- Joseph Nanven Garba
Major General Joseph Nanven Garba (July 17 ,1943 –June 1 ,2002 ) was aNigeria n general, diplomat, and politician who served as president of theUnited Nations General Assembly from 1989 to 1990.Early military career
Born in
Langtang , Nigeria, Garba was educated at Sacred Heart School,Shendam from 1952 to 1957. His early military career began at theNigerian Military School in Zaria in 1957, where he studied until 1961. In 1961 he enlisted in the Nigerian Army and was sent to theMons Officer Cadet School inAldershot , England, before being commissioned as aninfantry officer in 1962. Garba rose through the ranks quickly: amongst his many military command postscite news |url = http://www.onlinenigeria.com/links/adv.asp?blurb=79 |title = End of a Diplomatic Guru |work = Online Nigeria |date =2002-06-14 |accessdate = 2006-07-28] wereplatoon commander of 44th Battalion in 1963, company commander from 1963 to 64, and mortal platoon commander in 1964. He participated in the United Nations Military Observer Mission in India/Pakistan (UNIPOM) from 1965 to 1966 cite news |url = http://news.biafranigeriaworld.com/archive/ngguardian/2002/jun/04/article27.html |title = Joseph Garba: 1943-2002 | work = The Guardian |date =2002-06-04 |accessdate = 2006-07-28] before being made commander of the Brigade of Guards in 1968. He studied atStaff College, Camberley , England, in 1973.Garba first came to national attention in Nigeria when, on
July 29 ,1975 , he announced the coup d'état against the leader of the country, GeneralYakubu Gowon . Garba's speech, broadcast from Radio Nigeria, began with the following statement:cquote|Fellow countrymen and women, I, Colonel Joseph Nanven Garba, in consultation with my colleagues, do hereby declare that in view of what has been happening in our country in the past few months, the Nigerian Armed Forces decided to effect a change of the leadership of the Federal Military Government.As from now, General Yakubu Gowon ceases to be head of the Federal Military Government and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Nigeria. The general public is advised to be calm and to go about their lawful duties. cite web | url = http://www.dawodu.com/omoigui38.htm | title = Military Rebellion of July 29, 1975: The Coup Against Gowon | accessdate = 2006-07-28| last = Omoigui | first = Nowa | date =2006-07-11 ]Garba was known as a
loyalist and close ally of Gowon. The coup was led by junior military officers unhappy at the lack of progress General Gowon had made in moving the country towards democratic rule, and Garba's role as an insider is credited with ensuring that the coup was bloodless. Garba and Gowon later reconciled to the extent that Gowon attended Garba's funeral in Langtang in 2002. cite web | url = http://www.ogbaru.org/garbarememberd.html| title = Joe Garba: A Man Before His Time| accessdate = 2006-07-28| last = Obaze | first = Oseloka | date =2003-06-01 ]Diplomatic career
Following the coup, Garba made a shift from the military to politics and diplomacy. In 1975 he was appointed Nigeria's foreign minister (Federal Commissioner for External Affairs) by
Murtala Mohammed , and continued in this role underOlusẹgun Ọbasanjọ after the former was assassinated in 1976. Garba was the head of the Nigerian delegation to theUnited Nations General Assembly from 1975, culminating in his appointment as President of theUnited Nations Security Council in January 1978.cite web | url = http://www.un.org/ga/55/president/bio44.htm | title = Joseph N. Garba (Nigeria) Elected President of the Forty-Fourth Session of the General Assemby | accessdate = 2006-07-28 ]In 1978, as Ọbasanjọ was preparing to hand rule of Nigeria over to civilians, Garba was reassigned to the role of Commandant of the Nigerian Defence Academy. He held this position until 1980, when he left to study at the National Defence College in
New Delhi ,India . Following this, Garba studied as afellow at theKennedy School of Government ofHarvard University , where he obtained a Master's degree in Public Administration.Returning to diplomatic life, Garba was appointed a
Permanent Representative to theUnited Nations in 1984, a role he continued in until 1989. In 1989, he was electedPresident of the United Nations General Assembly for its forty-fourth session. During his tenure, theConvention on the Rights of the Child was adopted into international law. In the post of president, Garba was also an outspoken opponent ofapartheid inSouth Africa .cite web | url = http://www0.un.org/ga/president/57/pages/speeches/statement021028-GeneralGarba.htm | title = Commemoration Ceremony for Major-General Joseph Nanven Garba | accessdate = 2006-07-28 | last = Kavan | first = Jan | authorlink = Jan Kavan | date =2002-10-28 ] Garba remained president for the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth special sessions of the assembly, on Apartheid,drug abuse , and international economic co-operation respectively.Later life
In 1979, Garba was awarded the title of Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic, and made a Grand Officer of the "Ordre National Du Bénin" ("National Order of
Benin "). He wrote a number of books, including "Revolution in Nigeria: Another View" (1982), "Diplomatic Soldiering" (1987), and "Fractured History: Elite Shifts and Policy Changes in Nigeria" (1995), and was awarded an honorary doctoral degree from theState University of New York in 1991.In his later years Garba was reported as holding a desire to lead Nigeria, and said so publicly in 1995. He joined the
All Nigeria People's Party , although he was never elected to public office. From 1999 he was Director General of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies in Nigeria, and while carrying out the duties of this office inAbuja he died onJune 1 ,2002 . Garba was survived by his wife and six children. Following his death the president of theNigerian Senate , Anyim Pius, described Garba as "one of [Nigeria's] finest diplomats, patriots and staunch advocates of an indivisible and indissolable African continent",cite web | url = http://allafrica.com/stories/200206030715.html | title = Nigeria: Tributes Pour in For Garba | accessdate = 2006-07-28| last = Cobb Jr. | first = Charlie | date =2002-06-03 ] referring to Garba's strong belief in and advocacy ofPan-Africanism .Publications
*cite book | last = Garba | first = Joseph Nanven | title = Revolution in Nigeria: Another View | year = 1982 | publisher = Africa Books | location = London | id = ISBN 0-903274-15-9
*cite book | last = Garba | first = Joseph Nanven | title = Diplomatic Soldiering: Nigerian Foreign Policy, 1975-1979 | year = 1987 | publisher = Spectrum Books | location = Ibadan | id = ISBN 978-2461-76-8
*cite book | last = Garba | first = Joseph Nanven | title = Fractured History: Elite Shifts and Policy Changes in Nigeria | year = 1995 | publisher = Sungai Books | location = Princeton | id= ISBN 0-9635245-4-2References
Persondata
NAME=Garba, Joseph Nanven
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Garba, Joseph
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Nigerian general, diplomat and politician
DATE OF BIRTH=July 17 ,1943
PLACE OF BIRTH=Langtang, Nigeria
DATE OF DEATH=June 1 ,2002
PLACE OF DEATH=Abuja, Nigeria
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