Peket Ahmadi
| Peket Ahmadi | |
|---|---|
| 2nd Prime Minister | |
| In office June 11, 1991 – August 13, 2008 | |
| Preceded by | Beshootu Pyvupi |
| Succeeded by | Mahshid Shi'upa |
| 2nd Leader of the Shooda-Tsiba Party | |
| In office June 11, 1991 – August 12, 2008 | |
| Preceded by | Beshootsu Pyvupi |
| Succeeded by | Mahshid Shi'upa |
| 1st Ja-Prime Minister | |
| In office June 25, 1991 – August 12, 2008 | |
| Prime Minister | Beshootsu Pyvupi |
| Succeeded by | Mahshid Shi'upa |
| Personal details | |
| Born | August 14, 1936 Chatoogu’u, Tsibitsy |
| Died | December 15, 2018 (aged Error: Need valid year, month, day)Expression error: Unexpected > operator. Chatoogu'u, Tsibitsy |
| Cause of death | Lung Cancer |
| Resting place | Chatoogu'u, Tsibitsy |
| Political party | Shooda-Tsiba |
| Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Voohhada Ahmadi (1970-2018) |
| Children | 3 |
| Mother | Eleanor Ahmadi |
| Father | Gichypy Ahmadi |
| Occupation | University of Central Vi'atsy |
Peket Ahmadi was a retired Tsiba politician and member of the Shooda-Tsiba party. He was the second Prime Minister of Tsiba, as well as the second Leader of the Shooda-Tsiba Party. He worked with the resistance against the Islamist government of Tsiba through the 1950s and 60s. Ahmadi served as the first Ja-Prime Minister of Tsiba and succeeded Beshootsu Pyvupi after her assasination in 1991. He retired from politics in 2008 and died in 2018 at his home in Chatoogu'u of lung cancer.
Early Life and Career
Ahmadi was born in 1936, in the city of Chatoogu'u. His father was a high school teacher and his mother was a homemaker. He enrolled at the University of Central Vi'atsy in 1954. He first became involved in the growing socialist movement while in college. He was arrested three times over the course of his college education and, by the time of his graduation, was one of the most prominent anti-Islamist student leaders.
Ahmadi remained active politically while working odd jobs after college. He went into hiding in 1964 after receiving numerous credible threats to his life as the government began openly attacking and murdering political dissenters.
Political Career
Personal Life
Ahmadi met and married his wife in 1970. The couple had three children. After Ahmadi retired from politics they returned to Ahmadi's hometown of Chatoogu'u. In 2016 Ahmadi was diagnosed with Stage 3 lung cancer, which ultimately killed him two years later in 2018. Ahmadi was buried in Chatoogu'u's city cemetary, at the requests of his widow.
Ahmadi identified as non-religious.