Chicago Sun-Times

Science teacher became 2nd president of Nigeria

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LAGOS, Nigeria — Shehu Shagari, Nigeria’s second president, whose civilian tenure was sandwiched between two military rulers in an era rocked by coups, has died. He was 93.

Nigeria’s current President Muhammadu Buhari, who unseated Mr. Shagari 35 years ago, said on Saturday he mourns “the departure of a patriot, who served Nigeria with humility, integrity and diligence.” Mr. Shagari’s grandson Bello in a Twitter post said he died on Friday in the capital, Abuja, after a brief illness.

Mr. Shagari had an ambivalent relationsh­ip with the military, which initially favored his ascension to power but held him in solitary confinemen­t for three years after toppling his government.

After military ruler Olusegun Obasanjo lifted the ban on political activity in Africa’s most populous nation in 1978, Mr. Shagari beat regional political veterans in a hotly contested election the next year. The polls followed 13 years of military rule by four different men.

At his swearing-in ceremony, Mr. Shagari said the military had “succeeded in large measure in unifying us.”

It had been less than 20 years since the West African powerhouse had earned its independen­ce from British rule, and it struggled to forge national unity within the colonial borders which tied some 250 ethnic groups together.

Those years saw a civil war, a toppled civilian government and a series of military administra­tions including that of Gen. Yakubu “Jack” Gowon, in which Mr. Shagari served as a civilian finance minister.

Mr. Shagari is said to have been the first boy to go to school in his northern village of Shagari in the northeaste­rn state of Sokoto. He started out as a science teacher before entering politics. From 1954-1966, he was a member of the House of Representa­tives and later held a variety of ministeria­l posts under both civilian and military government­s.

Even though the military had voluntaril­y paved the way for democratic rule, the threat of its interferen­ce loomed over Mr. Shagari’s time in office.

The oil-rich nation’s economy suffered from a sharp drop in global crude oil prices, fueling discontent. On Dec. 29, 1983, Mr. Shagari announced austerity measures in a country already suffering from high unemployme­nt rates and general disillusio­nment after the oil boom of the ’70s.

Mr. Shagari’s administra­tion also was marred by corruption scandals. Even though the public considered him to be honest, his inability to rein in his government’s avarice was sharply criticized.

On New Year’s Eve in 1983, a group of military plotters toppled his government, describing Mr. Shagari’s administra­tion as “inept and corrupt.” Buhari, then a military ruler, took over the nation.

Mr. Shagari, who had been re-elected a few months earlier, seemed to have seen it coming.

“My greatest concern is that democracy survives in Nigeria,” he told a biographer just before the coup.

It was not until Buhari returned to the presidency in 2015 that Nigeria saw the first peaceful transfer of power from one party to another. The next election is in February.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? President of Nigeria Shehu Shagari at a press conference in Lagos circa 1983.
AP FILE PHOTO President of Nigeria Shehu Shagari at a press conference in Lagos circa 1983.

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