Rotimi Adebari
Rotimi Adebari | |
---|---|
Laois County Councillor | |
In office 2009–2014 | |
Constituency | Portlaoise |
Personal details | |
Born | 1964 (age 59–60) Okeodan, Ogun State, Nigeria |
Political party | Independent |
Alma mater | University of Benin |
Rotimi Adebari ⓘ (born 1964) is a Nigerian-born Irish politician. Adebari was elected as the first black mayor in Ireland in 2007.
Early life and background
[edit]Adebari was born 1964 in Okeodan, Ogun State, and studied economics at the University of Benin.[1]
Life in Ireland
[edit]Failed Asylum claim
[edit]Adebari arrived in Dublin with his wife and two children in 2000. Adebari claimed that as after he converted from Islam to Christianity, he fled Nigeria in 2000, and made a claim for asylum on the grounds of religious persecution.[2][3][4]
His application was rejected because of a lack of evidence that he had personally suffered persecution,[5] Adebari did however gain automatic residency when his wife gave birth to a son in Ireland shortly after they arrived.[3]
Election to Laois County Council
[edit]Adebari and his family settled in County Laois. Adebari completed his master's degree in intercultural studies at Dublin City University.[6][7] and set up a firm called Optimum Point Consultancy.[8]
In 2004, he was elected as a town councilor in local elections. In June 2007 he was elected as mayor of Portlaoise Town Council (9 members), with support from Fine Gael, Sinn Féin and an Independent councillor.[9] In the 2009 local elections he was re-elected to the town council and also to Laois County Council for the Portlaoise electoral area.
Alleged work in United Kingdom
[edit]In 2007, Adebari denied claims that he was a train operator in London who worked out of the Queen's Park depot on the Bakerloo line. Multiple London Underground employees, including Paddy Clarke, a retired tube driver from County Louth, stated that Adebari worked as a train driver in London during the late 1990s before moving to Ireland. Clarke stated, "at the very least 50 drivers and six or more managers will remember him. His photograph and signature are on file with London Underground's personnel office which were used in the issue of his free travel-pass and identity card." Adebari asserted he travelled to Ireland directly from Nigeria via Paris, and never worked or lived in London at any time.[10]
Adebari ran as an independent candidate in the 2011 general election for the Laois–Offaly constituency, he failed to get elected and received 628 1st preference votes (0.85%). In 2014, Adebari ran as an Independent in the Local Election but failed to gain election and lost his position on Laois County Council.
References
[edit]- ^ "Local hero". The Irish Times. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
- ^ "All hail The chieftain", Irish Independent, 25 August 2007
- ^ a b Shawn Pogatchnik, "Ireland Gets Its First Black Mayor", Associated Press, 28 June 2007
- ^ "State's first black mayor elected". The Irish Times. Retrieved 8 December 2022.
- ^ Ohia, Paul (7 August 2007). "Nigeria: It's Only a White Lie, Isn't It?". Retrieved 1 December 2020.
- ^ Ireland elects its first black mayor, RTÉ News, 28 June 2007
- ^ Ireland elects first black mayor, BBC News, 28 June 2007
- ^ "Rotimi Adebari". Africa Resource. 27 February 2011.
- ^ County Laois, Election of Town Mayor Makes History Archived 2007-09-18 at the Wayback Machine, website of the Laois County Council, 28 June 2007
- ^ Shane Phelan and Eimear Ni Bhraonain, Candidate rejects claims he lied to stay in Ireland, Irish Independent, 7 February 2011
- 1964 births
- Nigerian emigrants to Ireland
- Converts to Christianity from Sunni Islam
- Independent candidates in Dáil elections
- Irish Christians
- Irish former Sunni Muslims
- Members of Laois County Council
- Mayors of places in the Republic of Ireland
- Nigerian Christians
- Nigerian former Sunni Muslims
- Politicians from Ogun State
- People from Portlaoise
- Politicians from County Laois
- Living people
- Black Irish people
- 21st-century Irish politicians