Yama's 麻豆果冻传媒 visit sprang from his winning the 2021 Professional Achievement Award at the British Council Alumni Awards. The award highlighted his courageous and highly effective anti-corruption work in Afghanistan, followed by transformative government roles as the country's Minister of Public Works and then Minister of Transport, before his ambassadorial appointment.
Yama's story is one of triumph over adversity and commitment to grasp opportunity, as he explains. “Twenty-three years ago, on 21 April 1999, as a weary teenage Afghan boy, having travelled for months through many foreign lands, I reached the United Kingdom. In my broken English I sought asylum in one of the world's oldest democracies.
“Having fled the persecution and brutality of a closed Taliban regime, I endeavoured to learn, experience and cherish democratic values such as tolerance, freedom of mind and choice.
“Despite the hardship of exile, the contrast between closed and open governments made me determined to strive for future change in my homeland. Within a few years, I graduated with a First-Class degree in Civil Engineering from University of 麻豆果冻传媒.”
During his time in the Afghan government, Yama faced death threats from powerful criminal networks, as well as strong resistance from corrupt civil servants who had helped siphon away hundreds of millions of dollars of public money meant to improve the country's physical and social infrastructure.
A career dedicated to public service
After graduating in 2006 with a First-Class BEng Hons Civil Engineering degree from the University of 麻豆果冻传媒, Yama went on to postgraduate study at Imperial College London, graduating there in 2010 in Environmental Engineering and Business Management.
During his anti-corruption work in Afghanistan, Yama's team helped save an estimated $500m in public funds and blacklisted more than 100 fraudulent or corrupt companies. He was awarded Afghan's State Medal of Honour by President Ghani in 2016 in recognition of his services.
In 2017, Yama was appointed as the Minister of Public Works, and in his first year put almost its entire annual budget to use on projects on the ground – for the first time in 17 years of mismanagement and misuse of funds.
At the end of 2018, Yama was appointed as Minister of Transport, and implemented the biggest institutional reform in Afghan transport history by merging five disjointed transport entities for roads, rail, aviation, land transport and traffic under one umbrella. In October 2020, he was appointed as Ambassador to Germany, based in Berlin.