Board of Directors

The daily operations of the IBW is overseen by a team constituted of Executive Director and three department managers, who all together put the goals of the institution and guarantee their achievements, and the Executive Director is responsible, in front of the Board of Trustees, of daily managing the IBW.

Morshed Alam

Morshed Alam

The Executive Director

Morshed Alam has worked in Islamic charity finance for over eight years. He is a graduate from the prestigious al-Azhar University in Egypt where he studied Arabic and Islamic Studies, followed by a Masters in Islamic Finance, Banking and Management from Birmingham Newman University in the UK.

Morshed has a number of Islamic finance qualifications including a Diploma in Islamic Finance and Entrepreneurship from the University of Dundee in Scotland, UK; a Diploma in Waqf management from the International Institute of Islamic Waqf, Malaysia; a Diploma in Commercial Real Estate and Financial Management from Cornell University, USA. He also has an Islamic finance qualification from the Chartered Institute of Securities and Investment (CISI), UK.

Morshed was formerly Director of the International Waqf Fund (IWF), affiliated with Islamic Relief Worldwide (IRW), and has worked as a consultant in Islamic financial accounting standards on Waqf investment funds.

How he sees IBW:

“Working with IBW is an opportunity for me to use my expertise to help IBW grow and become an effective means through which to provide support to communities in need.”

Syed Ali Owais Ahmad

Syed Ali Owais Ahmad

Finance Manager

A Fellow of the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants, Owais Ahmad is responsible for all aspects of IBW’s finances. He studied Economics at the University of London (Queen Mary College) and also has a Postgraduate Certificate in Business Administration from the University of Warwick. He has almost forty years’ financial and management accounting experience gained in a variety of roles with a diverse range of organisations.

Owais started his career in the corporate world, including stints at General Electric and Accenture, before moving to the social care sector and finally for the past ten years in the charity sector. The majority of this time has been spent as Head of Finance at Islamic Relief Worldwide. He also has three years’ experience of building up his own Domiciliary Care company which employed over 150 staff.

How he sees IBW:

“I am attracted to the perpetual nature of Waqf having seen how revenue from Waqf assets have funded madrassas in Bosnia for the past five hundred years, even through the most tumultus of times.”

Error

Close"