Ladan tabatabaei biography of williams
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Global Burden of Cardiovascular Diseases and Risks,
George A Mensah 5 , Yohannes Habtegiorgis Abate 6 , Mohammadreza Abbasian 7 , Foad Abd-Allah 8 , Ashkan Abdollahi 9 , Mohammad Abdollahi 10 , Deldar Morad Abdulah 11 , Auwal Abdullahi 12 , Ayele Mamo Abebe 13 , Aidin Abedi 14 , Armita Abedi 15 , Olugbenga Olusola Abiodun 16 , Hiwa Abubaker Ali 17 , Eman Abu-Gharbieh 18 , Niveen M E Abu-Rmeileh 19 , Salahdein Aburuz 20 , Abdelrahman I Abushouk 21 , Ahmed Abu-Zaid 22 , Tigist Demssew Adane 23 , Nicola J Adderley 24 , Oladimeji M Adebayo 25 , Bashir Aden 26 , Temitayo Esther Adeyeoluwa 27 , Olorunsola Israel Adeyomoye&nb • Since , the senior leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran has been linked to at least extrajudicial killings of the regime’s political opponents in 19 different countries around the world. These operations flourished in contravention of both international and national legal regimes, and were planned at the highest levels of state. Many of those responsible are still in power today. The IHRDC’s new report is the most authoritative study of Iran’s global campaign of political assassination to appear to date. The Iranian Revolution was the result of a broad-based opposition movement that encompassed clerics, Islamists, communists, ethnic nationalists and liberal secularists. Although these groups were able to unite around the common goal of deposing Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, they could not agree on the shape the future republic should take and the triumphant coalition gradually fell apart in mutual acrimony. Between and , a struggle for power rage • Iranian politician and activist (–) Mehdi Bazargan (Persian: مهدی بازرگان; 1 September – 20 January ) was an Iranian scholar, academic, long-time pro-democracy activist and head of Iran's interim government. One of the leading figures of Iranian Revolution of , he was appointed prime minister in February by Ayatollah Khomeini, making him Iran's first prime minister after the revolution. He resigned his position in November of the same year, in protest at the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Iran and as an acknowledgement of his government's failure in preventing it.[5] He was the head of the first engineering department of University of Tehran. Bazargan was born into an Azerbaijani family[6][7] in Tehran on 1 September [8][9] His father, Hajj Abbasqoli Tabrizi (died ) was a self-made merchant and a religious activist in bazaar guilds.[8] Bazargan went to France
Table of Contents
1. Preface
Mehdi Bazargan
Early life and education
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