Babayo Garba Gamawa

Babayo Garba Gamawa (2 February 1966 – 14 June 2019)[1] was a Nigerian businessman and was the 2011 Senator for the Bauchi North district of Bauchi State. He was affiliated with the People's Democratic Party (PDP).[2]

Babayo Garba Gamawa
Member of Senate of Nigeria
In office
29 May 2011  2015
Succeeded by Suleiman Nazif
ConstituencyBauchi North
Personal details
Born2 February 1966
Died14 June 2019 (aged 53)
Bauchi
NationalityNigerian
Political partyPeople's Democratic Party (PDP)
ResidenceBauchi
OccupationBusinessman
ProfessionPolitician

Political career

Babayo Garba Gamawa served as both the Deputy Governor and Speaker of the Bauchi State House of Assembly.[3] He became Deputy Governor of Bauchi when Alhaji Mohammed Garba Gadi was impeached from his position. When this impeachment was appealed and the original ruling was deemed unconstitutional, Gadi arrived at the offices to reclaim his seat. Gamawa refused to give up his seat and his supporters rioted in the street, saying "Gamawa is the authentic deputy governor." Gadi's supporters, however, proclaimed that "the owner has arrived, the pretender should roll up his mat." Gamawa would eventually concede and Gadi would reclaim his seat as Deputy Governor.[4][5]

In 2011, he was elected as the Bauchi North Senator for the 7th National Assembly.[2] He was the Vice-President of the Aviation Committee and a member of the Land Transport Committee.

gollark: Just memorise all airport codes.
gollark: IXT sounds vaguely plausible.
gollark: It is in any case already too late.
gollark: If your throat hurts, probably your immune system is trying to fight off nanoassemblers of some kind. Maybe paperclipper ones.
gollark: Information wants to either be free or sold by GTech™.

See also

References

  1. Senator Babayo Gamawa, former PDP deputy chairman, dies after brief illness
  2. "Babayo Garba Gamawa Homepage". Senator's Homepage.
  3. "Why I settled for Senate, by Bauchi Dep Gov". Peoples Daily.
  4. Abubakar, Muhammad. "Nigeria: Two Deputy Governors in Bauchi". AllAfrica. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  5. Micheal, Ishola (1 July 2010). "Bauchi: A case of two sitting deputy govs". Archived from the original on 2 June 2013. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.