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Abubakar Kyari
Abubakar Kyari
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Abubakar Kyari Listen CON (born 15 January 1963)[1] is a Nigerian politician who is the minister of Agriculture and Food Security. He was the senator representing Borno North Senatorial District from 2015 until his resignation in April 2022.[2][3][4] He is a member of the All Progressives Congress, and briefly served as its acting national chairman in 2023.[5][6]

Key Information

Early life and education

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Kyari was born on 15 January (1963) to Brigadier Abba Kyari, a former military governor of North Central State from 1967 to 1975.[7]

He has eight siblings.[8]

He was educated in both Nigeria and the United States. He attended Kaduna Capital School in 1974. He then proceeded to Barewa College, Zaria where he obtained his WASSCE In 1979. He attended the University of Tennessee, Martin US, where he obtained a bachelor's degree in 1986. Thereafter in 1989, he attended Webster University, St.Louis, Missouri for his master's degree in Business Administration (MBA).[9]

Political career

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Kyari was elected to the House of Representatives of Nigeria during the military regime of General Sani Abacha under the platform of the United Nigeria Congress Party in 1998, but did not take office after the party was dissolved by General Abdulsalami Abubakar following Abacha's death. He was State Treasurer of the All People's Party (APP), Borno State chapter from 1998 to 1999.

At the start of the fourth republic in 1999, he was re-elected to the House of Representatives under the platform of the APP and served from 1999 to 2003.[10] He was appointed Borno State commissioner for Water Resources by Governor Ali Modu Sheriff in 2003 and served till 2005. He was managing director, Rural Water Supply Agency, Borno State from 2005 to 2007, and appointed Borno State commissioner for Education in 2007 serving till 2008. He was reappointed commissioner for Water Resources by Governor Sheriff and served from 2008 to 2010, commissioner for Home Affairs and Information from 2010 to 2011, and commissioner for Works in 2011. He served as Chief of Staff to Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima from 2011 to 2014.

Kyari was elected to the senate in 2015 under the platform of the All Progressives Congress and re-elected in 2019, serving till April 2022 when he resigned to become APC deputy national chairman, North.[11][12][1] He became acting national chairman of the APC on 17 July 2023, following the resignation of APC national chairman, Abdullahi Adamu.[5] He was appointed minister of Agriculture and Food Security by President Bola Tinubu on 16 August 2023, following his screening and confirmation by the senate.

Following a period of significant food price inflation in Nigeria, Senator Kyari, announced the plans in a press briefing in the nation’s capital of Abuja. The plans included importing 250,000 metric tonnes of wheat and 250,000 metric tonnes of maize, which will be supplied to small-scale processors and millers throughout the country. He also announced a 150-day duty-free import window for specific food commodities, including maize, brown rice, wheat, and cowpeas. Imported goods under this scheme will be subject to a set Recommended Retail Price (RRP).

Award

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In October 2022, a Nigerian national honour of Commander Of The Order Of The Niger (CON) was conferred on him by President Muhammadu Buhari.[13]

References

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from Grokipedia
Abubakar Kyari (born 15 January 1963) is a Nigerian politician serving as Minister of and since his appointment by President on 16 August 2023. A member of the (APC), he previously represented Borno North Senatorial District in the Nigerian from 2015 to 2022, served as APC Deputy National Chairman (North) in 2022 and acting National Chairman briefly in 2023, and held state-level roles including to Borno Governor from 2011 to 2014. Educated in Nigeria and the , with a from the in 1986 and an MBA from in 1989, Kyari has focused on agricultural policy amid Nigeria's challenges. Kyari's ministerial tenure has emphasized interventions to boost production and distribution, including a 2024 emergency declaration on , distribution of 2.1 million bags of , procurement of 2,000 tractors through partnerships, and biometric registration of over two million farmers to improve targeting of subsidies. He has advocated for dry-season farming across thousands of hectares and a 150-day duty-free import window for essentials, while criticizing prior federal farmer databases as corrupt and politicized, prompting reforms under his oversight. These efforts aim to address shortages exacerbated by insecurity and climate factors in northern , where Kyari's home state of Borno has faced ongoing insurgency. Awarded the Commander of the (CON) in 2022 for , his career reflects a progression from local representation to national agricultural leadership. Criticisms of Kyari's approach include early low public approval ratings around 13% in 2024 surveys, debates over reliance on imports potentially undermining local production incentives, and budgetary scrutiny from oversight groups. During his time in Borno's executive under Shettima, the administration faced blame for inadequate initial response to the 2014 Chibok schoolgirls abduction by , though Kyari's specific role centered on administrative coordination rather than security operations. No formal corruption allegations have been leveled against him, distinguishing his record amid broader political scrutiny in Nigeria's resource-challenged .

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Abubakar Kyari was born on January 15, 1963, in , . As the eldest of nine siblings, he grew up in a prominent family shaped by military and political service. His father, Brigadier , served as military administrator of the North Central State from 1967 to 1975, instilling an environment steeped in discipline, leadership, and . This household dynamic provided early immersion in matters of governance and security, common in northeastern 's border regions during a period of post-independence and regional instability. Kyari hails from Mobbar Local Government Area in northern , near the border, where familial values emphasized communal responsibility and strategic engagement in local affairs. His formative years unfolded amid the socio-economic challenges of the zone, including resource scarcity and ethnic dynamics among Kanuri communities, fostering a practical orientation toward resilience and . The military heritage of his family likely reinforced a worldview attuned to hierarchical decision-making and regional security imperatives, factors that later aligned with his trajectory in Nigerian politics.

Formal education and early influences

Abubakar Kyari completed his primary education at Kaduna Capital School, obtaining his First School Leaving Certificate in 1974. He then attended in from 1974 to 1979, earning his West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) qualification upon graduation. Kyari pursued higher education abroad, obtaining a degree in from the in 1986. He followed this with a (MBA) from in , , in 1989, focusing on principles applicable to policy and management. These studies emphasized economic analysis and administrative frameworks, providing foundational skills in and organizational strategy. Early influences on Kyari stemmed from his upbringing in , a region characterized by arid conditions and vulnerability to conflict, which underscored the need for practical, development-oriented governance. Combined with familial ties to regional political figures, including his father Abba Kyari's involvement in northeastern Nigerian affairs, these factors cultivated a focus on empirical problem-solving tailored to environmental and security challenges prevalent in such areas. His progression from Nigerian secondary institutions to American universities exposed him to diverse analytical methods, reinforcing a pragmatic orientation toward policy-relevant disciplines amid Borno's developmental constraints.

Early political career

Party formation and initial roles (1990s)

In 1996, amid Nigeria's fraught transition from military dictatorship under General , Abubakar Kyari emerged as a founding member of the United Nigeria Congress (UNC), a political association established to contest the regime's orchestrated elections and prepare for potential civilian governance. The UNC operated within the constraints of Abacha's National Electoral Commission framework, which limited party formation to five approved entities, reflecting the era's controlled democratization efforts that prioritized regime loyalty over open pluralism. Kyari's early involvement underscored his organizational acumen in navigating these restrictions, as the UNC positioned itself as a vehicle for northern interests in and beyond. Following Abacha's death in June 1998 and the interim administration of General , the UNC underwent transformations amid broader party realignments, eventually contributing to the formation of the All People's Party (APP) for the Fourth Republic's inaugural elections. This evolution involved mergers and adaptations from the defunct United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP), the military-backed entity that had dominated prior polls, highlighting the volatile landscape where surviving groups rebranded to align with the new democratic constitution. Kyari demonstrated adaptability by assuming the role of State Treasurer for the APP's Borno chapter from 1998 to 1999, a position that entailed managing finances and logistics during the party's grassroots mobilization in a region recovering from military-era instability. In this capacity, Kyari focused on forging local networks among traders, farmers, and community leaders in Borno, leveraging personal connections from his upbringing to secure funding and membership drives essential for the APP's viability in the northeast. These efforts were critical in a post-military context marked by distrust of institutions and economic scarcity, where party operatives like Kyari prioritized decentralized structures over centralized patronage to build resilience against potential electoral manipulations. His tenure as treasurer thus laid foundational for the APP's regional foothold, emphasizing fiscal prudence and alliance-building in advance of the 1999 polls.

House of Representatives tenure (1999–2003)

Abubakar Kyari was elected to the in Nigeria's 1999 general elections under the All People's Party (APP), securing the seat for the Abadam/Guzamala/Kukawa/Mobbar Federal Constituency in . This victory followed his earlier candidacy under the United Nigeria Congress Party (UNCP) during the aborted 1998 elections under General Sani Abacha's regime, which were not seated. Kyari served from May 1999 to 2003 as part of the Fourth , amid the transition to sustained civilian governance in Nigeria's Fourth Republic after decades of military rule. His role involved representing a border-adjacent constituency with pastoralist economies vulnerable to cross-border challenges, though specific bills sponsored or committee assignments from this period remain undocumented in available legislative records. During this tenure, the House prioritized stabilizing democratic institutions and addressing regional disparities, including infrastructure deficits in the northeast, but Kyari's individual contributions are noted primarily through constituency advocacy rather than high-profile national legislation.

State and legislative roles

Commissioner positions in Borno State (2003–2011)

Abubakar Kyari served as Honourable Commissioner for Water Resources in Borno State from 2003 to 2005 under Governor Ali Modu Sheriff, focusing on improving water access in a region characterized by arid conditions and reliance on groundwater for both domestic and agricultural use. During this period, his portfolio involved managing state water infrastructure projects, including borehole drilling and rural supply systems, which aimed to mitigate chronic water shortages affecting farming communities in northern Borno. These initiatives laid groundwork for irrigation-dependent agriculture, addressing causal factors like seasonal droughts that limited crop yields in the Sahel zone. From 2005 to 2007, Kyari transitioned to Managing Director of the Rural Water Supply Agency, where he expanded rural water schemes, rehabilitating and constructing facilities to serve over 100 communities, with emphasis on sustainable sourcing from aquifers to support small-scale for staples like millet and . He later held the position of Commissioner for Education from 2007 to 2008, overseeing curriculum reforms and infrastructure upgrades amid growing enrollment pressures, before returning to from 2008 to 2010 to consolidate prior gains against expanding urban-rural disparities. In these roles under Sheriff's administration, Kyari's administrative experience in foreshadowed his national emphasis on agricultural inputs, as directly influenced in Borno's rain-fed farming systems. Kyari's tenure extended to Commissioner for Works from approximately 2008 onward and culminated as Commissioner for Home Affairs and Information from 2010 to 2011, coinciding with the initial escalation of following the group's 2009 suppression by state forces. In Home Affairs, he coordinated internal security protocols, including intelligence coordination and community policing pilots in volatile areas like , as the state responded to attacks that displaced thousands and disrupted local economies, including farming cooperatives. Policy measures under Sheriff, which Kyari helped implement, involved joint task forces with federal agencies, though empirical data from the period indicate over 700 sect members killed or arrested by mid-2009, contributing to temporary stabilization before retaliatory bombings in 2010. Challenges persisted due to porous borders and ethnic tensions, with administrative hurdles in deploying resources amid fiscal constraints typical of northeastern states.

Senate service for Borno North (2015–2023)

Abubakar Kyari was elected to represent Borno North Senatorial District in the Nigerian Senate during the 2015 general elections on the All Progressives Congress (APC) platform, securing victory in a district encompassing Monguno, Gubio, and Kukawa local government areas amid ongoing Boko Haram insurgency challenges. He polled 89,198 votes, defeating opponents from the People's Democratic Party and other parties. Kyari was re-elected in the 2019 elections with 85,424 votes, continuing his tenure until his resignation in April 2022 to assume the role of APC acting national chairman. In the 8th Senate (2015–2019), Kyari chaired the Committee on Defence, which conducted oversight on military operations, procurement, and funding allocations critical to counter-insurgency efforts in and the broader Northeast. Under his leadership, the committee reviewed defence budgets, including allocations for troop welfare and equipment to reclaim territories from control, though Kyari publicly contested claims of full liberation, asserting in February 2018 that insurgents retained influence in parts of his constituency despite military advances. He also chaired the Senate Committee on Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), influencing electoral reforms amid security disruptions from the insurgency. During the 9th Senate (2019–2023), Kyari led the Committee on Federal Capital Territory (FCT), overseeing budgetary provisions and infrastructure projects for while maintaining focus on Northeast recovery needs through plenary contributions. His legislative record included sponsoring at least three bills between 2019 and 2021, notably the Electoral Offences Commission (Establishment) Bill aimed at strengthening penalties for election malpractices, though passage rates for senator-sponsored bills in the 9th Senate averaged low, with only a fraction advancing beyond second reading due to procedural bottlenecks. Kyari raised motions on escalating attacks, prompting Senate resolutions for presidential briefings on security strategies in June 2020. Kyari's oversight extended to critiquing the limitations of government and military efforts alone in ending the insurgency, arguing in October 2019 that civilian participation was essential for sustainable recovery, as isolated state actions could not fully address root causes like community or diversion risks in conflict zones. Through committee reports and plenary debates, he advocated for enhanced scrutiny to ensure funds for reconstruction—such as those under the North East Development Commission—reached affected areas without inefficiencies, though empirical data on specific distribution impacts in Borno North during his tenure remains limited by opaque federal reporting.

APC leadership and ministerial appointment

Acting National Chairman of the APC (2023)

Abubakar Kyari, serving as Deputy National Chairman (North) of the (), assumed the position of Acting National Chairman on July 17, 2023, immediately following the resignations of National Chairman and National Secretary . This transition adhered to the constitution, which designates the deputy chairman to act in the principal's absence, and was ratified during a National Working Committee (NWC) meeting at the party headquarters in . Kyari's prompt assumption of leadership addressed immediate vacancies amid reports of internal pressures contributing to Adamu's exit, including tensions over the party's support for President during the 2023 primaries. Kyari's tenure, spanning roughly one month until August 2023, prioritized stabilizing the party's operations during a period of factional strains exacerbated by the recent and outcomes. He convened NWC sessions to affirm the resignations and maintain administrative continuity, thereby mitigating risks of further disarray in the ruling party's structure post-Adamu. Sources described his role as focused on uniting a fractured , which had faced divisions during candidate selection processes favoring Tinubu over other aspirants initially backed by Adamu. In line with party protocols, Kyari oversaw preparations for electing a substantive chairman, facilitating a handover that prevented prolonged interim leadership and potential consolidation of influence. He vacated the acting position in August 2023 to pursue his impending ministerial responsibilities, enabling the APC to advance toward formal leadership renewal without extended transitional instability. This brief stewardship contributed to averting deeper internal fractures, as evidenced by the absence of major public defections or escalated disputes during his oversight.

Appointment as Minister of Agriculture and Food Security

Abubakar Kyari was nominated by President for the position of Minister of and Food Security on August 16, 2023, as part of the administration's initial cabinet formation following Tinubu's on May 29, 2023. The nomination came shortly after Kyari's brief tenure as acting National Chairman of the () earlier in 2023, reflecting his rising prominence within the party's leadership structure. Tinubu's selection emphasized Kyari's prior legislative experience as a senator representing Borno North from 2015 to 2023, a region with significant agricultural and pastoral interests, to advance the president's priority on bolstering domestic food production amid Nigeria's reliance on imports. The Nigerian Senate screened and confirmed Kyari's nomination alongside other ministerial appointees in late August 2023, enabling his integration into the executive branch. He was sworn in by President Tinubu on August 21, 2023, at the State House in Abuja, marking the formal commencement of his role in overseeing federal agricultural policies. This appointment aligned with Tinubu's broader economic reform agenda, which sought to prioritize self-sufficiency in food staples to mitigate vulnerabilities from global supply disruptions and currency fluctuations. Kyari's portfolio rationale drew on his northern Nigerian political background, where agricultural challenges such as post-harvest losses and input access have long constrained output, positioning him to implement targeted interventions for enhanced domestic productivity without immediate reliance on prior administration critiques. The initial focus under his leadership was framed around operationalizing Tinubu's vision for through foundational enhancements in production capacity, setting the groundwork for subsequent sectoral reforms.

Ministerial policies and initiatives

Reform of agricultural databases and infrastructure

Upon assuming office as Minister of Agriculture and Food Security in August 2023, Abubakar Kyari identified systemic inefficiencies in the federal farmers' database, describing it as "corrupt and politicised" during a December 11, 2023, address to the . He highlighted instances of political interference, such as non-farming political figures receiving automated text messages to redeem subsidized fertilizers, which diverted resources from genuine producers and exacerbated input leakages estimated to undermine . This politicization fostered a causal of misallocation, where verifiable was supplanted by networks, resulting in untargeted interventions that failed to boost output among actual beneficiaries. To address these issues, Kyari initiated database reforms focused on depoliticization and verification, including a February 2024 directive to excise "political farmers" from registries ahead of the second-phase farming program. The ministry emphasized state-level provision of credible, verifiable farmer data to enable precise targeting, contrasting pre-reform practices where poor validation enabled round-tripping of inputs like seeds and fertilizers. These measures aimed to curtail leakages, which prior analyses linked to in distribution chains, by prioritizing empirical enumeration of active cultivators over politically influenced entries. Parallel to database overhaul, Kyari advanced reforms through the revitalization of the federal silo concession program, announced in September 2025, to mitigate post-harvest losses totaling approximately $10 billion annually. Of 17 silo complexes originally concessioned to five private firms, only fulfilled operational requirements across its three managed sites, prompting Kyari's commendation and extension of partnerships for enhanced storage capacity in key value chains. This private-sector integration sought to rectify underutilized public infrastructure, where politicized management had previously hindered maintenance and efficiency, thereby supporting verifiable reductions in storage-related waste through concessional incentives tied to performance metrics.

Key programs for food production and security

Under Kyari's leadership, the Federal Government launched the 2025 wheat farming initiative on October 17, targeting rainfed varieties to diminish reliance on imports and curb post-harvest losses, which contribute to Nigeria's annual food import costs exceeding $10 billion. This program leverages climate-resilient seeds suited to northern Nigeria's agro-climatic conditions, aiming to expand domestic production of a staple heavily imported at costs nearing N1 trillion yearly for wheat alone. In alignment with continental frameworks, Kyari oversaw the domestication of the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme (CAADP) through a simplified policy document launched on October 7, 2025, integrating the adopted by African heads of state on January 11, 2025. The (2026–2036) prioritizes agrifood system transformation via South-South collaborations, climate-smart practices, and enhancements to foster intra-African agricultural partnerships and resilience. To address northeastern vulnerabilities amid Borno's persistent insecurity and flooding risks, Kyari emphasized dry-season farming expansions, enabling irrigated cultivation in conflict-affected zones where rainy-season access remains limited. These interventions, complemented by federal engagements with the National Emergency Management Agency for 2025 flood outlooks, adapt to regional arid conditions and disaster threats by promoting off-season staples like and .

Achievements and criticisms

Empirical impacts on food prices and output

In September 2025, food prices for staple commodities across Nigeria dropped significantly nationwide, with Minister Abubakar Kyari attributing the decline to harvest surges from the 2025 wet season and targeted interventions enhancing supply. The Agricultural Performance Survey (APS) for 2025 documented this trend, linking lower prices to improved availability of grains and tubers amid steady production growth. Output metrics from the same period showed increases in key crops, including , , , millet, , yam, and , surpassing 2024 levels due to expanded cultivation under ministry-supported programs. For , the Central Development (CARD) initiative boosted yields through enhanced support and input distribution during the 2025 review cycle. production advanced with successful rainfed varieties in highland regions, contributing to overall abundance and countering earlier pressures from seasonal shortages. These gains facilitated reduced reliance on imports for staples, as local supply expansions—driven by and climate-resilient seeds—met demand more effectively, evidenced by stabilized markets post-harvest. While some farmers contested the extent of local contributions versus imports, official data emphasized production upticks as the primary causal factor in price stabilization.

Policy challenges, security issues, and political critiques

Kyari's tenure in positions, including as commissioner from 2003 to 2011, has been linked by critics to broader failures in addressing security threats that later exacerbated agricultural disruptions in the region. The 2014 Chibok schoolgirls abduction by , which saw 276 girls kidnapped from a , drew widespread condemnation of the Borno administration for ignoring security advisories to relocate students to safer areas like , contributing to the incident's scale and the ensuing #BringBackOurGirls campaign. This event underscored systemic vulnerabilities in northeastern , where 's insurgency has since targeted farming communities, displacing populations and limiting land access essential for . Ongoing security challenges in Borno and the North East continue to hinder agricultural productivity, with and its splinter ISWAP doubling attacks on farmers in 2024 and reaching a five-year high in killings during the first half of 2025, according to conflict tracking data. Farmers in areas like Darwa require armed escorts from the Agro Rangers unit to cultivate fields, yet persistent threats have left over 3.9 million people facing acute food insecurity, as displacement and fear restrict planting and harvesting cycles. As a former senator for Borno North from 2015 to 2023, Kyari highlighted difficulties in accessing liberated communities due to residual pockets, reflecting gaps in securing agricultural zones despite military advances. These insecurities form a causal barrier to food production, as unprotected farmlands remain fallow, amplifying national supply shortages. Policy implementation under Kyari's ministry has faced critiques over inherited inefficiencies, particularly post-harvest losses estimated at $10 billion annually, driven by inadequate storage, weak , limited , and factors like flooding, which disproportionately affect smallholder farmers producing 70% of Nigeria's . In 2025, government claims of declining as evidence of boosted output clashed with farmers' reports of prices falling below production costs due to duty-free imports of grains like and , extended into January, amid unsubsidized high input expenses such as fertilizers costing N50,000 to N108,000 per bag. Kyari was directly informed of these losses during the 2025 Agricultural Survey, yet farmers alleged insufficient targeted aid, prompting some to abandon staple crops for cash alternatives or exit farming altogether. Opposition voices and agricultural stakeholders have accused the administration of politicizing relief efforts, with claims that interventions favor short-term imports over sustainable local support, exacerbating farmer distress without addressing root security-agriculture linkages. These critiques highlight verifiable shortfalls in integrating security measures with policy, as unchecked perpetuates cycles of low yields and vulnerability, independent of production incentives.

Awards and honors

Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON)

Abubakar Kyari was conferred the Commander of the (CON), Nigeria's fourth-highest national honor, on October 11, 2022, by President during the country's 2022 National Honours Awards ceremony. The award recognizes distinguished , a criterion applied to senior political figures for sustained contributions to and legislative duties. The conferral aligned with Kyari's tenure as Senator for Borno North, where he served on key committees including and , reflecting standard recognition for APC loyalists and northern representatives advancing regional and federal interests. No primary documentation specifies additional qualifiers beyond general public service, underscoring the honor's role in formal acknowledgment rather than empirical metrics of impact. As Kyari's sole major national distinction, the CON lacks counterparts in higher tiers like the Commander of the Order of the Federal Republic (CFR), with subsequent recognitions limited to sector-specific media awards post-appointment as minister, such as Newspaper's Minister of the Year in 2024. This positions it as a merit-based of legislative amid Nigeria's patronage-oriented honors system, without evidence of exceptional empirical outcomes tied to the award.

References

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