James Vwi
Nigerian public servant and politician (born 1952)
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James Mwankon Vwi (// ⓘborn 1 April 1952) is a Nigerian public servant and politician who served as a Member of the House of Representatives between 5 December 1992 and 17 November 1993 in Nigeria's short-lived Third Republic.[3][4]He represented Barkin-Ladi constituency (now Barkin-Ladi/Riyom constituency) in the old Plateau State from which Nassarawa State was later carved on 1 October 1996. Following the inauguration of the Third House of Representatives on 5 December 1992,[5] he was appointed to the House committee for petroleum and mineral resources. It was in the same legislature that Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso the national leader of the New Nigeria People's Party (NNPP) served as Deputy Speaker. [3] When the succeeding Sani Abacha military junta seized power from Ernest Shonekan's Interim National Government, all democratic structures of the Third Republic were dissolved the most prominent of which was the Third National Assembly sitting in Abuja.[6] He then recessed from political life till the dawn of the Fourth Nigerian Republic in 1997 when he joined the United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP) known mockingly at the time as the army's proxy.
James Vwi | |
|---|---|
| Member of the House of Representatives of Nigeria | |
| In office 5 December 1992 – 17 November 1993 | |
| Preceded by | P. C. Deme (Second Republic)[1] |
| Succeeded by | Isa Chungwom Song (Fourth Republic) as member representing Barkin-Ladi/ Riyom constituency |
| Constituency | Barkin-Ladi |
| Chairman Riyom Local Government Council (transition) | |
| In office 2008–2009 | |
| Preceded by | Simon Mwadkwon |
| Succeeded by | Dachollom Dahoro |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1 April 1952 |
| Party |
|
| Spouse | Naomi Chundung Vwi |
| Children | 6 |
| Education | Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria – (BPA) University of Jos, Jos – LLB, LLM Nigerian Law School, Bwari |
| Occupation | |
| Profession | lawyer |
| former President of the Berom Youth Movement (BYM)[2] | |
Early life and education
James Mwankon Vwi was born on 1 April 1952 to the family of Dara Vwi Mwangwong and De. Ngem Tu Vwi Mwangwong of Dabwam, Riyom in present-day Riyom Local Government Area of Plateau State. He attended the Riyom Local Education Authority Primary School where he obtained his First School Leaving Certificate (FSLC). He then proceeded to the state capital Jos in an ambitious drive to acquire business skills and save funds in order to further his education. After passing his GCE subjects, He enrolled in the Kaduna Polytechnic to study for a Higher National Diploma in Government and Politics. He then attended the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria where he bagged his first degree, a Bachelor's in Public Administration (BPA). Years after his tenure in the House of Representatives, he studied law in the University of Jos from the year 2002 to 2006 for a Bachelor of Laws degree (LLB Hons.) and was called to the Nigerian Bar in the year 2007. He will later attain a second degree; Master of Laws (LL.M) from the same institution making him an overall holder of three.[7]
Public service
James Vwi got his very first job in the Plateau State Civil Service and later moved his services to the Nigerian Mining Corporation. According to Chris Anyanwu's compendium of Third Republic legislators The Law Makers, 1992 to 1996: Federal Republic of Nigeria he later resigned to join politics in order to contribute his quota to his people and nation.[3]
Politics
James Vwi served as the national president of the Berom Youth Movement (BYM)[8] a Berom youth advocacy group. During this time he fostered ties and forged new links between all chapters of the movement nationwide and in the diaspora. At the dawn of the Third Nigerian Republic after a Constituent Assembly had finished final touches on a new constitution in early 1989,[9] his people called on him to make a run for the House of Representatives ticket for Barkin-Ladi constituency on the platform of the Social Democratic Party (SDP). He was declared winner in the National Assembly elections held on 4 July 1992.[3]
In 1997, Vwi joined the newly formed military government aligned United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP) one of the five political parties formed after the proscription on all political activities was lifted by the Federal Military Government. The other 4 registered (government sanctioned) political parties were: the Democratic Party of Nigeria (DPN), the Congress for National Consensus (CNC), the Grassroots Democratic Movement (GDM) and the National Centre Party of Nigeria (NCPN).[10][11] The parties were later dissolved following Abacha's demise and new political parties formed in their stead by Abacha's successor Abdulsalami Abubakar. That ushered in a new political order that was generally more democratic than the previous era of 5 political parties.[12][13]
At the advent of the Fourth Nigerian Republic that commenced on 29 May, 1999 James Vwi will resort to grassroots politics which would inevitably bring him very close to the views and sentiments of the peasant population of his native Riyom Local Government Area.
Jos – December, 2000. James Vwi issues strong denials that his Riyom branch of the People's Democratic Party had suspended the Minister of Sports, Damishi Sango from the party. He dismissed the purported suspension of the minister alongside 10 others as a ploy to have him fired from his job in the president's cabinet.[14] [15] The purported suspension was one of the highlights in the rift between Sango and the then Executive Governor of Plateau State, Joshua Chibi Dariye.

On 12 April 2003, The Honourable Vwi was the House of Representatives flag-bearer for the PDP in the National Assembly elections of that year. He lost to Gyang Dalyop Dantong of the ANPP.
He had a stint as a member of the board of directors of the Plateau Radio Television Corporation (PRTVC) Jos by appointment of His Excellency, Joshua Chibi Dariye Governor of Plateau State.
On 2 August 2008, James Vwi implored all governors across the 36 states of the federation to not tamper with local government funds in order to pave way for the much desired accelerated development of the people at the grassroots. Shortly before taking office as Local Government Chairman Vwi, who at the time was the Council Secretary of Riyom Local Government, Plateau State, said that unless state governors hands-off local government funds, infrastructural development at the local government level would continue to suffer a severe setback, to the detriment of the common people.[16]
Personal life
He is married to Naomi Chundung Vwi, a former Permanent Secretary in the Plateau State Civil Service. Together, they have 6 children.[17]