Find a Ruler
Member Login
World Rulers Facts
GDP:
GDP per cap
Population
Online users
Area
Median age
Sex ratio
Countries
Literacy
$65 trillion
$10,000
6.6 billion
1.02 billion
510.072m skm
28 years
1.07male/fem
193
82%

 

New World Rulers and Leaders

Mr. Somchai Wongsawat, Prime Minister of ThailandMr. Somchai Wongsawat, Prime Minister of Thailand
September 17, 2008



ASIF ALI ZARDARI, President of PakistanASIF ALI ZARDARI, President of Pakistan
Sept 6, 2008

Ismaïl Omar Guelleh, President of Djibouti

Ismaïl Omar Guelleh, President of Djibouti Ismaïl Omar Guelleh (born November 27, 1947 in Dire Dawa, Ethiopia) is the second president of Djibouti. He succeeded his uncle, Hassan Gouled Aptidon, in 1999.

Background

In the late 1960s, Guelleh migrated to Djibouti before finishing high school. He later joined the police, becoming a junior non-commissioned officer. After Djibouti became independent, he became head of the secret police and chief of the cabinet in the government of Hassan Gouled Aptidon. He received training from the Somali National Security Service and then from the French Secret Service, and was intended to become his uncle's successor. "The key to Guelleh's success is the skillful way in which he has played the cards in his strong hand", according to PINR. "As the head of Djibouti's security agency under his uncle's regime, Guelleh gained an intimate knowledge of the country's political forces and has used it to practice a politics of divide and rule, supplemented by repression and intimidation when expedient."

Elected president in April, 1999

Guelleh won the presidential election of April 1999 with 74% of the vote and took office on May 8.
In December 2000 he sacked the chief of staff of the National Police Force, Yacin Yabeh, who shortly afterward unsuccessfully attempted a coup.
He was the only candidate in the presidential election in Djibouti held on April 8, 2005. Without a challenger, he won 100% of the ballots cast and was sworn in for a second six-year term, which he said will be his last, on May 7.