Friday, 21 November 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-NIGERIAN " SIR AHMADU BELLO " WAS A NIGERIAN POLITICIAN AND WAS THE FIRST PRIMER OF NORTHERN NIGERIA REGION FROM 1954 TO 1966 : GOES INTO THE " hall of black genius "

BLACK            SOCIAL          HISTORY                                                                                                                  

































































































































Ahmadu Bello


Sir Ahmadu Bello
KBE
Ahmadu Bello2.jpg
Premier of Northern Nigeria
In office
1954–1966
Succeeded byHassan Katsina
Personal details
BornJune 12, 1910
RabbahSokoto State,Northern Nigeria.
DiedJanuary 15, 1966
Political partyNorthern People's Congress
ReligionIslam
Sir Ahmadu Bello (June 12, 1910 – January 15, 1966) was a Nigerian politician, and was the first premier of the Northern Nigeria region from 1954-1966. He was the Sardauna of Sokoto and one of the prominent leaders in Northern Nigeria alongside Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, both of whom were prominent in negotiations about the region's place in an independent Nigeria. As leader of theNorthern People's Congress, he dominated Nigerian politics throughout the early Nigerian Federation and the First Nigerian Republic.

Early life

He was born in Rabbah, Sokoto State. The son of a district head and heir to the Sokoto Caliphate, his great-grandfather was Sultan Bello, the founder of Sokoto and son of the revered Shaykh Usman Dan Fodio. Ahmadu Bello received his education first at the Sokoto Provincial School, the only modern school at the time in the Sokoto province. Then, he proceeded to the Katsina Teacher's Training College. After spending five years at Katsina, he was appointed by the Sultan to become a teacher at the Sokoto Middle School, his former school which had undergone rapid transformation. In 1934, he was made the district head of Rabbah, four years later, he was promoted and sent to Gusau to become a divisional head. In 1938, he made an unsuccessful bid to become the newSultan of Sokoto. The successful sultan immediately conferred upon Sir Ahmadu Bello the traditional, now honorary, title of Sarduna, alternatively spelled Sardauna, and elevated him to the Sokoto Native Authority Council. In 1948, he was offered a scholarship to study local government administration in England. Ahmadu Bello took the scholarship sensing he needed to shore up his knowledge about the process of governance.

Nigerian politics


Ahmadu Bello as Premier of Northern Nigeria with the Governor and Chief Justice of Northern Nigeria

Sir Ahmadu Bello with Queen Elizabeth II in Northern Nigeria
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 interest and embraced a style of consultation and consensus with the major representatives of the northern emirates: Kano, Bornu and Sokoto. 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 successively 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.
Bello's greatest legacy was the modernization and unification of the diverse people of Northern Nigeria. He 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.
Ahmadu Bello was often criticized for not seeing a unified Nigeria as a whole but rather a unified north as he viewed the Igbos as "The Jews of Nigeria" as they had a sense of dominating where ever they went and often publicly stated he would rather have a non-Nigerian do a job than have a non-Northerner.
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.

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