Mohammed Arzika
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mohammed Arzika | |
|---|---|
| Federal Minister of Communications | |
| In office June 1999 – 12 June 2001 | |
| Preceded by | Air Vice Marshal Canice Umenwaliri |
| Succeeded by | Haliru Mohammed Bello |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 21 April 1943 Tambuwal, Sokoto State, Nigeria |
| Died | 9 June 2015 (aged 72) Sokoto State |
| Party | PDP |
| Awards | Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR) 1979 |
Mohammed Arzika was appointed Nigerian Minister of Communications from June 1999 to June 2001 in the cabinet of President Olusegun Obasanjo.[1] He died after a brief illness on 9 June 2015.
Mohammed Arzika was born in Tambuwal, Tambuwal Local Government Area of Sokoto State, Nigeria, on 21 April 1943 to Alhaji Usman Nabungudu and Hajiya Bilikisu. He attended Tambuwal Primary School from 1951 to 1953, Sokoto Middle School from 1953 to 1955 and Provincial Secondary School (Nagarta College) from 1955 to 1961. He also attended Barewa College from 1962 to 1963 and Ahmadu Bello University Zaria, Institute of Administration, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in public administration from 1964 to 1967.[citation needed]
Arzika joined the Federal Civil Service in 1967 and served in various ministries and offices of the Federal Government. He was Assistant Secretary, Federal Ministry of Mines and Power 1967–1968, Assistant Secretary, Federal Civil Service Commission 1968–1969, Assistant Secretary Federal Ministry of Industry 1969–1971.
He moved to the NorthWestern State Civil Service in 1971 as Senior Assistant Secretary and returned to the Federal Civil Service in 1972. He was posted to the Nigeria Embassy to the United States, Washington D.C. as Recruitment Attache from 1972 to 1975.
In 1975, he was appointed Principal Private Secretary to the Head of State (General Murtala Muhammad) and became Principal Secretary to the Head of State (General Olusegun Obasanjo) from 1976 to 1979. Between 1979 and 1980, he was Secretary for External Finance, Federal Ministry of Finance and became General Manager, Sokoto-Rima River Basin Development Authority in 1980. He retired from the Civil Service in this position in 1984 to enter private business and later joined politics.
He formed an agricultural business MAZ Agricultural Enterprises Ltd in 1984 which was focused on agriculture and MAZ Global Ventures Ltd which focused on commodity trading.
Other positions he held included Member, Board of Directors, Sokoto Investment Company ltd 1985–1987, President, Sokoto State Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture 1986–1989, Councillor for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Yabo Local Government Area Council 1986–1989, Chairman, Governing Council, Federal Polytechnic, Kaura Namoda 1986–1989, Organising Secretary, Council of Nigerian Farmers 1986-1989 and Member, Governing Council, Sokoto State University 2011 -2017.
Arzika was also a member of the Sokoto State Elders Committee and Turaki (Shehu Shagari) National Elders Committee.
Political career
Arzika joined politics when he contested and won the election to represent Yabo/Tambuwal Federal Constituency in the Constituent Assembly 1988-1989 which was held to debate and agree the provisions of the Constitution for the return to civil rule in 1993 being mid wifed by the General Ibrahim Babangida Administration.
Arzika was the Chairman of the People's Solidarity Party (PSP), one of the political parties that applied for registration when General Ibrahim Babangida started preparing for a transition to democracy in 1991, later merging into the Social Democratic Party (SDP).[2] Arzika contested for and lost the National Chairmanship of the Social Democratic Party to Ambassador Babgana Kingibe in June 1990. He was included in the Elders Committee of the SDP until it was scrapped by General Sani Abacha in November 1993.
After the failure of the Nigerian Third Republic with the assumption of power by General Sani Abacha, he became a member of the National Democratic Coalition (NADECO) formed in May 1994.[3] Along with Balarabe Musa and few others in the North, they championed the cause of the return to power of the presumed winner of the 12 June 1993 elections Chief MKO Abiola until Abiola died in 1998.
In 1998, Arzika joined with a group of prominent politicians headed by Chief Solomon Lar known as G18 from Northern Nigeria to ask General Sani Abacha to resign from office and return Nigeria to civil rule. The group later expanded to include other prominent politicians from Southern Nigeria (G34) headed by former vice president Alex Ekwueme and continued with the agitation. With the sudden death of Abacha and Abiola, the new Head of State General Abdulsalami Abubakar announced that the Military will handover power to civilians in May 1999 and political activities resumed. The G34 then expanded to become a pan Nigeria group which became the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). Arzika chose to remain in Sokoto to organize the party and was its first State Chairman. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) won presidential elections in 1999 and its candidate- Arzika's former boss General Olusegun Obasanjo returned to power.[citation needed]