First
 civilian governor of Plateau State, Chief Solomon Lar, is dead. Lar 
passed on in a US hospital of what family sources described as old-age 
related ailment on Wednesday. He was aged 80.
Commissioner for Information, Mr. 
Abraham Yiljap, who confirmed his death, told our correspondent that the
 family had contacted Governor Jonah Jang to
 inform him about Lar’s 
demise.
Jang, in a statement signed by the 
Director of Press Affairs to the Governor, Mr. James Mannok, said that 
Jang was shocked when he received the news.
He described the elder statesman as a pillar of democracy in Nigeria.
The statement partly reads, “It’s  with 
great sadness that the Government of Plateau State received the death of
 Chief Solomon Daushep Lar the first civilian Governor of the state  and
 the first National Chairman  of the Peoples Democratic Party, who 
passed away in the United States of America.”
Meanwhile, President Goodluck Jonathan 
and Governors Emmanuel Uduaghan (Delta); Seriake Dickson (Bayelsa); and 
Liyel Imoke (Cross River); a former Vice President, Alhaji Abubakar 
Atiku, the Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu and Dr. 
Junaid Muhammed had expressed shock at the late politician’s death.
Jonathan, who expressed sadness over the death Lar, described it as a national loss.
He observed that the late politician 
would be remembered for the exemplary humility, great vision, wisdom and
 maturity which he brought to political leadership in Nigeria for over 
50 years as a legislator, executive governor, party leader and a highly 
revered elder statesman.
In a statement by his Special Adviser on
 Media and Publicity, Dr. Reuben Abati, the President urged the 
deceased’s family and associates to take solace in the knowledge that he
 lived a long and most fulfilled life.
Also, the PDP, the Baraje-faction of the
 party and other eminent Nigerians had also commiserated with the family
 of the deceased.
The PDP in a statement by its National 
Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, said the death of the politician
 had “left a big vacuum not only in the party but in Plateau State and 
the nation at large.”
The party described Lar as a 
quintessential politician and patriot, who sacrificed the greater part 
of his life for the entrenchment of true democracy and an egalitarian 
nation.
Metuh further said the “PDP at the 
national level will participate fully in ensuring that Chief Solomon Lar
 is given an equivalent of a party national burial.”
The Deputy Senate President, Senator Ike Ekweremadu also expressed shock and sadness over the death of  Lar.
He said, “We have lost one of the finest
 political figures of our time and a hero of our current democratic 
dispensation; his death marks the end of an era.”
Also, the Alhaji Abubakar Kawu 
Baraje-led PDP in a statement signed by its spokesperson, Chief 
Chukwuemeka Eze, said that the country had lost a rare gem with the 
death of Lar.
The New PDP described Lar as a colourful politician of substance, a first-class patriot and an accomplished administrator.
For Atiku, Lar’s demise was a national loss.
 “Lar was a leader Nigeria needed at 
each time of crisis,” Atiku said, noting that his departure will be most
 felt at this time when there is growing disagreement among the 
country’s political elite.
Atiku said the late Chief Lar’s “fight 
for his middle-belt region in particular and Nigerians in general and 
would be remembered by every worthy historian of this era.”
The Northern States Governors Forum also
 described the death of the first civilian Governor of the old Plateau 
State, as a devastating loss to the people of Plateau State in 
particular and the nation in general.
Chairman of the forum and Governor of 
Niger State, Dr. Babangida Aliyu, said with the death of Chief Solomon 
Lar, Nigeria has lost a patriot of uncommon courage.
The forum’s condolence was contained in a statement signed by Aliyu’s spokesman, Danladi Ndayebo.
 
 
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