4/18/2024
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Hassan Shiekh Mahamud: Personal Profile

Personal Data
Name : Hassan Shiekh Mahamud
Date of Birth : Nov. 29, 1955
Place of Birth : Jalalaqsi, Somalia
Marital Status : Married with Children
e-mail: [email protected]

Qualification

 1989 – 1990 Attended MBA program in SIDAM Somalia in collaboration with state University in New York (SUNY Albany) – not completed

 1986 – 1988 Master of Technical Education in Bhopal University India

 1978 – 1981 Bachelor of Technology in Somali National University.
Trainings, Seminars and short courses attended

Conferences attended

o 2006 Result Based Management Seminar by WSP International in Windsor Nairobi, Kenya
o 2005 Community Driven Development (CDD) workshop, World Bank Institute, held in Dar es Salam, Tanzania

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o 2001 Summer Peace Building Institute, Eastern Mennonite University Harrisonburg, Virginia USA
o 1996 conflict management seminar in Mogadishu, implemented SAACID Somalia and ACCORD South Africa

 Reflections of 50 years of Independence in Somalia: what went wrong June, 2010

 Somali Reconstruction and Development Conference May 21-23, 2010 Istanbul, Turkey

 Somali Civil Society and EC policy makers Dialogue - Brussels, 5 March,2010

 Somali Civil Society Congress in Mombasa in 2009

 Rebuilding Somali Public Finance Management World Bank, Nairobi, June, 2006

 Somali Peace Process in Eldorette and Mbagathi Kenya 2002 – 2004

Recent Publications

 Building Regional Capacity to Protect: The Role of Civil Society, Nairobi - 6-7 November 2003

 The role of Somali CSOs in conflict and peace – a paper presented in Somali Social Forum Conference held in Mogadishu. 16-17 December 2003

 Somali Reconciliation conference, Arta, Djibouti 2000

 Somali Reconciliation conference, Addis Ababa 1993

 Building Structures for Peace: The Banadir Administration – ACCORD Publication 2009

 Somalia’s Missing Millions: The Somali Diaspora and its Role in Development, March, 2009 UNDP Somalia Publication

 A History of Mediation in Somalia Since 1988 - an International Peace Building Alliance (Interpeace) Publication 2009

 Somali Civil Society: Peace Building in a Collapsed State, 2008
Profile (Experience)

I graduated Somali National University in 1981 and was employed in the Ministry of education as a teacher / trainer Lafole Technical Secondary School where I teach students and train artisans. In 1984, I joined Technical Teachers’ Training College as a lecturer and in 1986 became head of department before I traveled to India to attend a master of technical education program offered by Bhopal university in India. In 1988 upon my return to Somalia, I was selected as a counterpart to a group of international experts working on Upgrading Technical and Vocational Education of Somalia – a project implemented by UNESCO. My main area of concentration in the project was undertaking the research component of the project where I extensively travelled throughout Somalia.

After the collapse of the Somali state, I worked with UNICEF as education officer in south and central zone of Somalia in 1993. This task mainly involved in reviving education sector in this zone. I travelled extensively in the zone researching the magnitude of the collapse in the education sector and consulting the people on how to revive the sector as a community based endeavor

After the departure of the UNOSOM in 1995, I mostly involved in civic actions such as forming pressure groups on the political factions to reconcile. The main activities engaged were attempting to open channels of communication between and among the faction leaders in Mogadishu. Later on, this became the seed for the formation and strengthening of the Somali civil society. As a result, networks, coalitions and professional associations emerged in Mogadishu one after the other.

After the Cairo agreement of 1997, I was member of a team that negotiated and successfully dismantled the GREENLINE that divided Mogadishu into north and south after the disastrous war of 1992.

In the last part of the 1990s, the conditions of the Somali youth was very critical. Those graduated from the secondary schools were having limited opportunities for higher learning and professional career development. As a member of ex university lecturers’ forum, we conducted need assessment survey in the market and identified the importance of establishing technical and vocational centers which some of them later on became higher learning centers such as universities.

As result, I became one of the founders of Somali Institute of Management and Administration Development (SIMAD) in 1999. It was the first institute of its kind since the collapse of the Somali state. The main purpose of SIMAD was to produce mid level management and administrative technicians for the post conflict reconstruction of Somalia. I became the first dean of the institute until I resigned in 2010. Currently SIMAD is a leading university in academics, consultancy, research, and training in Somalia. Close 4,000 student are registered in its undergraduate programs as of September 2011and more than 1,500 students graduated since 2002 at diploma and bachelor’s degree in various disciplines.

In 2001, I joined Center for Research and Dialogue (CRD) as a researcher in post conflict reconstruction of Somalia. I extensively traveled in south central Somalia conducting research in the post conflict reconstruction issues and local peoples’ priorities. Later on I became a principal researcher. In 2004, CRD appointed me as a focal point for the issues related to the civil society strengthening. In consultation with other prominent civil society members, I worked in establishing the Mogadishu monthly forum, which became the first open neutral space for the public to express their views regarding the pertinent issues of the time.

In late 2005, I became program coordinator in CRD. The civil society in Mogadishu collectively appointed me to lead the formation of Somali civil Society Forum – a conglomerate of networks, coalitions and action groups engaged in different sectors. Since then the forum became a unified voice for the Somali Civil Society.

In 2009 - 2010, I worked as consultant in the Ministry of Planning and International Cooperation (MoPIC), Transitional Federal Government (TFG) in establishing Somali Aid Coordination and Management Unit within the Ministry.

Since 2007, I worked as a consultant and advisor in Somali political crisis with various international and local organizations. Among the organization I worked with include:
1. UNDP Somalia
2. Life and Peace Institute
3. Conciliation Resources
4. Oxford University, Center for Refugee studies.
5. International Peace Building Alliance (Interpeace)
6. Center for Research and Dialogue (CRD)
7. Department for International Development (DfID)
8. Transitional Federal Government of Somalia (TFG)
9. Unicef Somalia

In 2011, I became a founding member of PEACE AND DEVELOPMENT PARTY (PDP) in Somalia. The first political party established in Mogadishu. I became its first Chairman



 





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