Mohamed Youssef Ibrahim

Mohamed Youssef Ibrahim
Minister of Interior of Egypt
In office
7 December 2011  1 August 2012
President Hussein Tantawi (Acting)
Mohamed Morsi
Prime Minister Kamal Ganzouri
Preceded by Mansour el-Essawy
Succeeded by Ahmed Gamal El Din
Personal details
Born (1947-01-23) 23 January 1947
Military service
Allegiance Egypt
Years of service 1967-2012
Rank

Mohamed Youssef Ibrahim (Arabic: محمد يوسف إبراهيم; born 23 January 1947) is a former minister of interior in the Egyptian Government. Retired from the ministry in 2007, Ibrahim was appointed on 7 December 2011 by Kamal Ganzouri, then prime minister of Egypt. Ibrahim was replaced by his aide Ahmed Gamal El Din in an August 2012 cabinet reshuffle by Mohamed Morsi.[1]

Early life and education

Ibrahim was born in Sohag, Egypt, on 23 January 1947. He was conscripted into the Egyptian Army in 1965 at the age of 18 and served in an Infantry Mortar regiment and participated in the 1967 War. He later joined the Egyptian Police College and graduated in 1968 and was commissioned as a Lieutenant in the National Police.

Career

After graduating, Ibrahim joined Cairo Police Directorate, then worked in the public security sector as a precinct officer. In the 1970s, he was posted in the State Security. He served as director of the Security Directorates of Sohag and El Minya in the 1990s. In 2001, Ibrahim became assistant minister of interior for Central Upper Egypt. In 2002, he was appointed assistant minister of interior for prisons department. In 2003 he was appointed assistant minister of interior and the director general of Giza police directorate. In 2006, Ibrahim became first assistant minister of interior for the economic security sector and he retired in 2007.[2]

Controversy

During his tenure in Upper Egypt from 1989 to 1999, there were several terrorist attacks by Islamic fundamentalists.In December 2005,an incident known as the “Mostafa Mahmoud massacre” occurred in Cairo under his command, earning him serious criticism for the violence used against Sudanese refugees.[3]

References

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