Officially born in
Adda Daoueni, he was actually born in Bandracouni, the village of his mother Naïme Mouchidra Moussa. He was born Djamil Halidi but was renamed Ibrahim Halidi in 1960 when he lived in
Ouani to receive treatment and attend school. Ibrahim Halidi supervised the National Revolutionary Youth Committee and was the second most important person for
Ali Soilih's regime. When Ali Soilih and his government resigned, Ibrahim Halidi became president for about a month. The revolutionary regime sentenced Ibrahim Halidi to death in 1977 at a trial in the Hotel Alamal. After the May 1978 coup against Ali Soilih, Ibrahim Halidi was imprisoned in Hombo and Patsy in
Anjouan. He obtained his
baccalaureate in 1978 and went to
Togo to study philosophy and education at the
University of Lomé. He returned to the
Comoros in 1983 and taught philosophy at a secondary school in
Fomboni (
Moheli), then in
Mutsamudu and
Domoni (Anjouan). After the
1990 presidential election, Ibrahim Halidi became Minister of the Interior, then Minister of Information, Culture, Youth and Sport. He founded the
Union of Democrats for Development (UDD) party with Saïd El Anis Mohamed Djohar and Mohamed Dhakoine Abdou. After the
general elections of 22 and 29 November 1992, Ibrahim Halidi became a member of parliament, before being appointed
Prime Minister of the Comoros from January to May 1993. Ibrahim Halidi stood in the presidential elections of March 1996. After this election, he became Minister of Public Health, Population and Social Affairs, then Minister of Transport, Tourism and Telecommunications. After the dissolution of the Union of Democrats for Development (UDD), Ibrahim Halidi became secretary general and then president of another party, the
Movement for the Comoros (MPC). In December 2002, he ran for president of the autonomous island of Anjouan and came second. In the presidential elections of April and May 2006, he also stood for election and came second. He was diagnosed with
brain cancer in 2017 in
Tananarive. He underwent treatment in
Madagascar,
Mauritius and
Tanzania. He died in
Mamoudzou hospital in
Mayotte on 23 February 2020. He is the author of the book
Comores. Unité dans la pluralité, published in 2021 by
L'Harmattan. ==References==