Ahmadu Bello
Sir
Ahmadu Bello KBE
(June 12, 1910 – January 15, 1966) was a Nigerian
politician who was the first and only premier
of the Northern Nigeria region. He also held the title of Sardauna
of Sokoto.
Bello and Abubakar Tafawa
Balewa were major figures in Northern
Nigeria pre-independence politics and both men played major roles in
negotiations about the region's place in an independent Nigeria. As leader of
the Northern People's
Congress, he was a dominant personality in
Nigerian politics throughout the early Nigerian Federation and the First Nigerian
Republic.
Early life
Bello was born in Rabah c. 1909 to
the family of Mallam Ibrahim Bello. His father held the title of Sarkin Rabah.[1]
He is a descendant of Uthman dan Fodio, a great grandson of Sultan Muhammed Bello and a grandson of Sultan Atiku na Raba. He attended Sokoto
Provincial School and the Katsina Training College. During his school days, he
was known as Ahmadu Rabah.[1] He finished school in 1931 and
subsequently became the English master teacher in Sokoto Middle School.
Political beginnings
In 1934, Bello was made the District
Head of Rabah by Sultan Hassan dan Muazu, succeeding his brother. In 1938, he
was promoted to the position of Divisional Head of Gusau (now in present-day
Zamfara State) and became a member of the Sultan's council. In 1938, at the age
of just 28, he made attempts to become the Sultan of Sokoto but was not successful, losing to Sir Siddiq Abubakar III who reigned for 50 years until his death in 1988. The new
Sultan immediately made Sir Ahmadu Bello the Sardauna (Crown Prince) of Sokoto,
an honorary title, and promoted him to the Sokoto Native Authority Council.
These titles automatically made him the Chief Political Adviser to the Sultan.
Later, he was put in charge of the Sokoto Province to oversee 47 districts and
by 1944, he was back at the Sultan's Palace to work as the Chief Secretary of
the State Native Administration.
In the 1940s, he joined Jamiyya
Mutanen Arewa which would later become the NPC in 1951. In 1948, he got a
government scholarship and was off to England to study Local Government
Administration which broadened his understanding and knowledge of governance.
After returning from Britain, he was
nominated to represent the province of Sokoto
in the regional House of Assembly. As a member of the assembly, he was a
notable voice for northern interests and embraced a style of consultation and
consensus with the major representatives of the northern emirates namely Kano,
Bornu and Sokoto. He was selected among with others as a member of a committee
that redrafted the Richards Constitution and he also attended a general
conference in Ibadan. His work at the assembly and in the constitution drafting
committee brought him appreciation in the north and he was asked to take on
leadership positions within Jamiyya Mutanen Arewa.[1] In the first
elections held in Northern Nigeria in 1952, Sir Ahmadu Bello won a seat in the
Northern House of Assembly, and became a member of the regional executive
council as minister of works.
Bello was successfully minister of Works, of
Local Government, and of Community Development in the Northern Region of
Nigeria. In 1954, Bello became the first Premier
of Northern Nigeria. In the 1959 independence elections, Bello led the NPC to
win a plurality of the parliamentary seats. Bello's NPC forged an alliance with
Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe's NCNC (National
Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons)
to form Nigeria's first indigenous federal government which led to independence
from Britain. In forming the 1960 independence federal government of the
Nigeria, Bello as president of the NPC, chose to remain Premier of Northern
Nigeria and devolved the position of Prime Minister of the Federation to the deputy president of the NPC, Abubakar Tafawa
Balewa.
Premier
Bello's leadership characteristics
was a blend of religious, traditional and modern values and his obligation in
colonial and post-independence Nigeria was performing these different roles in
the northern region. [2] A major priority of his was making sure the
region was at par politically and economically with the Western and Eastern regions. This contributed to the decision to replace both
Southerners and Europeans in the Northern region's civil services with
Northerners, a policy that received criticism from opposition leaders such as Ibrahim Imam.
Bello originally embraced the Indirect rule system of colonial Nigeria before gradually embracing
reforms. During his period of premiership, his biographer, John Paden described
him as a progressive conservative, because he was an agent of change and also
of the traditional elites.[2]
Economic policies
Various institutions were created
under Bello, including the Northern Nigeria Development Corporation (NNDC),
Bank of the North and Northern Nigeria Investments Ltd (NNIL). NNDC was an
holding company with capital sourced from the region's marketing board while
NNIL was a partnership between the Commonwealth
Development Corporation and NNDC
created to assist in the industrial development in Northern Nigeria.
Education
Bello initiated plans to modernise
traditional koranic education in Northern Nigeria. He set up a commission to
this effect and gave official recognition to the schools.[3] The
commission recommended the introduction of secular subjects in the schools and
creation of different classes for pupils.[4]
Part of his educational objectives
was building a school in each province in Northern Nigeria,[2]
Cabinet in 1959
|
Members
of cabinet of the Northern region [5]
|
||
|
Portfolio
|
Minister
|
Tenure
|
|
Ahmadu Bello
|
1954-1966
|
|
|
Minister of Education
|
1959
|
|
|
Minister of Finance
|
Aliyu, Makaman Bida
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Agriculture
|
Mustafa Monguno
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Social Welfare
|
Michael Buba
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Health
|
Ahman, Galadima Petegi
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Lands and Survey
|
1959
|
|
|
Minister of Internal Affairs
|
Usman, Galadiman Maska
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Trade
|
1959
|
|
|
Minister of Local Government
|
Maikano Dutse
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Animal Health
|
Abdullahi Jada
|
1959
|
|
Minister of Works
|
George Ohikere
|
1959
|
|
Ministers without portfolio
|
||
Death
Bello was assassinated on 15 January
1966 in a coup which
toppled Nigeria's post-independence government. He was still serving as premier of Northern Nigeria at the
time.
Personal life
Bello married three wives. His first
wife was Hafsatu. He had three survived daughters with one of his wife,Amina
(Goggon Kano). His eldest daughter was Inno followed by Aisha and Lubabatu.
Legacy
Bello's greatest legacy was the
modernization and unification of the diverse people of Northern Nigeria.
The Ahmadu Bello
University is named after him. His portrait
adorns Nigeria's 200 naira note, and he is survived by three daughters, one of whom
died in 2008.
See also
Further reading
- Ahmadu Bello; My Life, Cambridge University Press, 1962.
References
- Savage, Babatunde (1959-03-16). "Profile of a Fearless Leader". Daily Times. Lagos.
- Obadare, Ebenezer, and Adebanwi, Wale, eds. African Histories and Modernities : Governance and the Crisis of Rule in Contemporary Africa : Leadership in Transformation. New York, US: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. Pp. 175-190
- Brenner, Louis. 1993. Muslim identity and social change in sub-Saharan Africa. Bloomington u.a: Indiana Univ. Press. P.186
- Kane, Ousmane. Muslim Modernity in Postcolonial Nigeria : A Study of the Society for the Removal of Innovation and Reinstatement of Tradition. Leiden, NLD: Brill Academic Publishers, 2003. P. 64
- Sklar, Richard L. 2004. Nigerian political parties: power in an emergent African nation. Trenton, NJ: Africa World Press. pp513-517

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