Mohammad Eqbal Munib (Dari: محمد اقبال منیب; died in 2012) was a Hazara politician in Afghanistan and the former governor of Ghor. He had previously served as the governor of Sar-e Pol.
As governor of Sar-e Pol, Eqbal Munib survived two attempts on his life. One was on 24 April 2007, a "mine planted near a brook" which was remotely detonated by unidentified people as Munib's car passed by. The blast caused damage to the vehicle but no casualties. No one has claimed responsibility for the attack.[1]
In May 2010 the provincial council of Ghor Province and some civil society organizations wrote a letter to President Hamid Karzai wherein they criticized the performance of Mohammad Eqbal Munib and asked for the dismissal of the governor. Following this, Governor Munib was dismissed by the president due to lack of professionalism.[1]
On 14 July 2012, he was killed in a suicide blast during a wedding party in Samangan, Samangan Province.
Notes
|
---|
Badakhshan |
- Sayed Amin Tareq (2002–2003)
- Mohammad Amaan Hamimi (2003–March 2004)
- Sayid Ikramuddin Masoomi (March 2004–February 2005)
- Sayyed Mohammad Akram (February 2005–April 2009)
- Munshi Abdul Majid (April 2009–May 2009)
- Baz Mohammad Ahmadi (April 2009–November 2010)
- Shah Waliullah Adib (November 2010–October 2015)
- Ahmad Faisal Begzad (October 2015–January 2019)
- Muhammad Zekaria Sawda (January 2019–June 2021)
- Bashir Samim (June 2021–September 2021)
- Amanuddin Mansoor (September 2021–November 2021)
- Abdul Ghani Faiq (November 2021–June 2023)
- Mohammad Ayub Khalid (June 2023–)
|
---|
Badghis | |
---|
Baghlan |
- Faqir Mohammad Mamozai
- Engineer Mohammad Omar (2003–February 2005)
- Juma Khan Hamdard (February 2005–July 2006)
- Mohammad Alam Rasikh (July 2006)
- Sayyed Ikramuddin (July 2006–November 2007)
- Muhammad Alam Ishaqzai (November 2007–January 2008)
- Abdul Jabbar Haqbin (January 2008–January 2009)
- Mohammad Akbar Barakzai (January 2009–May 2010)
- Abdul Majid Munshi (April 2010–September 2012)
- Sultan Mohammad Ebadi (September 2012–October 2015)
- Abdul Sattar Bariz (October 2015–March 2017)
- Abdul Qayyum Niazi (April 2017–July 2017)
- Abdul Hai Nemati (July 2017–April 2019)
- Ahmad Farid Baseem (April 2019–September 2019)
- Abdul Qadim Naizi (September 2019–July 2020)
- Taj Mohammad Jahid (July 2020–December 2020)
- Mohammad Akbar Barakzai (December 2020–)
- Nisar Ahmed Nusrat (Sep 2021??–November 2021)
- Qari Bakhtiar Muhaz (November 2021–February 2023)
- Hizbullah Samiullah (February 2023–April 2023)
- Abdul Rahman Haqqani (May 2023–)
|
---|
Balkh | |
---|
Bamyan | |
---|
Daykundi | |
---|
Farah |
- Abdul Hai Nemati (2002–February 2004)
- Bashir Baghlani (February 2004–July 2004)
- Assadullah Falah (July 2004–March 2005)
- Ezatullah Wasifi (March 2005–August 2006)
- Abdul Ahmad Stanikzai (August 2006–January 2007)
- Mohayuddin Baluch (January 2007–May 2008)
- Rohullah Amin (May 2008–March 2012)
- Mohammad Akram Kpalwak (April 2012–July 2013)
- Mohammad Omar Shirzad (July 2013–January 2015)
- Mohammad Asif Nang (January 2015–March 2017)
- Mohammad Arif Shah Jahan (March 2017–January 2018)
- Abdul Basir Salangi (January 2018–October 2018)
- Shoaib Sabet Mohammad Shoaib Sani (October 2018–February 2020)
- Taj Muhammad Jahid (August 2020–Unknown)
- Ghawsuddin Rahbar (January 2024–)
|
---|
Faryab | |
---|
Ghazni | |
---|
Ghor |
- Ibrahim Malikzada (2001–September 2004)
- Abdul Qadir Alam (September 2004–2005)
- Shah Abdul Ahad Afzali (2005–November 2006)
- Ahmadi Baz Mohammad (July 2007–December 2008)
- Mohammad Eqbal Munib (December 2008–May 2010)
- Fazlul Haq Nejat (October 2010–December 2010)
- Aqahi Abdullah Heiwad (December 2010–August 2012)
- Syed Anwar Rahmati (August 2012–June 2015)
- Sima Joyenda (June 2015–December 2015)
- Ghulam Naser Khaze (December 2015–January 2017)
- Nur Muhammad Kohnaward (May 2020–March 2021)
- Abdul Zaher Faizzada (March 2021–December 2021)
- Ahmad Shah Din Dost (December 2021–)
|
---|
|
|
|
|