Atiku Abubakar was born on the 25th of November 1946 in a small village called Jada. Jada was then a part of British Cameroon. But in the year 1961, the people of Jada voted for their country to be part of Nigeria. They now belong to Adamawa State.
His father’s name was Garba Abubakar and was of the Fulani ethnic group; he was into the trade of goods and agriculture. His mother’s name was Aisha Kande. Atiku was named after his grandfather, Atiku Abdulqadir, who came from Wurno in Sokoto State and later moved to Jada. His mother’s father, Inuwa Dutse, also relocated from Dutse in the state of Jigawa to
Atiku Abubakar had only one sister, but she died as a baby, so he had no siblings. At the age of eleven, in 1957, Atiku’s father died from drowning in a river on the way to a village called Toungo.
Childhood and School Life
Atiku’s father did not like Western education and tried to stop him from going to school. Because Atiku was not attending school as required by law, the government arrested his father for a short time. He was released after Atiku’s mother paid a fine.
At the age of eight, Atiku finally started school at Jada Primary School. He finished primary school in 1960 and moved straight to Adamawa Provincial Secondary School. He completed secondary school in 1965 and passed his final exam with a grade three result.
After school, Atiku went briefly to the Nigeria Police College in Kaduna but left because he could not show a Mathematics result. He then worked for a short time as a Tax Officer at the Regional Ministry of Finance.
In 1966, he was accepted into the School of Hygiene in Kano and graduated in 1967 with a diploma. While studying there, he became the Interim Student Union President. In the same year, he received a government scholarship to study for a Law Diploma at Ahmadu Bello University. He finished in 1969.
During the Nigerian Civil War, he joined the Nigeria Customs Service. Many years later, in 2021, he earned a master’s degree in International Relations from Anglia Ruskin University.
Career in the Nigeria Customs Service
Atiku Abubakar worked with the Nigeria Customs Service for twenty years. Over time, he rose to the position of deputy director, which was one of the highest roles at the time. He retired from Customs in April 1989. While still working there, he started investing in businesses, especially property.
Business Life
In 1974, Atiku borrowed 31,000 naira to build his first house in Yola. He rented it out and used the rent money to buy more land and build more houses. Over time, he owned many properties in Yola.
In 1981, he went into farming and bought 2,500 hectares of land near Yola to grow maize and cotton. This farming business failed and closed in 1986. He later said this was his first big failure in agriculture.
After that, he started trading food items like rice, flour and sugar in large amounts. One of his biggest business successes started while he was still a Customs Officer at Apapa Ports. An Italian businessman named Gabrielle Volpi asked him to help start a company called Nigeria Container Services, also known as NICOTES. This company later became Intels Nigeria Limited, a large oil servicing and logistics company that made Atiku very wealthy. He is one of its founders.
His other businesses include Adama Beverages Limited, an animal feed factory, and the American University of Nigeria in Yola, which became the first American-style private university in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Because Atiku owned business shares while working for the government, some people accused him of a conflict of interest. He said this was allowed by the rules and explained that he did not manage the businesses himself. Later, while he was Vice President, Intels was linked to money laundering accusations made by the United States government against him.
How He Entered Politics
Atiku first became involved in politics in the early 1980s by quietly helping Bamanga Tukur run for governor. He helped gather votes and donated money.
Near the end of his Customs career, he met General Shehu Musa Yar’Adua. Yar’Adua introduced him to a group of politicians who met often in Lagos. These meetings led to the creation of the People’s Front of Nigeria, which included many people who later became important leaders.
In 1989, Atiku became National Vice-Chairman of the People’s Front and was elected to the Constituent Assembly that worked on a new constitution. When the military government refused to allow political groups to register, the People’s Front joined the Social Democratic Party.
In 1990, Atiku said he wanted to run for governor of Gongola State. Before elections were held, the state was split into Adamawa and Taraba. Atiku won the SDP primaries in Adamawa in 1991 but was later stopped by the government from contesting the election.
First Presidential Ambitions
In 1993, Atiku ran in the SDP presidential primaries. He came third, behind Moshood Abiola and Baba Gana Kingibe. There were talks about joining forces to defeat Abiola, but Atiku later withdrew after advice from Shehu Yar’Adua. Abiola was said to have promised to make him his running mate, but party pressure led Abiola to choose Kingibe instead.
After the June 12 election was cancelled and during General Sani Abacha’s rule, Atiku planned to run for governor under the United Nigeria Congress Party. That political process ended when Abacha died.
In 1998, Atiku joined the Peoples Democratic Party and won the election to become Governor of Adamawa State. Before he could take office, he was chosen as the running mate to Olusegun Obasanjo, who won the 1999 presidential election.
Vice Presidency Years
Atiku became Vice President on 29 May 1999. During his first term, he led the National Economic Council and headed the National Council on Privatisation, which sold many government-owned companies.
His second term was difficult because he had serious disagreements with President Obasanjo, especially over Obasanjo’s attempt to stay in power for a third term.
In 2005, Atiku was linked to an alleged bribery case involving U.S. Congressman William Jefferson and a businesswoman named Lori Mody. Investigators believed money was meant to influence Atiku, but he denied any wrongdoing. Jefferson was later convicted in 2009 and sent to prison, though his sentence was reduced in 2017.
After the third-term plan failed, the ruling party became deeply divided. In 2006, Atiku left the PDP and joined the Action Congress to prepare for the 2007 election.
2007 Presidential Election
Atiku announced he would run for president in November 2006 and became the Action Congress candidate.
At first, the electoral commission removed his name from the ballot because of corruption claims. The Supreme Court later ruled that this was wrong and allowed him to run.
He came third in the election, which he described as the worst in Nigeria’s history, and he refused to attend the new president’s swearing-in.
Return to PDP and Further Contests
After the election, Atiku returned to the PDP. He tried again to become president in 2011 but lost the party primaries to Goodluck Jonathan.
In 2014, he left the PDP and helped form the All Progressives Congress. He ran in the APC primaries in 2015 but lost to Muhammadu Buhari.
In 2017, he returned to the PDP, saying past problems had been settled.
2019 and 2023 Elections
In 2018, Atiku won the PDP presidential primaries and ran against President Buhari in 2019. During the campaign, he promised to privatise most of the national oil company and made controversial comments about forgiving people who stole public money. He lost the election and challenged the result in court.
In 2022, he again won the PDP presidential primaries for the 2023 election. In the general election, he finished second behind Bola Tinubu and joined other opposition candidates in asking for a revote.
And in 2025, he left the PDP, saying it had moved away from its original values, and joined the African Democratic Congress with Peter Obi. They planned to work together ahead of the 2027 elections.
What He Believes In
Atiku believes strongly in federalism. He thinks Nigerian states should have more power and control over their own resources so they can develop better and be more accountable.
He also cares deeply about education. In 2005, he founded the American University of Nigeria to improve learning and encourage critical thinking.
He has spoken many times about the poor state of education in Nigeria and has given scholarships, including to girls who escaped from the Chibok school kidnapping.
Corruption Allegations and International Issues
Atiku has faced many corruption accusations over the years, including claims involving bribery and money laundering. For a long time, people questioned whether he could travel to the United States, but he later visited in 2019. He, his wife Rukaiyatu, and his daughter Hadiza own several properties in Dubai.
Atiku Abubakar Wives & Children
Atiku Abubakar has a large family; he is married to four wives and has twenty-eight children. He said he married multiple wives because he grew up as an only child and did not want his children to feel lonely.
First wife: His first wife, Titilayo “Titi” Albert, married in 1971, has four children named Fatima, Adamu, Halima, and Aminu. Second wife: His second wife, Saadatu Ladi Yakubu, married in 1979, had six children: Abba, Atiku, Zainab, Ummi-Hauwa, Maryam, and Rukaiyatu, before they divorced.
His third wife, Princess Rukaiyatu Mustafa, married in 1983, and they have seven kids named Aisha, Hadiza, Aliyu, Asmau, Mustapha, Laila, and ‘Abdusalam. His fourth wife, Fatima Shettima, married in 1986, and they too have seven kids named Amina (Meena), Mohammed, twins Ahmed and Shehu, twins Zainab and Aisha, and Hafsat.
He later married Jennifer Iwenjiora Douglas (Jamila), who is not considered his wife according to the Islamic religion. The couple had three children before they divorced in 2022 as a result of longstanding differences. Their children’s names are Abdulmalik, Zahra, and Faisal.
According to certain reports, he might have also married a Moroccan woman, but details are unclear.
Atiku Abubakar Net Worth
As of 2025, Atiku Abubakar’s net worth is estimated at $1.4–$1.6 billion, making him one of Nigeria’s richest politicians.
His wealth comes from diverse investments: co-founding Intels Nigeria Limited (oil and logistics), early and ongoing real estate ventures in Nigeria and abroad, and founding the American University of Nigeria. He also owns farmland in Adamawa and has stakes in media, beverage manufacturing, fast food chains, property development, and microfinance banking.
Titles and Awards
In 1982, Atiku Abubakar was given the traditional title of Turaki of Adamawa. In 2017, he received a higher title, Waziri of Adamawa. And in 2011, a United States organisation, the National Peace Corps Association, honoured him with the Harris Wofford Global Citizen Award for his work in education and democracy in Africa.