Maryam Babangida (November 1, 1948 – December 27, 2009) was the wife of General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, who was Nigeria's head of state from 1985 to 1993. Her husband was the target of criticism for rampant corruption during his regime. "Shamed By Their Nation", Time Magazine, 6 September 1993 She was credited with creating the position of First Lady of Nigeria.
As first lady, she launched many programmes to improve the life of women. The "Maryam Phenomenon" became a celebrity and "an icon of beauty, fashion and style", a position she retained after her husband's exit from power.
On September 6, 1969, shortly before her 21st birthday, she married Major Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida. They had four children, boys Mohammed and Aminu, and two girls, Aisha Babangida and Halima. After her husband became Chief of Army Staff in 1983, Maryam Babangida became President of the Nigerian Army Officers Wives Association (NAOWA). She was active in this role, launching schools, clinics, women's training centres and child day care centers.
Her hobbies were gardening, Interior design, music, squash, badminton, collecting birds, philanthropic activities and reading.
As First Lady of Nigeria between 1985 and 1993, she turned the ceremonial post into a champion for women's rural development. She founded the Better Life Programme for Rural Women in 1987 which launched many co-operatives, cottage industries, farms and gardens, shops and markets, women's centres and social welfare programs. The Maryam Babangida National Centre for Women's Development was established in 1993 for research, training, and to mobilize women towards self-emancipation.
She championed women issues vigorously.
She reached out to the first ladies of other African diaspora countries to emphasize the effective role they can play in improving the lives of their people.
Her book, Home Front: Nigerian Army Officers and Their Wives, published in 1988, emphasized the value of the work that women perform in the home in support of their husbands, and has been criticized by feminists.
Working with the National Council for Women's Societies (NCWS), she had significant influence, helping gain support for programmes such as the unpopular SFEM (Special Foreign Exchange Market) program to cut subsidies, and to devalue and fix the currency. She also established a glamorous persona. Talking about the opening of the seven-day Better Life Fair in 1990, one journalist said "She was like a Roman empress on a throne, regal and resplendent in a stone-studded flowing outfit that defied description..." Women responded to her as a role model, and her appeal lasted long after her husband fell from power.
At 61 years old, Maryam died due to ovarian cancer on 27 December 2009 in a Los Angeles, California, hospital. Her husband was at her side as she died. President of the Senate of Nigeria, David Mark, was said to have broken down into tears upon hearing the news. On March 19, 2020, Governor Ifeanyi Okowa accompanied by Governor Aminu Tambuwal immortalised the memories of Maryam Babangida by commissioning the Maryam Babangida Way in Delta state capital, Asaba.
The Times of Nigeria reported on her death that she was "considered to be one of the greatest women in Africa today".
the life and times of Maryam Babangida
First lady
Illness and death
Bibliography
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