The National Conference sitting in Abuja was on Monday hit by another sad
news of the death of a delegate, Dr Mohammed Abubakar Jumare, from Kaduna
State.
Dr Jumare who came to the Conference as an Elder Statesman died in the
early hours of Monday in Abuja and was buried later in the day in Zaria.
The late Dr Jumare was born on August 20, 1943 in Kwarbai, Zaria City. He
attended Town School Number 1 in 1949 -1952; Middle School, Soba Senior
Primary School, Katsina Teachers College and Ahmadu Bello University where
he bagged the Doctor of Philosophy in 1989.
He started out as a primary school teacher in 1960 at the Zaria Local
Authority and later transferred to the Treasury as Clerk in 1962. He rose
to the position of Emirate Supervisor of Accounts and then Head of the
Local Authority between 1973 and 1975.
After the local Government Reforms, he became the first Principal
Assistant Secretary and Head of Administration. He worked with the Ahmadu
Bello University between 1986 and 1992 as Senior Lecturer and Senior
Administrative Consultant. He was the General Manager Personnel and
Administration at Peugeot Automobile Limited, Kaduna, between 1993 and
1999; and Chairman, Kaduna State Water Board between 2003 and 2004.
Dr Jumare had also served as a National Commissioner in charge of
Information and Publicity Committee at the National Electoral Commission.
He was also the Chairman of the 15-member National Advisory Committee on
Delimitation of Constituencies constituted by INEC in 2008. His tenure at
INEC lapsed in 2009.
He was reappointed Chairman of the Local Government Service Commission in
Kaduna State in 2011, a position he was until his demise on Monday, May 5,
2014.
His burial was attended by the Kaduna State Governor, Alhaji Ramalan Yero
and the Emir of Zazzau, Alhaji (Dr) Shehu Idris. The National Conference
was represented by Professor Mahmood Yakubu, the Assistant Secretary in
charge of Finance and Administration.
Dr Jumare
A strong believer in the democratic process, Dr Jumare once threatened to
leave public service if there was an attempt to introduce another interim
government in the country. While announcing INEC’s plan to hold a national
conference on the 2007 general elections, Dr Jumare was quoted as telling
Journalists that politicians should go and canvass for votes from the
electorate instead of looking for short-cut to governance. “There is
nothing like Interim National Government (ING). Many of us will leave if
the government comes up with something like that”.