Solomon Daushep Lar,
the first civilian governor of Plateau State is dead at the age of 80
in a U.S. hospital, after a protracted illness. The Plateau State Governor, Jonah Jang, announced his death on Wednesday in Jos.
“He died at about 3.00 a.m. American time (about 9.00 a.m. Nigerian time),” the governor told reporters on Wednesday evening.
Dr.Solomon
Daushep Lar born April 1933 has held various offices at the National
level for over 50 years. He was a member of the first national
parliament when Nigeria gained independence in 1960. He was elected
governor of Plateau State on the Nigerian People's Party (NPP) platform
during the Nigerian Second Republic, holding office from October 1979
until the Military coup of 31 December 1983 that brought General
Muhammadu Buhari to power. Later, he was founding chairman of the
People's Democratic Party (PDP) which has held power since the return to
democracy in 1999.
Lar was born in Pongaa, Langtang, Plateau
State in April 1933. His father was a farmer and his mother a pottery
maker. He studied at the Sudan United Mission Primary School in
Langtang, and then at the Gindiri Teachers College where he qualified to
teach at the Primary School, Langtang. After two years he returned to
Gindiri for the Senior Teachers Training Programme, earned his Higher
Elementary Certificate and started to teach at the Senior Primary School
level. He planned to become a clergyman.
Lar was elected as a
councilor to the Langtang Natives Authority in January 1959. On
December 12, 1959 he was elected to the Federal Parliament on the
platform of United Middle Belt Congress (UMBC). He was reelected in
1964, and from then until 15 January 1966, when General Yakubu Gowon
took power in a coup, Lar was parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa. He was also a Junior Minister in the Federal
Ministry of establishments.
After the fall of the democratic
government, Lar attended Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, graduating in
1970 with an LLB and being called to the bar in 1971. He established a
private legal practice, and was co-founder and first National Secretary
of the Nigerian Legal Aid Association.
In 1972, Lar joined the
Board of Amalgamated Tin Mines of Nigeria. He became Chairman of the
Board of Directors of African Continental Bank, Member of the Nigeria
Council of Legal Education and a member of the Constituent Assembly
(1977–1978). He was vice-chairman of the panel chaired by Justice Ayo
Irikefe that recommended expanding from 12 to 19 states during the
regime of generals Murtala Muhammed and Olusegun Obasanjo. Lar was also a
Board member of the USA-based World Environmental Movement for Africa.
At
the start of the Second Republic, Lar was a co-founder of the Nigerian
People's Party. He was nominated as the party’s presidential candidate
in 1978, and later won the governorship election in Plateau State as the
first Executive Governor on 1 October 1979.
His deputy was Alhaji
Aliyu Akwe Doma. He was active in building infrastructure in the state
including hospitals, educational institutions, rural electrification,
water supplies, and roads. He introduced reforms to state employment
laws, abolishing the daily pay and contract systems and introducing paid
maternity leave for nursing mothers.
After the military coup in
December 1983, General Muhammadu Buhari set up military tribunals which
tried all former governors. Although Lar was not found guilty of
embezzlement or misappropriation, he was sentenced to 88 years in
prison, first in Jos and then in Kirikiri in Lagos. His case was
reviewed and he was released by the regime of General Ibrahim Babangida,
who started another transition to democracy in 1992.
During the
Nigerian Third Republic, Lar was a supporter of the Social Democratic
Party (SDP). He was appointed Minister of Police Affairs by the
government of General Sani Abacha, later resigning when he realized
Abacha was not serious about restoring democracy.
In the
transition to the Nigerian Fourth Republic Lar became the first National
Chairman of People's Democratic Party (PDP) in 1998, holding this
position until 2002 when he handed over to Chief Barnabas Gemade.
In
February 2004 he resigned as chairman of the PDP Board of Trustees,
handing over to Chief Tony Anenih at a caucus in Abuja.He remained a
power in the PDP until 2005, when he supported Vice President Atiku
Abubakar in his falling out with President Olusegun Obasanjo, and later
supported Atiku's bid for the Presidency in 2007. In April 2006, Lar
also welcomed the decision of former Military President, General Ibrahim
Babangida to compete for President in the 2007 elections, saying that
in a democracy anyone was entitled to run.
Lar has been described
as an ardent Middle-Belter, an active participant in the Middle Belt
Forum. In Plateau State he championed a policy based on the idea that
the state should help indigenes realize the benefits of their
"emancipation" from Hausa domination, and that the centuries-old Hausa
and Jarawa communities in Jos and Yelwa should be relegated to
non-indigene status.[9] In an interview in February 2009 he said that
the Middle Belt was being neglected despite the great contributions it
made to national unity, a reference to sacrifices in the Nigerian Civil
War. He also complained of discrimination against Christians in the
North, to the extent that they could not get land to build a church.
In
February 2010 Vice President Goodluck Jonathan appointed him Chairman
of the Presidential committee tasked with recommending how to prevent
further violence in Jos, the capital of Plateau State.
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