Nahdi Saqqaf: Difference between revisions
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==Private Life== | ==Private Life== | ||
Saqqaf does not hold citizenship in either Jordan, the place of her birth, or {{wp|India}}, her mother's homeland—prior to 10 December 1992, only children born to Indian fathers (not mothers) were eligible for {{wp|Indian nationality law#Entitlement by birth or descent|citizenship by descent}}, while {{wp|Jordanian nationality law#Nationality at birth|Jordanian nationality laws}} have historically operated under the ''{{wp|jus sanguinis}}'' principle, the interpretation of which are extremely similar to the former Indian policy. She is also ineligible for naturalization, having only lived in the latter country until she was six, and after that returning, as aforementioned, to attend university there. | Saqqaf has two younger siblings—Nilam, born in 1994, and Nur, born in 1999. | ||
Saqqaf does not hold citizenship in either Jordan, the place of her birth, or {{wp|India}}, her mother's homeland—prior to 10 December 1992, only children born to Indian fathers (not mothers) were eligible for {{wp|Indian nationality law#Entitlement by birth or descent|citizenship by descent}}, while {{wp|Jordanian nationality law#Nationality at birth|Jordanian nationality laws}} have historically operated under the ''{{wp|jus sanguinis}}'' principle, the interpretation of which are extremely similar to the former Indian policy. She is also ineligible for naturalization, having only lived in the latter country until she was six, and after that returning, as aforementioned, to attend university there. Both of her younger siblings, however, hold {{wp|Overseas Citizenship of India|OCI status}}. | |||
Saqqaf has spoken at length about her regret in regards to not being able to speak {{wp|Tamil language|Tamil}}— | Saqqaf has spoken at length about her regret in regards to not being able to speak {{wp|Tamil language|Tamil}}— |
Revision as of 08:25, 3 December 2022
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Her Excellency Dr. Nahdi Saqqaf | |
---|---|
نهضي سقاف | |
رئيسة وزراء المَدْحَاء
Prime Minister of Al Madhaa | |
Assumed office September 2019 | |
Monarch | Zuhr bint Ghazi Al Shams (2018 - present) |
Preceded by | ? |
رئيسة مجالس الشورى
Speaker of the Majlis al-Shura | |
Assumed office September 2019 | |
Monarch | Zuhr bint Ghazi Al Shams (2018 - present) |
Preceded by | ? |
Personal details | |
Born | Nahdi Hrishti Saqqaf 16 December 1987 Jordan University Hospital, Amman, Jordan |
Height | 161 cm (5 ft 3 in) |
Spouse | Rihaan Khan (m. 2011 — present) |
Children | None |
Parents |
|
Alma mater | University of Jordan, (BA)
Zayed University, (MIA) Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, (Ph.D.) |
Other name(s) | Nahdi Saqqaf Khan |
Languages | Bangla, Arabic (along with Gulf, Jordanian and Hadhrami dialects), Hindustani (Hindi and Urdu), English, Kashmiri |
Religion | Islam |
حكومة المَدْحَاء | رئيسة وزراء
GOVERNMENT OF AL MADHAA | THE PRIME MINISTER °
Dr. Nahdi Saqqaf ([nahðˤˈiː saqˈaːf]; Arabic: نهضي سقاف, romanized: Nāhḍī Sāqāf; Bangla: নাহদি সাক্কাফ, born Nahdi Hrishti Saqqaf on 16 December 1987), also known as Nahdi Saqqaf Khan (née Saqqaf), is a Indo-Madhaa'in politician of Hadhrami, Kashmiri, Bengali and Tamil descent serving as the Prime Minister of Al Madhaa and Speaker of the Majlis, the Emirate's accompanying administrative council. She is the first female prime minister in both the Emirate and the Arab world, having been appointed to her position just before Her Excellency Najla Bouden, Tunisia's prime minister.
Early Life
Saqqaf was born Nahdi Hrishti Saqqaf on Wednesday, 16 December 1987, at the Jordan University Hospital in Amman, Jordan, as the oldest child of Harun Jawad-Lal Saqqaf, a mixed-race Madhaa'in national working as a historian and interim undergraduate professor of Law at the University of Jordan, and Dyuti Chithra Rai Sen, a professionally trained Bengali-Tamil Bharatanatyam dancer originally from Delhi.
Private Life
Saqqaf has two younger siblings—Nilam, born in 1994, and Nur, born in 1999.
Saqqaf does not hold citizenship in either Jordan, the place of her birth, or India, her mother's homeland—prior to 10 December 1992, only children born to Indian fathers (not mothers) were eligible for citizenship by descent, while Jordanian nationality laws have historically operated under the jus sanguinis principle, the interpretation of which are extremely similar to the former Indian policy. She is also ineligible for naturalization, having only lived in the latter country until she was six, and after that returning, as aforementioned, to attend university there. Both of her younger siblings, however, hold OCI status.
Saqqaf has spoken at length about her regret in regards to not being able to speak Tamil—