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词条 Ibrahim Imam
释义

  1. Early life and education

  2. Political career

     Borno Youth Movement 

  3. References

{{Infobox Politician
| name = Ibrahim Imam
| image =
| caption =Nigerian Government
| birth_date = 1916
| birth_place = Yerwa
| residence =
| death_date = April {{death year and age|1980|1916}}
| death_place = London
| office = Member of the Northern Nigeria House of Assembly
| term_start =1951
| term_end = 1959
| predecessor =
| successor =
| constituency = Yerwa
| office2 =Member of the Northern Nigeria House of Assembly
| term_start2 = 1961
| term_end2 = 1965
| predecessor2 =
| successor2 =
| constituency2 = Tiv
| office3 =
| term_start3 =
| term_end3 =
| predecessor3 =
| successor3 =
| constituency3 =
| party = Borno Youth Movement NEPU, NPC
| religion = Muslim
| occupation = Contractor
| majority =
| spouse = Fusam Umaram, Hajiya Dije & Hajiya ashe
| children =
| website =
| footnotes =
}}

Ibrahim Imam (1916 – April 1980) was a Kanuri politician from Borno, Nigeria who was the secretary of the Northern People's Congress and later became a patron of the Borno Youth Movement. He was elected into the Northern House of Assembly in 1961, representing a Tiv district. Prior to his election in 1961, he had represented his district of Yerwa in 1951 after supporting a strike of Native Administration workers.

Early life and education

Imam was a Kanuri man from the Yerwa district of Borno. He was born in 1916 into an aristocratic family and his half-brother was the district head of Yerwa. He attended Katsina College and after completing his studies joined the Borno Native Administration as an assistant and later became the supervisor of works in 1950.

Political career

While working as an engineering assistant for the Borno Native Authority, he entered the political arena as the founder of the Borno Youth Improvement Association in 1949.[1] In 1951, he contested and won a seat to the House of Assembly defeating the Waziri Mohammed. A year later at the inception of the Northern People's Congress, which later became the dominant party in the region, he was nominated as the party's secretary-general; he joined a large number of his colleagues from the regional house who enlisted on the political platform of the new NPC. As the general secretary of NPC, he became one of the party's prominent campaigners and was involved in political tours, traveling for thousands of miles while providing support for the extension of the party through the establishment of branches in various towns and cities in the region.

After leaving the Native Authority, he became a building contractor to supplement his income as an honourable member of the House.

Borno Youth Movement

In 1954, however, Imam resigned his position from NPC and left the party, citing the lack of a revolutionary platform for political reform of the local government in the north[2] and also NPC's movement towards a reactionary and imperialistic political union. A year later, he joined Aminu Kano's Northern Elements Progressive Union and in 1956, he became the patron of the Borno Youth Movement, a young organization that had grown out of its members disappointment with the native authority in Borno and the scandal of the Waziri, Mohammed. In 1956, he encouraged a fruitful alliance of the movement with NEPU particularly in Borno where the alliance later won two regional seats. But in a few years, Imam an ambitious politician was in need of resources to organize the alliance in Bornu and in the Northern region left the merger due to the inability of NEPU to contribute enough resources to strengthen the party in the region. He left NEPU and established an alliance with the Action Group and later became the leader of opposition in the regional House of Assembly.

References

1. ^Billy J. Dudley. Parties and Politics in Northern Nigeria, Routledge, 1968. p 88-90. {{ISBN|0-7146-1658-3}}
2. ^K. W. J. Post, The Nigerian Federal Election of 1959: Politics and Administration in a Developing Political System, Oxford University Press, 1963.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Imam, Ibrahim}}

7 : Borno State|Borno Youth Movement politicians|Northern People's Congress politicians|1916 births|1980 deaths|20th-century Nigerian politicians|Kanuri people

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