Friday 5 July 2013

Abubakar Tafawa Balewa 1912 - 1966

 
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa was born in 1912 in Bauchi State and educated at the Bauchi Provincial School and the Katsina Teachers Training College; He later joined the Northern Peoples' Congress, (NPC) and was a member of the Northern Nigeria team to the Ibadan Constitutional Conference in 1950.

In 1951, he won a seat in the House of Assembly, Kaduna and was sent to Lagos by his party where he was appointed Federal Minister of Transport and Works in 1955.
It was during his tenure that the River Niger bridge at Onitsha was constructed, A fearless and courageous politician, he was a permanent delegate to the various Constitutional Conferences held in London leading to Nigeria's independence. He was Prime Minister from 1957 until January 15 1966 when he was assassinated during Nigeria's first military coup.
Abubakar was a committed Nigerian politician, leader in the Northern People’s Congress (NPC), and the first federal prime minister. A commoner by birth, an unusual origin for a political leader in the NPC, Balewa was both a defender of northern special interests and an advocate of reform and Nigerian unity.
Balewa was a teacher by profession and was one of the first Northern Nigerians to be sent to London University Institute of Education (1945). On his return in 1946 he was elected to the House of Assembly of the Northern Region and in 1947 was one of five representatives to the Central Legislative Council in Lagos. He was reelected to the assembly in 1951 despite the hostility of some conservative of the generally Muslim north.
From 1952 until his death Balewa served in the federal government: he was minister of works and of transport in the middle 1950s, and then, as leader of the NPC in the House of Representatives, he was made the first prime minister of Nigeria. After the pre-independence elections of 1959, he again became prime minister in a coalition government of the NPC and Nnamdi Azikiwe's National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons. As prime minister of independent Nigeria, he was sharply circumscribed in his powers by those delegated to regional premiers. He proved unable to mitigate the growing tensions of 1964-66, manifested by a partial boycott of the election in 1964, army unrest, and outbreaks of violence in the Western Region. He was killed in the first of two Nigerian army coups in 1966.


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