Yahaya Abdulkarim | |
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Governor of Sokoto State | |
In office January 1992 – November 1993 |
|
Preceded by | Bashir Salihi Magashi |
Succeeded by | Yakubu Mu'azu |
Personal details | |
Born |
Talata Mafara, Zamfara State, Nigeria |
21 August 1944
Malam Yahaya Abdulkarim was elected governor of Sokoto State, Nigeria between January 1992 and November 1993, during General Ibrahim Babangida's attempted transition to democracy. After the return to democracy in 1999, he became a power in the Zamfara State branch of the People's Democratic Party (PDP), and served for a while in the cabinet of president Olusegun Obasanjo.
Yahaya Abdulkarim was born on 21 August 1944 in Talata Mafara, Zamfara State. His father was a Native Authority officer. He joined the civil service of the North-Western State as a teacher, and held various positions before retiring in 1989 as Director-General in the Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning of Sokoto State.
Yahaya Abdulkarim was elected governor of Sokoto State, Nigeria in January 1992, representing the National Republican Convention (NRC). He was forced out of office in November 1993 by the military regime of General Sani Abacha. During his period of office, he feuded with Attahiru Bafarawa, the NRC party chairman in the state. The feud persisted, and when Bafarawa became Governor of Sokoto State in 1999, he followed a policy of neglecting all roads and buildings built by the Abdulkarim administration. In 1992, Yahaya Abdulkarim signed the bill establishing the Talata Mafara Polytechynic, later renamed the Abdu Gusau Polytechnic.
In September 2002 Yahaya Abdulkarim was appointed to a sub-committee of the Niger Delta Development Commission to monitor a multi-billion naira developmental project that had been launched in the nine oil-producing states.
Yahaya Abdulkarim was appointed Minister of State for Works in president Olusegun Obasanjo's cabinet in July 2005. He replaced Alhaji Saleh Shehu in this position. In November 2006 he unfolded plans for an extensive and accelerated roads recovery programme to target the Christmas season. When the Minister of Works, Adeseye Ogunlewe, was dismissed in March 2006, he was promoted to Minister of Works. He was later subject to a Senate inquiry into his conduct while in this office.