leaders
who was a successful businessman and had worked as a banker, police
officer, MP and diplomat. He was a former ambassador to Senegal. He was
the son of Abdullahi Bayero dan Muhammad Abbas. Ado Bayero was the 13th
Fulani emir since the Fulani War of Usman dan Fodio, when the Fulani
took over the Hausa city-states. He was one of the strongest and most
powerful emirs in the history of the Hausa land. He was renowned for his
abundant wealth, maintained by means of stock market investments and
large-scale agricultural entrepreneurship both at home and abroad.
Bayero was born to the family of Hajiya Hasiya and Abdullahi Bayero
and into the Fulani Sullubawa clan that has presided over the emirate of
Kano since 1819. He was the eleventh child of his father and the second
of his mother. At the age of seven, he was sent to live with Maikano
Zagi.
He started his education in Kano studying Islam, after which he
attended Kano Middle School. He graduated from the School of Arabic
Studies in 1947. He then worked as a bank clerk for the Bank of British
West Africa until 1949, when he joined the Kano Native Authority. He
attended Zaria Clerical College in 1952. In 1954, he won a seat to the
Northern regional House of Assembly.
He was head of the Kano Native Authority police division from 1957
until 1962, during which he tried to minimize the practice of briefly
detaining individuals and political opponents on the orders of powerful
individuals in Kano. He then became the Nigerian ambassador to Senegal.
During this time he enrolled in a French language class. In 1963, he
succeeded Muhammadu Inuwa as Emir of Kano.
Bayero became emir during the first republic, at a time when Nigeria
was going through rapid social and political changes and regional,
sub-regional and ethnic discord was increasing. In his first few years,
two pro-Kano political movements gained support among some Kano elites.
The Kano People’s Party emerged during the reign of Muhammadu Inuwa and
supported the deposed Emir Sanusi, but it soon evaporated. The Kano
State Movement emerged towards the end of 1965 and favored more economic
autonomy for the province.
The death in 1966 of many political agitators from northern Nigeria,
and the subsequent establishment of a unitary state, consolidated a
united front in the northern region but also resulted in a spate of
violence there, including in Kano. Bayero’s admirers credit him with
bringing calm and stability during this and later crises in Kano.
As emir, he became a patron of Islamic scholarship and embraced
Western education as a means to succeed in a modern Nigeria. The
constitutional powers of the emir were whittled down by the military
regimes between 1966 and 1979. The Native Authority Police and Prisons
Department was abolished, the emir’s judicial council was supplanted by
another body, and local government reforms in 1968, 1972, and 1976
reduced the powers of the emir. During the second republic, he witnessed
hostilities from the People’s Redemption Party led government of
Abubakar Rimi. In 2002 he led a Kano elders forum in opposing the
onshore and offshore abrogation bill.
Ado Bayero was seen as a vocal critic of the Islamist group Boko
Haram who strongly opposed their campaign against western education. On
19 January 2013, he survived an assassination attempt blamed on the
Islamist group which left two of his sons injured and his driver and
bodyguard dead, among others. A prime suspect confessed to have
participated in the attack on the Emir`s motorcade and so many other
co-ordinated attacks in the state which led to the arrest of six others.
Alhaji Dr. Ado Abdullahi Bayero (CFR, LLD, JP) (25 July 1930 – 6 June
2014) was the Emir of Kano in Nigeria, from 1963 to his death. Bayero
was seen as one of Nigeria’s most prominent and revered Muslim
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