Sule Lamido

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DeputyAhmad Mahmud
Preceded bySaminu Turaki
Succeeded byBadaru Abubakar
Sule Lamido
Governor of Jigawa State
In office
29 May 2007  29 May 2015
DeputyAhmad Mahmud
Preceded bySaminu Turaki
Succeeded byBadaru Abubakar
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
1999–2003
PresidentOlusegun Obasanjo
Preceded byIgnatius Olisemeka
Succeeded byOluyemi Adeniji
Member of the
House of Representatives of Nigeria
from Kano State
In office
1979–1983
Preceded byposition established
ConstituencyBirnin Kudu
Personal details
Born (1948-08-30) 30 August 1948 (age 77)
Bamaina, Northern Region, British Nigeria (now in Jigawa State, Nigeria)
PartyPeoples Democratic Party
Other political
affiliations
People's Redemption Party (1979–1983)
Children11
OccupationPolitician

Sule Lamido (born 30 August 1948) is a Nigerian politician who served as the governor of Jigawa State from 2007 to 2015. He previously served as the foreign affairs minister of Nigeria from 1999 to 2003.[1] He is a member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

In 2015, Lamido and his two sons were arrested by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC)[2][3] on allegations of misappropriating approximately ₦1.35 billion from the Jigawa State government during his tenure as governor.

Lamido was born on 30 August 1948 in Bamaina, Birnin Kudu Local Government Area of Jigawa State Nigeria.[4]

Lamido entered politics as a member of the left-of-center People's Redemption Party (PRP) in the Nigerian Second Republic. He represented Birnin Kudu at the House of Representatives from 1979 to 1983.[5]

During the Nigerian Third Republic, Lamido became National Secretary of the Social Democratic Party, where he received criticism for his handling of the June 12, 1993 presidential elections won by Moshood Abiola, who was prevented from taking office.[6]

When the military ruler General Sani Abacha announced his plan to return to democracy, Lamido was a founding member of the Social Progressive Party, and was National Secretary of the new party.[7] He was imprisoned in 1998 by Abacha for criticising Abacha’s plan to perpetuate himself in office.[6] After Abacha's unexpected death in June 1998, General Abdulsalami Abubakar announced a revised transition strategy and new parties were formed to contest the 1999 elections. Lamido became a member of the PDP.[7] He ran for Governor of Jigawa State in the 1999 elections at the start of the Nigerian Fourth Republic, but was defeated by the All People's Party (APP) candidate Ibrahim Saminu Turaki.[8]

Foreign Minister

President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed Lamido Foreign Minister in June 1999, causing friction with Lamido's patron Abubakar Rimi who had been turned down as Obasanjo's Vice-Presidential partner and was lobbying for the Foreign Minister job.[9] Tensions between Lamido and Rimi lingered on. In December 2003, the two disagreed over the choice of chairman of a committee to investigate the zonal chairman of the party, with the argument degenerating into what one delegate described as "unseeming behavior".[10] In October 2006, Lamido described Rimi as "a contradiction of his political past".[11] However, during a courtesy visit to Rimi in December 2007 Lamido described him as a major factor that cannot be ignored in Nigerian politics.[12]

In January 2001, Nigeria turned over the Chairmanship of Group of 77 to Iran. Speaking at the hand-over ceremony, Lamido gave an enthusiastic account of G77 progress under Nigeria's leadership. Delegates from other countries agreed that much had been achieved.[13] After a September 2001 meeting with British Prime Minister Tony Blair in London, Lamido told the BBC that Britain was passionate over the numerous problems retarding Africa's peace, progress and prosperity, described the meeting as "fantastic".[14] The same month, he inaugurated a committee to organize an international conference on human trafficking, child abuse, child labor and slavery. He noted that hundreds of trafficked Nigerians had died while trying to cross the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to reach Europe.[15] Speaking at the United Nations in November 2001, Lamido described the corrosive impact of corruption on new democracies such as Nigeria, and called for "an international instrument" against transfer of looted funds abroad.[16]

In January 2003, a nine-member Joint Committee of the House of Representatives visited Pakistan, apparently seeking to mediate in the dispute over Kashmir, without consulting the Foreign ministry. Lamido wrote to Sadiq Yar'Adua, the president of the Committee, pointing out the risk of such a trip without background knowledge of the delicate balance of alliances. Yar'Adua reacted angrily, saying "...nobody is here as an appendage of Sule Lamido's Ministry. We are not his boys; we are not bound by his whatever foreign policy strategy."[17]

In March 2003, Lamido reacted to a claim by Governor Turaki of Jigawa State that the Federal government had neglected the state, calling on him to account for the way in which he had spent federal funds.[18]

Later career

See also

References

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