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History
The earliest Nigerians were the Nok people, skilled
artisans from around the Jos area. By the beginning of the second
millennium the Nok had virtually disappeared and the state of Kanem,
to the north east of Lake Chad, was flourishing. Much of Kanem was
Islamic, as were the kingdoms around Kano and Katsina, and its wealth
came from control of the trans-Saharan trade route from West Africa
to the Mediterranean. These northern Islamic states remained untouched
by Europeans until well into the 19th century. By contrast the southern
states were dominated in the 14th and 15th centuries by a number
of Yoruba empires with traditional Obas (kings) who cultivated European
contact through the Portugese spice trade.
At the end of the 18th century Fulani religious
zealots in the north, sick of being dominated by the Islamic Hausa
states, took over and created the single Islamic state of the Sokoto
Caliphate. This original division between the Islamic government
in the north and the Yoruba tribes in the south has never healed,
and over the years intertribal fighting and civil wars have rubbed
salt into the wounds. Even today Nigerian politics is riddled with
tribal rivalries and ancient axes to grind.
After the bottom fell out of the spice trade, the
Portugese, and then the British, began a miserable trade slaves,
but by 1807 slavery had been banned and the British began to look
for other ways to turn a buck. British companies began to take control
of the Jos mines thus destroying the livelihood of thousands of
independent tin producers. Worse still, the heavy reliance on mining
exports was achieved at the expense of Nigeria's export food crops
and the country had its first-ever food shortage. The British had
also appointed chiefs in the southern Ibo communities to run the
area but this was like hammering square pegs into round holes. These
'invented chiefs' had little in common with the people and simmering
hostility and resentment was the usual result.
In 1960 Nigeria declared independence. Unfortunately
the British system of colonialism had done nothing to unify Nigeria
or prepare it for independence. The historical conflicts between
north and south, and other inter-regional fighting, made the idea
of a unified republic unworkable. By 1966 the dream of a flourishing
democracy was floundering amidst a series of massacres, inter-regional
hostilities and, finally, a military coup that installed the first
of a series of military governments. The Ibo responded by seceding
from the federation and declaring the independent republic of Biafra,
kick-starting an all-out civil war that lasted for nearly three
years before federal Nigeria won and reintegrated Biafra. The war
left behind nearly 1,000,000 dead and 'Biafra' as a byword in mass
destruction and famine.
Given Nigeria's seesawing fortunes it was almost
predictable that they would follow one of the world's worst famines
with a champagne period of excessive prosperity. Rocketing oil prices
provided the Nigerian government with a chance to go on a spending
spree of reckless proportions and the country quickly became a hotbed
of foreigners rushing to Nigeria with their dash (bribe)
money. Corruption became de rigueur, crime rampant, and chaos spread
like cancer. By the early 1980s the world recession sent oil prices
plummeting again and plunged Nigeria into a cycle of massive debt,
soaring inflation, large-scale unemployment and widespread corruption.
In 1993 the country came under the iron-fisted rule of General Abacha.
Far from delivering on the promise of a US-style
democracy, Abacha earned the wrath of human rights group and the
censure of the Commonwealth nations for executing well-known playwright
Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight others for seditious political activity.
This and other despotic actions sparked rioting and civil unrest
across Nigeria. In June 1998 Abacha died and was immediately replaced
by Major General Abubakar. Abubakar promised a return to civilian
rule. He kept his promise and in 1999 Olusegun Obasanjo, a former
military leader and - until 1998 - a political prisoner, was elected
president.
Upon the election of Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigerians
were euphoric, as it seemed they were finally free from military
rule. It was not long before things deteriorated as several rival
groups (religious and tribal), no longer threatened by army intervention,
settled down to protracted conflict. In one night of carnage during
the Sharia'a riots (over full implementation of Islamic law) in
February 2000, over 300 people were killed in hand-to-hand rioting
between Igbo Christians and Hausa Muslims in Kaduna.
The emergency was exacerbated by fuel shortages
and extended power blackouts that left the country in darkness for
weeks. Little improved under the new democracy. Obasanjo consolidated
Nigeria's position as West Africa's political heavyweight and a
key player in the Commonwealth, but the country was still beset
by ethnic and religious violence, especially in Lagos, the Central
Plateau and the southern oilfields. In presidential elections in
April 2003 Obasanjo claimed an overwhelming victory, although independent
observers expressed reservations over irregularities and intimidation. |