Dr. Abdullahi Balarabe Salame | |
---|---|
Member of Federal House of Representatives (National House of Assembly Abuja) representing Gwadabawa/Illela. | |
Preceded by | Hon.Haliru Gidan Hamma |
In office 2011 – Till date | |
Member of Sokoto State House of Assembly, represented Gwadabawa East. | |
In office 2007–2011 | |
Preceded by | Hon. Alhaji Chika Abubakar |
Personal details | |
Born | Salame Gwadabawa, Sokoto. | 5 March 1961
Alma mater | Usmanu Danfodiyo University Sokoto. Shehu Shagari College of Education Sokoto. |
Occupation | Public Servant |
Abdullahi Balarabe Salame (born 5 March 1961) is a Nigerian politician from Salame, Gwadabawa Local government, Sokoto State, Nigeria.[1] He is a member of parliament for Gwadabawa and Illela constituency, at Federal House of Representatives under a platform of All Progressive Congress (APC) and is a chairman house committee on poverty alleviation.[2] He was a speaker of Sokoto State house of assembly from 2007 to 2011 who represented Gwadabawa East, and also served as acting governor of the state from 11 April to 28 May 2008.[3][4]
Salame was appointed acting governor when the election of Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko was annulled, and held the position until Wamakko was returned after a fresh election.[5] Speaking in May 2008 while receiving a delegation of caretaker L.G.A Councillors, he urged caution, and said that anyone elected to serve the people is expected to approach problems with a high sense of understanding.[6]
In July 2008 he was elected treasurer of the nineteen-member Northern States Speakers' Forum.[7]
In August 2008 he said that the state government was determined to support the National Council for the Welfare of the Destitute (NCWD) self-reliance program in cooperation with the Sultanate, and hoped that more destitutes would benefit from the council's training program.[8] In July 2009 he spoke at the launch of a program to immunize more than 800,000 children under five years of age in Sokoto State, which was controversial because of people, backed by Islamic clerics, feared the program was a contraceptive designed to reduce the population of the region. He deduced that it was essential for parents to ensure that their children were immunized against the killer disease.[9]