ARA:
عبد العزيز الحكيم (1950 - 26 أغسطس 2009)، رجل دين وسياسي عراقي. هو ابن المرجع الشيعي محسن الحكيم. عاش معارضاً لنظام صدام حسين مع أخيه محمد باقر الحكيم. ترأس المجلس الأعلى الإسلامي العراقي (المجلس الأعلى للثورة الإسلامية في العراق سابقاً) الذي إستلم رئاسته بعد مقتل أخيه محمد باقر الحكيم في هجوم انتحاري بسيارة مفخخة استهدف موكبه بعد خروجه من باب ضريح الإمام علي في النجف، عضو في مجلس النواب العراقي وزعيم الائتلاف العراقي الموحد. نجله عمار ...
1 The reason why people got together and rose up against the fascist regime of Saddam was because they had a common national and religious interest. - Abdul Aziz al-Hakim, amalia
1 Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim: "There is no problem between Shias and Sunnis.", amalia
33 أنا لا أوافق. سید عبد العزيز الحكيم هو سوء الاختيار. على سبيل المثال ، بسبب... (إذا أردت أن أكتب لماذا ، لقد كتبت هنا), negative
BAGHDAD — Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim, the scion of a revered clerical family who channeled rising Shiite Muslim power after the fall of Saddam Hussein to become one of Iraq's most influential politicians, died Wednesday in Iran, the country that was long his key ally. He was 59. The calm, soft-spoken al-Hakim, who died of lung cancer, was a kingmaker in Iraq's politics, working behind the scenes as the head of the country's biggest Shiite political party. But for many in Iraq's Shiite majority, he was more than that – a symbol of their community's victory and seizure of power ...
TEHRAN – Iraqi President Jalal Talibani has visited the leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, Abdul Aziz al-Hakim who is hospitalized in Tehran.Talibani along with a number of Iraqi political and parliamentary officials arrived in Tehran Saturday night to visit Al-Hakim who is under treatment for his lung cancer after he gave up a 30-year smoking habit in 2008.Talibani has come to visit Al-Hakim on an unofficial trip, Iraq’s ambassador Muhammad-Majid al-Sheikh to Iran told the Mehr News Agency.Al-Sheikh said the visits by high-ranking Iraqi officials including its ...
Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki offered his preference for a "National Coalition for the State of Law" after the January 2010 elections as a substitute for the current Shi'ite coalition which comprises his Al-Da’wa Party, the Supreme Islamic Council under Abdul-Aziz Al-Hakim, and elements from the organization of the young Shi'ite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr.He said that the proposed political coalition will be open to everyone – Sunnis, Shi'ites, and Kurds.[Al-Maliki won the provincial elections early this year with the slogan of "dawlat al qanoon," or "the State of Law."]Source: ...