Abubakar Saleh Michika

Abubakar Saleh Michika

During a visit by Governor Nasir Ahmad el-Rufai of Kaduna State
Governor of Adamawa State
In office
2 January 1992  17 November 1993
Preceded by Abubakar Salihu
Succeeded by Mustapha Ismail
Personal details
Born 1941
Michika, Adamawa State
Political party
Courtesy Call to Governor Murtala Nyako

Abubakar Saleh Michika (born 1941) was the first civilian governor of Adamawa State, Nigeria from 2 January 1992 to 17 November 1993. He was a member of the then ruling National Republican Convention (NRC).He worked with the British Bank of West Africa in 1966, then John Holt company before joining the politics[1] He was born in Michika, headquarters of the Michika Local Government Area (LGA), in what is now the northeastern state of Adamawa.Where he did his primary school in and then moved to Yola Middle School for his Secondary School (now known as the General Murtala Mohammed College Yola) and University at the School for Arabic studies. Father to 38 children, 17 boys and 21 girls, 99 grand children,and 3 great grand children, all from his four wives; Hajiya Daudu, Mairama, Aisha and Nana Saleh Michika of Algerian and Nigerien descent from Tamanrasset Province, Algeria.[2] Prominent among his children is Jalal-Eddeen Abubakar Saleh, PhD, an Associate Professor of Public Health, a Consultant Public Health Physician, a board-certified Epidemiologist of the American College Of Epidemiologist, a board-certified member of the American College Of Physicians, and alumnus of the famous Imperial College London, the London School Of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and the Walden University U.S.A.

Saleh Michika created a stir when he said in 1992 that he would be willing to relocate to the neighboring Cameroun if there were a military coup in Nigeria. Fourteen years later, he made a controversial statement that the solution to the problems of corruption and misrule in the country would be a diarchy, a mixture of military and civilian personalities, with a military head of state.[3]

A pragmatist, before the 1993 elections he refused to meet Bashir Tofa, the presidential candidate of his NRC party, but he was helpful when M.K.O. Abiola, candidate of the rival Social Democratic Party (SDP) came to his state.[4] However, in July 1993, after the Ibrahim Babangida administration had annulled Abiola's presidential election, he said "Much as I personally admired Moshood Abiola as an individual, the idea of a southern president was unrealistic".[5]

In January 2002, Michika described the National Assembly members as corrupt officials for whom he had no respect, and warned of the danger of another military coup.[6] In October 2002, Saleh Michika was a strong contender to become the All Nigeria People's Party (ANPP) candidate for the Adamawa governorship.[7]

In 2005, President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed him as the chairman governing council of the Federal Polytechnic, Mubi

In May 2006 a police corporal was killed by suspected armed bandits at his residence. However, the state commissioner of police, Alhaji Muhammad Sambo, said the attack was not an assassination attempt. The bandits just wanted to snatch the corporal's gun.[8]

Saleh Michika is now retired from active politics.

References

  1. "Adamawa". WorldStatesmen. Archived from the original on 22 November 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  2. Sola Balogun (December 4, 2008). "MICHIKA Home of 'Nyamiri Arewa'". Daily Sun. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  3. Kenny Ashaka (March 11, 2007). "Maverick politician Saleh Michika breaks 1 4-yr-old silence: Diarchy, not democracy is what Nigeria should be practicing". Daily Sun. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  4. "Cold Calculations for Power". ThisDay. 2001-04-14. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  5. Oladoyin Anthony Mayowa (2001). "State and Ethno-Communal Violence in Nigeria: The Case of Ife-Modakeke" (PDF). Africa Development. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 27, 2006. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  6. Abel Orih (2002-01-16). "Ex-Governor Chides Obasanjo, N/Assembly". ThisDay. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  7. Asaph Zadok (2002-10-05). "Adamawa: Between the Press and the Truth". ThisDay. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
  8. Umar Dankano (May 22, 2006). "FG awards 28 police barracks contracts in Adamawa". Nigerian Newsday. Retrieved 2009-12-05.
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