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World Leaders Quiz: Who’s Really in Charge? (3)

We give you the country—can you pick the boss?

World Leaders Quiz: Who’s Really in Charge? (3)
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About This Quiz

One country, four names. Tap the president, prime minister, or monarch who actually runs the place.

You’ll hop from parliaments to palaces, democracies to dynasties. Each question shows only the country—then pick the one current leader among four. The other three? Former presidents, next-door PMs, or dead-ringers ready to fake you out.

Part 1 starts with the big names; later rounds throw in tiny nations and “wait-who?” rulers. Think you know who’s in charge? Show us.

1/40

United Arab Emirates
(President-2022)?

[A] Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan | Known as MBZ; Abu Dhabi modernizer whose foreign‑policy activism reshaped the UAE’s regional role.

2/40

Uganda
(President-1986)?

[B] Yoweri Museveni | Ex‑guerrilla leader in power since 1986; stability‑first rhetoric and security focus hallmark his tenure.

3/40

Eritrea
(President- 1993)?

[C] Isaias Afwerki | Led Eritrea since independence; austere public style and extended national service define the state’s image.

4/40

Indonesia
(President-2024)?

[D] Prabowo Subianto | Ex‑general turned politician; nationalist messaging and defense portfolio shaped his public persona.

5/40

Cape Verde
(Prime Minister-2016)?

[D] Ulisses Correia e Silva | Cape Verde PM focused on tourism‑led growth and fiscal steadiness across a scattered Atlantic archipelago.

6/40

Algeria
(President-2019)?

[B] Abdelmadjid Tebboune | Civil‑service veteran; anti‑corruption messaging and subsidy reform headline his agenda.

7/40

Cambodia
(Prime Minister-2023)?

[A] Hun Manet | Son of Hun Sen; West‑educated officer positioned as a continuity figure during Cambodia’s handover.

8/40

Bolivia
(President -2020)?

[C] Luis Arce | Economist and ex‑finance minister; ‘Lucho’ is associated with MAS’s social‑redistributive model.

9/40

Portugal
(Prime Minister-2024)?

[D] Luís Montenegro | Centre‑right PSD leader; pitched fiscal prudence and institutional calm in Portugal’s power shift.

10/40

Barbados
(Prime Minister-2018)?

[B] Mia Mottley | Barbados PM and standout climate voice; steered the island’s republican turn and debt‑reform agenda.

11/40

Myanmar
(President-2024 (acting))?

[C] Min Aung Hlaing | Army chief who led Myanmar’s 2021 coup; uniforms and televised orders define his rule’s imagery.

12/40

Bangladesh
(Chief Adviser-2024)?

[A] Muhammad Yunus | Nobel laureate behind Grameen Bank; global face of microcredit before stepping into a caretaker role.

13/40

Armenia
(Prime Minister-2018)?

[C] Nikol Pashinyan | Journalist‑activist who rode the 2018 Velvet Revolution; town‑hall style communications are his hallmark.

14/40

Tanzania
(President-2021)?

[A] Samia Suluhu Hassan | Tanzania’s first woman president; consensus‑minded tone and business outreach marked her opening years.

15/40

Pakistan
(Prime Minister-2024)?

[B] Shehbaz Sharif | Ex‑Punjab chief minister; hands‑on ‘administrator‑in‑chief’ style and project site visits are his brand.

16/40

Bahrain
(King-1999)?

[D] Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa | Bahrain’s king under whom the island hosts F1 and financial‑hub ambitions; calibrated reform language persists.

17/40

Afghanistan
(Supreme Leader-2021)?

[A] Hibatullah Akhundzada | Reclusive cleric at the top of the Taliban; edicts and councils substitute for public campaigning.

18/40

Angola
(President-2017)?

[B] João Lourenço | Former defense minister; anti‑corruption and oil‑sector overhaul headline his Angolan agenda.

19/40

Greece
(Prime Minister-2023)?

[D] Kyriakos Mitsotakis | Harvard‑ and Stanford‑educated; digital reform and investment courtship shaped Greece’s recovery pitch.

20/40

Moldova
(President-2020)?

[C] Maia Sandu | World Bank alumna; anti‑corruption and EU‑tilt messaging define her Moldovan presidency.

21/40

Sweden
(Prime Minister-2022)?

[C] Ulf Kristersson | Moderate Party leader; NATO accession politics and crime‑crackdown pledges dominate his agenda.

22/40

Kenya
(President-2022)?

[A] William Ruto | Self‑styled ‘hustler’ narrative from roadside trader to president; bottom‑up economics is his slogan set.

23/40

Nigeria
(President-2023)?

[B] Bola Tinubu | Veteran Lagos power‑broker; currency and subsidy resets were early defining moves.

24/40

Zimbabwe
(President-2017)?

[D] Emmerson Mnangagwa | Ex‑security chief nicknamed ‘the Crocodile’; post‑Mugabe continuity with a hard‑edged style.

25/40

Ghana
(President- 2025)?

[A] John Mahama | Former communications minister and vice president; returns framed as steady hands in Ghanaian politics.

26/40

Kazakhstan
(President-2019)?

[D] Kassym-Jomart Tokayev | Career diplomat, UN Geneva alumnus; calm public tone contrasted with decisive moves during unrest.

27/40

Chad
(President -2021)?

[B] Mahamat Déby | Son of Idriss Déby; heads a transitional military council while pledging a move to civilian order.

28/40

Cuba
(First Secretary-2021)?

[C] Miguel Díaz-Canel | Engineer by training; Cuba’s first non‑Castro head since 1959, stewarding gradual economic tweaks.

29/40

Iraq
(Prime Minister-2022)?

[C] Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani | Technocrat administrator; cabinet‑level stints and provincial governance preceded his premiership.

30/40

Romania
(President-2025)?

[A] Nicușor Dan | Mathematician‑turned‑activist; known for civic groups and urban‑policy crusades before national office.

31/40

Czech Republic
(Prime Minister-2021)?

[B] Petr Fiala | Political scientist and academic; helms the Civic Democrats with a low‑drama managerial style.

32/40

Andorra
(Prime Minister-2019)?

[D] Xavier Espot | Jurist‑civil servant profile; steady stewardship of Andorra’s micro‑economy and tourism is his brief.

33/40

Sudan
(Head of State-2019 (de facto))?

[B] Abdel Fattah al-Burhan | Army general who emerged as de facto head amid transition; uniforms and brief communiqués are his public grammar.

34/40

Liechtenstein
(Regent-2004)?

[A] Alois | Hereditary Prince acting as regent; emphasizes prudent finance and gradual institutional continuity.

35/40

Ecuador
(President-2023)?

[C] Daniel Noboa | From a well‑known business family; youthful, pro‑investment branding marked his rapid ascent.

36/40

Peru
(President-2022)?

[D] Dina Boluarte | Peru’s first woman president; institutional steadiness and cabinet reshuffles defined her early tenure.

37/40

Norway
(Prime Minister-2021)?

[B] Jonas Gahr Støre | Ex‑foreign minister; Nordic consensus instincts and multilateral fluency shape his profile.

38/40

Finland
(Prime Minister-2023)?

[C] Petteri Orpo | Centre‑right leader with finance portfolio experience; coalition arithmetic is his daily craft.

39/40

Bahamas
(Prime Minister-2021)?

[A] Philip Davis | Known as ‘Brave’ Davis in Bahamian politics; lawyer‑organizer roots and disaster‑response advocacy.

40/40

Turkmenistan
(President-2022)?

[D] Serdar Berdimuhamedow | Heir‑successor to Gurbanguly; the scripted pageantry of Turkmen public life continued under his watch.

Your Scorecard

World Leaders Quiz: Who’s Really in Charge? (3)

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  • Excellent≥90%
  • Very Good≥80%
  • Good≥70%
  • Passed≥60%
  • Failed≤50%

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