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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life  





2 Alhassan Dantata and Sons Group  





3 Political career  





4 Philanthropy  





5 See also  





6 References  














Aminu Dantata






Hausa
 

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Aminu Alhassan Ɗantata
Born

Aminu Ɗantata


(1931-05-19) 19 May 1931 (age 93)
Occupations
  • Businessman
  • philanthropist
  • Spouse

    Rabi Ɗantata

    (died 2023)
    ParentAlhassan Dantata (father)
    Relatives
  • Mahmud Dantata (brother)
  • Aliko Dangote (grandnephew)
  • Aminu Dantata ((Listen); born 19 May 1931) is a Nigerian businessman and philanthropist who is one of the promoters of Kano State Foundation, an endowment fund that supported educational initiatives and provided grants to small-scale entrepreneurs in Kano.[1] He is the head of a group of companies that manages his real estate and other business ventures.[2]

    Dantata is the founder of Express Petroleum & Gas Company Ltd and one of the organizers of Jaiz Bank in Nigeria. In 1978, he was a member of the National Movement, an organization that later transformed to the National Party of Nigeria.[3]

    Life

    [edit]

    Dantata was born to the family of Alhassan Dantata, who was from an Agalawa trading family, Aminu Dantata's grand-father was called Abdullahi while his great-grand father was called Baba Talatin a prosperous merchant who brought the family from KatsinatoMadobi following the death of his father Ali, Aminu Dantata's grand father Abdullahi continued to operate from Madobi until 1877 when having set out for a journey to Gonja his wife delivered Alhassan Dantata the father of Aminu at a campsite (Zango) of Bebeji on his return from the journey he decided to abandon Madobi and moved to Bebeji. Aminu Dantata is the fifteenth child in a family of seventeen children. From 1938 to 1945, he was educated at Dala Primary School and then finished his education through home studies in a private school built by his father in 1949.[2] After his studies, he joined the family business, Alhassan Dantata & sons in 1948 as a produce buyer and also got married. In 1955, he became the Sokoto district manager of the business. The year 1955 was also when his father died and the shares in the business were subsequently distributed to the children. In 1958, Dantata became the deputy managing director of the business with his brother Ahmadu, was the MD. When Ahmadu died in 1960, Dantata became the head of the business.[4]

    Over the years, Dantata expanded the business holdings and his activities into various sectors of the Nigerian political and economic sphere. By the beginning of the 1960s, Dantata had a construction firm that received patronage from the newly independent government in Nigeria, his firm was given a contract to build part of the School of AviationinZaria. In 1961, he was among three other businessmen as part of the 23 member economic mission group, the first world-wide mission sent by an independent government in Nigeria.[5] In 1964, he was among the pioneer board members of the Nigerian Industrial Development Bank. In 1968, Dantata was appointed kano State commissioner for Economic Development, Trade and Industry under the administration of Audu Bako, he was in the position until 1973.[4]

    During the indigenization period of the 1970s, the Dantata group bought shares and held significant holdings in Mentholatum, SCOA, Funtua Cotton Seed Crushing Co and Raleigh Industries.

    Alhassan Dantata and Sons Group

    [edit]

    Dantata assumed executive leadership of Alhassan Dantata and Sons in 1960. Established by his father as commodity firm trading in groundnut, kolanut and a few other commodities, Dantata later invested in some foreign enterprises operating in Nigeria. Between 1960 and 1980, it operated the following divisions: Building and construction division whose contracts included Defense Academy in Kaduna, extension to Ahmadu Bello University in Zaria and a civil aviation training school in Zaria.[6] A Merchandise division that was founded in the middle of the 1970s traded in building materials primarily in Northern Nigeria.[6] Northern Amalgamated and Marketing Company Limited, this unit has two main parts, a fertilizer division generally supplying governments and a technical division trading in WARD generators and Barford construction equipment.[6] The firm maintained a division that held a Mercedes Benz dealership and another that maintained a terminal at Warri Port. By the 1990s, the group had changed its identity to become Dantata Organization with additional investment in oil exploration through Express Petroleum.[2]

    Political career

    [edit]

    In 1961, Dantata was elected as the representative of Kura district in the Northern House of Assembly. He was also an executive member of Kano Provincial Council. After the First Republic was truncated, Dantata was nominated to be an executive member of the newly formed Kano State in 1967 where he served as the state commissioner of Trade and Industry.[2]

    Philanthropy

    [edit]

    Dantata has donated funds and buildings to various institutions around Kano. He donated the Alhassan Dantata Haemodyalysis Center to Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital.[7] He was the first chancellorofAl-Qalam University, Katsina.

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Lucas, J. (1994). The State, Civil Society and Regional Elites: A Study of Three Associations in Kano, Nigeria. African Affairs, 93(370), 21–38. Retrieved from Jstor. Pp. 24–26
  • ^ a b c d "Alhassan Dantata's Long, Vibrant And Undying Legacy". People & Power. 2 June 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  • ^ Labinjoh, J. (1981). The National Party of Nigeria: A Study in the Social Origins of a Ruling Organization. Africa Spectrum, 16(2), 193–201. Pp. 194. Retrieved from Jstor.
  • ^ a b "Alhaji Aminu Dantata". Happy Home. Punch. May 1978. OCLC 30583416.
  • ^ Nigeria sending 23-man economic mission to U.S. (17 June 1961). Tri – State Defender (1959–1989) Retrieved Proquest.
  • ^ a b c 1978. "Alhassan Dantata and Sons Limited" advertisement. Financial Times Nigeria Survey. Financial Times. 29 August 1978
  • ^ Jafaar, Jafaar (27 October 2010). "Jonathan Commissions Modern Health Facilities at Teaching Hospital". Daily Trust (Abuja)p.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aminu_Dantata&oldid=1225119993"

    Categories: 
    Nigerian businesspeople
    1931 births
    National Party of Nigeria politicians
    Living people
    Dantata family
    Businesspeople from Kano
    People from Kano State
    Northern Elements Progressive Union politicians
    Northern People's Congress politicians
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    This page was last edited on 22 May 2024, at 13:52 (UTC).

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