A. Sbitany & Sons Co. Ltd. since Apr 2007
Branch Manager
Akram Sbitany & Sons Company Jun 2002 - Mar 2007
Deputy Branch Manager - Ramallah Center
Akram Sbitany & Sons Company Jul 1998 - Apr 2002
Sales
Education:
The Catholic School Of Our Lady Annunciation - Ramallah - Palestine
Syria Justice and Accountability Centre
Executive Director
International Center For Journalists (Icfj) Jan 2010 - Jan 2012
Program Officer
Human Rights Watch Aug 2007 - Feb 2009
Research Assistant and Research Analyst
Education:
George Mason University - Schar School of Policy and Government 2013 - 2014
Masters, Public Policy
Lebanese University 2001 - 2006
Bachelors, Law
George Mason University
Masters, Public Policy
Skills:
Human Rights International Humanitarian Law Transitional Justice Documentation Governance Rule of Law Political Risk Analysis Middle East Politics International Relations Team Leadership Team Management Management Research Social Media Marketing Syria Policy Analysis Civil Society Policy Nonprofits International Development Politics Public Speaking Public Policy Ngos Fundraising Social Media Public Relations International Organizations Capacity Building Writing Conflict Political Science Foreign Policy Editing Leadership International Human Rights Microsoft Office Strategic Planning Nonprofit Organizations Relationship Building Donor Engagement Executive Leadership Nonprofit Management Program Management European Union Strategy
Interests:
Civil Rights and Social Action Politics Human Rights
Languages:
English Arabic
Certifications:
Diploma In News Writing and Editing- Friedrich Naumann Foundation
may wait to see whether large-scale protests in Hama continue. He knows that using military aggression against peaceful demonstrations in a symbolic place like Hama would lose him support even from Russia and China," Mohammad Abdallah, another Syrian activist, told Reuters from exile in Washington.
see whether large-scale protests in Hama continue. He knows that using military aggression against peaceful demonstrations in a symbolic place like Hama would lose him support even from Russia and China," Syrian activist Mohammad Abdallah told Reuters from exile in Washington.
"Assad may wait to see whether large-scale protests in Hama continue. He knows that using military aggression against peaceful demonstrations in a symbolic place like Hama would lose him support even from Russia and China," Syrian activist Mohammad Abdallah told Reuters from exile in Washington.