Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Talal Al Fadhel | ||
Date of birth | 11 August 1990 | ||
Place of birth | Kuwait City, Kuwait | ||
Position(s) | Midfielder | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Kuwait SC | ||
Number | 10 | ||
Youth career | |||
2004–2012 | Kazma | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2012–2017 | Kazma | ||
2017 | Saham | ||
2018– | Kuwait SC | ||
International career | |||
2013– | Kuwait | 16 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Talal Al Fadhel (born 11 August 1990) is a Kuwaiti footballer who plays for Kazma Sporting Club as a midfielder. [1]
Khaled Fadhel is a Tunisian football former player and goalkeeper. He played for Kayseri Erciyesspor in Turkey.
Muhammad Fadhel al-Jamali was an Iraqi politician, Iraqi foreign minister, and prime minister of Iraq from 1953 to 1954. In 1945, al-Jamali, as Iraqi Minister of Foreign Affairs, signed the United Nations Charter on behalf of his country.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Iraq is a cabinet ministry of Iraq, responsible for conducting foreign relations of the country.
Hussain Fadhel is a Kuwaiti footballer who currently plays for Qadsia SC and also Kuwait national football team.
Mohamed Fadhel Ben Achour was a Tunisian theologian, writer, trade unionist, intellectual and patriot born in La Marsa.
Amer Maatouq Al Fadhel is a Kuwaiti professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Kuwaiti Premier League club Al Qadsia.
The National Security Agency (NSA) or Bahrain Intelligence Agency (BIA1) is an investigating authority in Bahrain that is associated with but not formally part of the Ministry of the Interior. The NSA was formed after King Hamad issued Decree No. 14 of 2002 declaring it as the replacement of the General Directorate for State Security Investigations. The NSA was granted the power to make arrests by a 2008 royal decree, and lost this power in 2011, again by royal decree.
Ali Abdulhadi Saleh Jafar Mushaima was a 21-year-old Bahraini who on Monday 14 February 2011, the "Bahraini Day of Rage", became the first fatality of the Bahraini Uprising. He died on his way to hospital from injuries he received when he was hit in the back by birdshot pellets fired from close range by security forces during the Bahraini uprising (2011–present). According to Nabeel Rajab, head of Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, Mushaima was participating in a protest in Al Daih, in Manama's outskirt, when he was shot.
Afek Tounes is a centre-right political party in Tunisia. Its program is liberal, focusing on secularism and civil liberties. The party mainly appealed to intellectuals and the upper class.
Fareej el-Fadhel is a core district of Manama, neighbouring the Manama Souq, in the Kingdom of Bahrain. It is adjacent to Fareej el-Makharqa. Along with the other districts of the souq in Manama, it formed the core districts of the city prior to the expansion of the city in the 20th century.
Ahmad Fadhel Mohammed Al-Nuaimi, is an Iraqi footballer who last played as a midfielder for Al-Zawraa in Iraqi Premier League.
The Special Security Forces, formerly known until 2013 as the Central Security Organization, is a paramilitary force in Yemen under the control of the Minister of the Interior and forms a key part of the Yemeni security establishment. The force was some 50,000 strong as of 2008, before the Yemeni Crisis began, and SSF units are equipped with a range of infantry weapons and armored personnel carriers. The force also has its own extrajudicial detention facilities.
Munira A. Al-Fadhel is a Bahraini poet, editor, writer and academic.
Fazel in Persian, or Fadhel is an Arabic and Persian male given and also surname meaning "virtuous".
Events from the year 1990 in Kuwait.
Events from the year 1988 in Kuwait.
Fadhel Jaziri is a Tunisian actor and film director.
Ahmed Fadhel is a Qatari footballer. He currently plays for Al-Wakrah.
Abdulrahman Al-Fadhel is a Kuwaiti rower. He competed in the 2020 Summer Olympics.
Al-Najma Sport Club is an Iraqi football team based in Al-Qādisiyyah. It plays in Iraq Division Two.