Hassan Tatanaki (Arabic: حسن طاطاناكي) is a Libyan-born businessman who invests in building of local Libyan communities civil society programs ranging from organic farming, water resource management, water and waste water treatment, the construction of educational facilities, and improvement of the program at the Tobruk School for the Blind. Most recently, Hassan Tatanaki founded Libya El Hurra Charity (LHC) which aims to provide humanitarian aid and relief to internally displaced, refugees, and vulnerable populations such as women and children in Libya, and refugees situated in Tunisia and Egypt.[citation needed]

Biography

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Tatanaki serves as chairman of the oilfield drilling company Challenger Limited. Educated and raised in the United Kingdom, he has directed his private philanthropic efforts toward humanitarian relief for Arab and African states in crisis and to promote moderate interpretations of the Muslim faith. Tatanaki provided the seed funding for Cairo-based Azhari TV, a new satellite television channel launched in August 2009 during the start of Ramadan. The channel aims to discourage extremism and promote the moderate face of Islam. Azhari, which features 24-hour entertainment and education programming, is the brainchild of clerics associated with Al-Azhar University, considered the highest authority of religious teachings in Sunni Islam.[1]

Libya El Hurra Charity (LHC)

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Libya El Hurra Charity (LHC)[2] was established within the first week of the Libyan crisis to provide humanitarian aid and relief to internally displaced, refugees, and vulnerable populations such as women and children.

Business activities

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Challenger Limited, one of the leading drilling, work-over, and oilfield services companies in the region, operates throughout North Africa and the Gulf region. Acquired by Tatanaki in 1991, Challenger currently owns and operates a fleet of 30 rigs and has worked with major energy corporations including Total, Marathon, and Verenex.[3]

In January 2008, Bronco Drilling acquired a 25% equity interest in Challenger and added several rigs to the overall fleet.[4][5]

Other activities

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Tatanaki is a philanthropist whose family foundation supports an array of humanitarian, cultural, and educational causes in Africa and the Middle East. He provided new housing for families in Egypt who were displaced when a section of rock broke off from a large outcrop in the Moqattam district of Cairo in 2008,[6] food and medical supplies to the Southern Sudan during the Second Sudanese Civil War, and development aid for a variety of projects in Libya. Tatanaki and Dr. Khaled Azzam, Chief Executive of The Prince's School of Traditional Arts, signed a Memorandum of Understanding on 30 January 2007, signifying their cooperation to open a school of traditional arts and handicrafts in Tripoli to train Libyan youth in the principles of traditional Islamic art and design. This training is intended to contribute to the ongoing restoration of the urban environment in the old city, or medina, of Tripoli.[7]

References

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  1. ^ "Obama out on a limb in Cairo". thestar.com. 2009-06-03. Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  2. ^ "libyaelhurra.org - libyaelhurra Resources and Information". www.libyaelhurra.org. Retrieved 2018-11-27.
  3. ^ VC Bank Acquires Stake in Challenger, Venture Capital Bank, November 21, 2006
  4. ^ "Bronco Drilling announces intl expansion; purchases 25% equity interest in Challenger Limited". Reuters. 2007-11-15. Retrieved 2022-12-25.
  5. ^ Gulf Financiers Seek to Invest in Libya, Africa Intelligence
  6. ^ [1] Archived 2009-07-27 at the Wayback Machine Death in Moqattam
  7. ^ Libya: The Old City of Tripoli Archived 2011-10-02 at the Wayback Machine The Prince's School of Traditional Arts. (Accessed May 24, 2008)
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