List of American University of Beirut alumni

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The American University of Beirut is a private international university which has its campus in Beirut, Lebanon. As of January 2020, the university has 9,495 students, 1,214 faculty and over 70,000 alumni.[1]

Afghanistan[]

Name Class year Notability Ref(s)
Anwar ul-Haq Ahady 1973 Minister of Commerce and Industry (2010–2013), Minister of Finance (2004–2009)
1973 chairman, Movement for Peaceful Transformation of Afghanistan. Ex-minister of education, ex-minister of refugees & repatriates
Ashraf Ghani 1973 Incumbent president of Afghanistan [2]
Yousef Pashtun 1973 Minister of urban development (2002, 2004–2009), governor of Kandahar Province (2003) [3]

Armenia[]

Name Class year Notability Ref(s)
Avedis Donabedian 1944 Armenian doctor and pioneer in study of health care, known for the Donabedian model [4]

Bahrain[]

  • (former minister of trade and industry)
  • (former minister health between 1972 and 1982, and education between 1982 and 1995. The first Bahraini medical doctor)
  • Abdulrahman Mohammed Jamsheer (leading businessman and chairman of the foreign affairs, defence and national security of the Shura Council in the Kingdom of Bahrain)
  • (currently dean at the University of Bahrain-College of Health Sciences, director of Quality and Excellence Centre 2010–2017 – Arabian Gulf University, associate dean of the College of Health Sciences 1999–2004, head analyst head registration and student affairs 1983–1998, Bahrain Flour Mills 1980–1982 Bahrain)

Canada[]

China[]

  • Ma Haide (1910–1988) (doctor credited with eradication of leprosy and many venereal diseases in China, first foreigner granted citizenship in the People's Republic of China, did clinical training at AUB)

Germany[]

  • (ambassador to Jordan and former ambassador to Lebanon)

Iran[]

Iraq[]

AUB Alumni and former Prime Minister of Iraq Sa'dun Hammadi

Israel[]

Japan[]

Jordan[]

  • , MD (minister of health)
  • (prime minister)
  • Suleiman Nabulsi (prime minister from 1956-1957)
  • (prime minister)
  • Abdul Hamid Sharaf (prime minister)
  • Ahmad Touqan (prime minister)
  • Abdul Raouf Al-Rawabdeh (prime minister)
  • (prime minister)
  • Makhluf Haddadin (chemist, co-discoverer of Davis–Beirut reaction)
  • Rima Khalaf (deputy prime minister, minister of finance, and senior UN official)
  • (economist; former dean of the business school, Lebanese French University, Iraq; currently member of the board of directors, Global Challenges Forum, Switzerland)
  • (second woman minister and current member of the Upper House "Majlis Al-A'yan")
  • (foreign minister and academic)
  • (finance minister, and former governor of the Central Bank of Jordan)
  • Akram Zu'eiter (foreign minister, ambassador and writer)
  • (former chairman of Arab Bank)
  • Samih Darwazah (founder of Hikma Pharmaceuticals, one of the United Kingdom's largest pharmaceutical businesses)
  • Talal Abu-Ghazaleh (founder of Talal Abu-Ghazaleh Organization)
  • (minister of higher education and scientific research and chairman of Jordan Atomic Energy Commission)
  • Ja'afar Tuqan (architect)
  • Laith Shubeilat (politician)
  • (tourism minister)
  • (doctor, MP, minister of health and labor and assistant director general of I.L.O.)

Kuwait[]

  • (former minister of health)
  • (one of the earliest parliamentarians)
  • (Cabinet minister – one of the first four women members of Parliament – Transferred to California State University – Chico during the Lebanese War)

Lebanon[]

Malaysia[]

  • Mohamad Noah bin Omar (first speaker of Malaysian Parliament [Dewan Rakyat], also the father-in-law of the second and third prime minister of Malaysia)

The Maldives[]

  • Mohamed Waheed Hassan (president of The Maldives – appointed in 2013 when President Mohamed Nasheed resigned)
  • Abdulla Yameen (president of The Maldives – elected in 2013)
  • (auditor general of The Maldives)
  • Zahiya Zareer (minister of education of The Maldives – held office from 2005 to 2008; high commissioner of Maldives for Sri Lanka (2013))
  • (minister of gender and family of The Maldives – held office from 2005 to 2008)

Palestine[]

Saudi Arabia[]

  • Abdullah Jum'ah (former president, director, and CEO of Saudi Aramco)
  • Omar al-Saqqaf – (former minister of foreign affairs)
  • (first Saudi woman medical doctor)

Somaliland[]

Sudan[]

  • Ismail al-Azhari (1900–1969), (first president of independent Sudan)
  • (founder of , Sudan's first private university)

Syria[]

United States[]

AUB alumni and American ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad at the World Economic Forum

Yemen[]

  • Farea Al-Muslim (activist)

References[]

  1. ^ American University of Beirut Facts and Figures 2020 (PDF) (Report). American University of Beirut. January 2020. pp. 4, 19, 33.
  2. ^ "Afghanistan's Ashraf Ghani in key dates". The Express Tribune. Agence France-Presse. December 22, 2019. Retrieved January 1, 2021.
  3. ^ Adamec, Ludwig W. (2012). Historical Dictionary of Afghanistan. Historical Dictionaries series. Scarecrow Press. p. 339. ISBN 978-0-8108-7815-0.
  4. ^ Best, M (2004). "Avedis Donabedian: father of quality assurance and poet" (PDF). Quality and Safety in Health Care. BMJ. 13 (6): 472. doi:10.1136/qshc.2004.012591. ISSN 1475-3898.

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