of GermanyOerlinghausen Show map of North Rhine-WestphaliaCoordinates: 51°58′00″N 08°40′00″E / 51.96667°N 8.66667°E / 51.96667; 8.66667CountryGermanyStateNorth Rhine-WestphaliaAdmin. regionDetmold DistrictLippe Government • Mayor (2020–25) Dirk Becker[1] (SPD)Area …

Emperor of China from 1644 to 1661 Fulin redirects here. For the Roman and Byzantine empires in contemporary Chinese sources, see Daqin. Emperor Shizu of Qing redirects here. For the ancestor of the Qing emperors, see Bukūri Yongšon. Shunzhi Emperor順治帝Emperor of the Qing dynastyReign8 October 1643 – 5 February 1661PredecessorHong TaijiSuccessorKangxi EmperorRegentsDorgon (1643–1650)Jirgalang (1643–1647)Emperor of ChinaReign1644–1661PredecessorChongzhen Emperor (Ming dynasty)Succe…

King of the Khmer Empire Harshavarman IKing of the Khmer EmpireReign910 – 923PredecessorYasovarman ISuccessorIshanavarman IIDied923HouseVarman DynastyFatherYasovarman IMotherJayadeviReligionHinduism Baksei Chamkrong, temple of Harshavarman Harshavarman I (Khmer: ហស៌វរ្ម័នទី១; or Rudraloka, died in 923) was an Angkorian king who reigned in 910–923 CE. He is mentioned by David P. Chandler, who is one of the foremost western scholars of Cambodia's modern history.[1&#…

Video CD-based optical disc format Compact Disc Super Video (SVCD)Media typeOptical discEncodingMPEG-2 video + audioCapacityUp to 800 MBRead mechanism780 nm wavelength semiconductor laserStandardIEC 62107Developed byPhilips, Sony, Panasonic, JVCUsageaudio and video storageExtended fromVideo CDExtended toDVDReleased1998 Optical discs General Optical disc Optical disc drive Optical disc authoring Authoring software Recording technologies Recording modes Packet writing Burst cut…

American outlaw and gunfighter (1859–1881) For other uses, see Billy the Kid (disambiguation). Billy the KidPortrait by Ben Wittick, c. 1880BornHenry McCarty[1]September 17 or (1859-11-23)November 23, 1859New York City, U.S.Died14 July 1881(1881-07-14) (aged 21)Fort Sumner, New MexicoCause of deathGunshot woundResting placeOld Fort Sumner Cemetery34°24′13″N 104°11′37″W / 34.40361°N 104.19361°W / 34.40361; -104.19361 (Billy the…

You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Portuguese. (November 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia. Consider adding a topic to this template: there ar…

Untuk kegunaan lain, lihat Gorontalo (disambiguasi). Koordinat: 0°53′N 122°39′E / 0.883°N 122.650°E / 0.883; 122.650 Kabupaten Gorontalo UtaraKabupaten LambangMotto: Gerbang Emas Gerakan Pembangunan Ekonomi MasyarakatPetaKabupaten Gorontalo UtaraPetaTampilkan peta SulawesiKabupaten Gorontalo UtaraKabupaten Gorontalo Utara (Indonesia)Tampilkan peta IndonesiaKoordinat: 0°47′28″N 122°52′07″E / 0.791°N 122.8687°E / 0.791; 122.8…

Ritual reflecting change of social status For other uses, see Rite of passage (disambiguation). Initiation ritual of boys in Malawi. The ritual marks the passage from child to adult, each subgroup having its customs and expectations. Part of a series onAnthropology of religionTwo ancient anthropomorphic figures from Peru Basic concepts Afterlife Animism Augury Communitas Comparative religion Divination Divine language Evolutionary origin of religion Fetishism Great Spirit Henotheism Initiation L…

Private hospital in Singapore For other uses, see Mount Elizabeth. Hospital in Mount Elizabeth, SingaporeMount Elizabeth HospitalParkway PantaiGeographyLocation3 Mount Elizabeth, Singapore 228510Coordinates1°18′16.2″N 103°50′06.3″E / 1.304500°N 103.835083°E / 1.304500; 103.835083OrganisationFundingFor-profit hospitalTypeGeneralServicesStandardsJoint Commission InternationalEmergency departmentYesBeds345HistoryOpened8 December 1979; 43 years ago…

Body-waves consist of P-waves that are the first to arrive (see seismogram), or S-waves, or reflections of either. Body-waves travel through rock directly.[1] mB scale The original body-wave magnitude – mB or mB (uppercase B) – was developed by Gutenberg (1945b, 1945c) and Gutenberg & Richter (1956)[2] to overcome the distance and magnitude limitations of the ML  scale inherent in the use of surface waves. mB  is based on the P- and S-waves, measured over…

CapiNome orig.Κάπυς Caratteristiche immaginarieSessomaschio Luogo di nascitaTroade Professionere di Dardania Capi (in greco antico: Κάπυς?, Kápys) è un personaggio della mitologia greca. Fu re di Dardania[1]. Indice 1 Genealogia 2 Mitologia 3 Nell'Eneide 4 Note 5 Voci correlate Genealogia Figlio di Assaraco e padre di Anchise[2][3][4] e di Acete[5], forse anche di Laocoonte e Antenore. Secondo Dionigi di Alicarnasso sua madre fu Clitodora …

Human settlement in EnglandWest MerseaWest MerseaLocation within EssexPopulation7,183 (2011)[1]OS grid referenceTM011127Civil parishWest MerseaDistrictColchesterShire countyEssexRegionEastCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townColchesterPostcode districtCO5Dialling code01206PoliceEssexFireEssexAmbulanceEast of England UK ParliamentHarwich and North Essex List of places UK England Essex 51°46′42″N 0°55′00″E / 5…

Waterfront casino resort in Louisiana Golden Nugget Lake Charles Location Lake Charles, LouisianaUnited StatesOpening dateDecember 7, 2014No. of rooms1,038Signature attractionsPrivate marinaBeach18-hole golf courseNotable restaurantsVic & Anthony's SteakhouseSaltgrass Steak HouseCadillac BarLandry's SeafoodLillie's Asian CuisineGrotto RistoranteClaim JumperThe BuffetChart HouseOwnerLandry's, Inc.Coordinates30°12′17″N 93°15′49″W / 30.20477°N 93.26374°W / 30…

Voce principale: Campionato mondiale di Formula 1 2006.  Gran Premio di Germania 2006 762º GP del Mondiale di Formula 1Gara 12 di 18 del Campionato 2006 Data 30 luglio 2006 Nome ufficiale LXVIII Großer Mobil 1 Preis von Deutschland Luogo Hockenheimring Percorso 4,574 km / 2,842 US mi Pista permanente Distanza 67 giri, 306,458 km/ 190,424 US mi Clima Soleggiato Risultati Pole position Giro più veloce Kimi Räikkönen Michael Schumacher McLaren-Mercedes in 1'14070 Ferrari in 1'16357 (nel g…

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article is an orphan, as no other articles link to it. Please introduce links to this page from related articles; try the Find link tool for suggestions. (December 2021) The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. Please help to demonstrate the notability of the topic by citing reliable secondary source…

This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (December 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Pyan GaunPyangaun settlementLocationKathmandu, NepalCoordinates27°35′52.73″N 85°19′31.84″E / 27.5979806°N 85.3255111°E / 27.5979806; 85.3255111Location of Pyan Gaun in Kathmandu Valley Pyan Gaun, also spelled as …

Sofía Rei live in Brooklyn, New York Sofia ReiBirth nameSofia Eugenia KoutsovitisBornBuenos Aires, ArgentinaGenresLatin, experimental, alternative, world, jazz, electronicOccupation(s)Vocalist, songwriter, producer, educatorLabelsWorld Village, Harmonia Mundi, Cascabelera, TzadikWebsitesofiamusic.comMusical artist Sofia Eugenia Koutsovitis, known professionally as Sofia Rei, is an Argentinian vocalist, songwriter, producer, and educator. A classically trained mezzo-soprano, Rei's influences inc…

1981–1982 South Korean television series For other uses, see First Republic (disambiguation). 1st RepublicThe show's titlecardAlso known asThe First RepublicHangul제1공화국Hanja第1共和國 GenrePeriod dramaDocudramaBiopicScreenplay byKim Gi-palOpening themeFanfare for the Common Man[1]Country of originSouth KoreaOriginal languageKoreanNo. of seasons1No. of episodes39ProductionProducersGo Seok-man, Lee Yeon-hunOriginal releaseNetworkMBC TVRelease2 April 1981 (1981-04-02) …

У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. М4. У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Дон (значения). Автодорога«Дон» М4 М4Новокаширское шоссе, Новокаширка, Ростовка, Черноморка, Сочинская трасса, Новокрымка, Новое Крымское шоссе М4 в сети автодорог России фе…

PemberitahuanTemplat ini mendeteksi bahwa artikel bahasa ini masih belum dinilai kualitasnya oleh ProyekWiki Bahasa dan ProyekWiki terkait dengan subjek. Terjadi false positive? Silakan laporkan kesalahan ini. 07.56, Rabu, 20 Maret, 2024 (UTC) • hapus singgahan Sebanyak 1.331 artikel belum dinilai Cari artikel bahasa  Cari berdasarkan kode ISO 639 (Uji coba)  Kolom pencarian ini hanya didukung oleh beberapa antarmuka Halaman bahasa acak Bahasa Khanty ханты ясаӈ hantĭ j…

بيان العلامعلومات عامةالمكان العلا، منطقة المدينة المنورةالبلد  السعوديةتعديل - تعديل مصدري - تعديل ويكي بيانات بيان العلا بيان اتفاق مصالحة أعلن عنه وزير الخارجية الكويتي الشيخ أحمد ناصر المحمد الصباح في 4 يناير 2021، يؤذن بإنهاء الأزمة الدبلوماسية مع قطر، وقع عليه من قبل…

Region di DenmarkRegioner (Bahasa Denmark) Midtjylland Nordjylland Syddanmark Hovedstaden Sjælland LetakKerajaan DenmarkJumlah wilayah5 (per 1 Januari 2021)PemerintahanDewan Regional (Regionsråd)Pembagian administratifMunisipalitas (Kommuner) Region adalah wilayah administratif tingkat satu di Denmark. Daftar region di Denmark Berikut ini merupakan daftar region di Denmark Lambang Nama(terjemahan literal) Pusat pemerintahan Kota terbesar Luas wilayah(km2) Region Hovedstaden(Region Ibu Kota Den…

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