Nigeria Introduction
Figure 1. Administrative Divisions of Nigeria as of August 1991
THE MOST POPULOUS COUNTRY IN AFRICA and the largest in
area
of the West African states, Nigeria was an early twentieth
century colony that became an independent nation in 1960.
A
country of great diversity because of the many ethnic,
linguistic, and religious groups that live within its
borders,
Nigeria is also a country with a long past. The history of
the
peoples that constitute the present state dates back more
than
2,000 years. The earliest archaeological finds were of the
Nok,
who inhabited the central Jos Plateau between the Niger
and Benue
rivers between 300 B.C. and 200 A.D. A number of states or
kingdoms with which contemporary ethnic groups can be
identified
existed before 1500. Of these, the three dominant regional
groups
were the Hausa in the northern kingdoms of the savanna,
the
Yoruba in the west, and the Igbo in the south.
The European slave trade that occurred in Africa as
early as
the late fifteenth century and that crested between the
1650s and
the 1850s had a significant impact on Nigeria. Britain
declared
the slave trade illegal in 1807 and sent its navy to West
African
waters to enforce the ban. Britain's action led ultimately
to
British intervention in Nigeria, which had become a major
area
for the slave trade. Meanwhile, whereas European
missionaries
were bringing Christianity to the peoples of southern
Nigeria,
Islam had been introduced along the caravan routes of
northern
Nigeria. The jihad, or holy war, waged within what became
the
Sokoto Caliphate between 1804 and 1808, was instrumental
in
spreading the Muslim faith not only in the north but also
into
adjacent regions, such as the area that came to be known
as the
middle belt, running from the Niger River valley in the
west to
the Cameroon Highlands in the east.
Initially, the slave trade had been the area's primary
attraction for the European powers, but other products,
including
palm oil and cocoa, also played a role. To safeguard trade
from
the instability resulting from the ongoing Yoruba wars
that began
in the 1830s, Britain established a colony in Lagos as
early as
1861. The Royal Niger Company was chartered for trading
purposes
in 1886, shortly after the Berlin Conference of 1885 had
sought
to resolve overlapping European colonial activities on the
African continent. Until 1900 British control of the area
was
limited to the coastal region and Lokoja, at the
confluence of
the Niger and Benue rivers. In that year, Britain named
Frederick
Lugard high commissioner of the Protectorate of Northern
Nigeria.
His tenure, which lasted until 1918, stressed indirect
British
control using local rulers. When Northern Nigeria and
Southern
Nigeria were united in 1914, Lugard continued as Britain's
chief
representative. Hugh Clifford, who succeeded him as
governor from
1919 to 1925, sought to bring Western economic
development, to
build on educational progress made in the south, and to
introduce
new governmental structures such as the 1922 constitution
and the
Legislative Council.
British rule and economic and educational development
produced a rising nationalism that was reflected
particularly in
the organized labor movement and the creation of various
political parties during World War II. Following the war,
Nigeria
developed under two colonial constitutions, those of 1946
and
1951. They expanded the Legislative Council and introduced
the
federal principle, combining regional autonomy with
federal union
and stipulating that civil service personnel and personnel
in
other public spheres should reflect the various parts of
the
country. In 1952-53 a census indicated that 54 percent of
the
population resided in the northern part of the country.
Because
population was the basis for allocating revenues as well
as
political representation, census findings always aroused
considerable controversy as to their accuracy. The 1962
census
was voided, and the 1963 census has become the accepted
basis for
planning purposes. The 1973 census, which claimed that 64
percent
of the population lived in the north, was subsequently
disallowed. (The November 1991 census was conducted by
restricting movement of the population for two days in
250,000
enumeration areas, In mid-March 1992 the government
announced
that the overall population was only 88.5 million
considerably
less than anticipated.
Nigeria gained its independence on October 1, 1960, and
the
First Republic is generally held to have begun then,
although the
nation actually became a republic on October 1, 1963. The
political scene, unfortunately, was clouded by the trial
of two
leading politicians, who were charged with conspiracy; and
widespread political abuses and corruption caused the
electorate
to become disillusioned. The 1964-65 elections saw very
low voter
participation, followed by increasing violence that led to
the
death of as many as 2,000 persons. After an abortive coup
attempt
in January 1966, the army took over under Major General
Johnson
Aguiyi Ironsi, an Igbo, and a Federal Military Government
was
formed. Ironsi's tenure was short-lived because northern
officers
staged a countercoup in July, in which Ironsi was killed
and
Lieutenant Colonel Yakubu Gowon, a Christian from the
middle belt
area, took control. Tension increased between the
infantry, who
were mainly of northern origin, and the Igbo soldiers in
the
south. The conflict led to the bloody civil war of 1967-70
(also
known as the Biafran War) that took the lives of about 2
million
persons.
Gowon, who intended that his be an interim rule
preparing for
return to civilian government, concentrated on economic
development. In the late 1960s, the discovery of petroleum
in
commercial quantities caused oil to replace cocoa,
peanuts, and
palm products as Nigeria's major foreign exchange earner;
and in
1971 Nigeria became a member of the Organization of the
Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC). The economy suffered, however,
from
the 1972-74 drought and rising unemployment as farm
workers
flocked into the cities.
Discontent increased, and in 1975 military forces
deposed
Gowon in a bloodless coup. They brought in Brigadier
General
Murtala Muhammad, who began demobilizing the military,
cutting
the civil service, and creating new states (the number of
states
eventually came to nineteen) in order to weaken regional
ethnic
ties. Dissatisfaction within the military over these
measures led
to Murtala Muhammad's assassination in 1976. He was
succeeded by
his next in command, Lieutenant General Olusegun Obasanjo,
who
concentrated on preparing the country for civilian rule in
accordance with the draft of the constitution, which was
promulgated in 1979, and the elections held under it.
The resulting Second Republic lasted from 1979 to 1983
under
civilian president Shehu Shagari. The weak political
coalition
government, the end of the oil boom, the strain of
recession, and
fraud in the 1983 elections caused the army to step in
again at
the end of December 1983 January 1984 under Major General
Muhammadu Buhari, who sought to end widespread corruption.
The
army removed Buhari in August 1985, substituting Major
General
Ibrahim Babangida and the calling the new governing
military body
Armed Forces Ruling Council. Babangida also attempted to
prepare
Nigeria for civilian government, initially through
economic
measures. He declared a National Economic Emergency in
1986 and
undertook Nigeria's own version of a rigorous structural
adjustment program (SAP), as a result of which it received
aid
from the
World Bank (see Glossary).
Economic measures designed to raise the overall
standard of
living of Nigerians had to take into account the
pluralistic
nature of the society. The country contained between 250
and 400
ethnic groups (depending on the way they were defined),
speaking
about 400 languages. Of these, the Hausa were the dominant
group
in the northern area, followed by the Kanuri; the Nupe and
Tiv
predominated in the middle belt; and the southern area was
fragmented: the major groups being the Yoruba concentrated
in the
southwest and the Igbo in the southeast. Whereas 80
percent of
Nigeria's population in 1990 lived in farming villages,
the
country experienced perhaps the fastest growing
urbanization in
the world in the 1970s and had the largest total urban
population
of any state in sub-Saharan Africa. The search for
employment
drew males to the cities, leaving most rural areas with a
population composed largely of women, children, and the
elderly.
Religion also has been pluralist. The far northern
areas of
Nigeria have commonly been considered Muslim, but the
middle belt
has a mixture of Muslim and Christian adherents. In the
south,
traditionally considered Christian and featuring
Protestant and
Africanized churches, such as the Aladura movement among
the
Yoruba and Roman Catholicism among the Igbo, there was
also a
sizeable Muslim population in 19900. In addition,
traditional
religion, characterized by worship of primordial spirits,
dead
ancestors, and spirits of places, is practiced, especially
in
rural areas.
Education, too, has followed a varied pattern. By 1992,
Nigeria had a nationwide indigenous system in which
English had
come to be the language of instruction beyond primary
school;
traditional Quranic schools, both in the rural and urban
areas of
the north; and private and parochial schools in the
cities, which
provided a European-style education (such schools were
taken over
by the government in the mid-1970s but allowed to resume
private
operation in 1990).
Health facilities were uneven in quality as of 1990.
Babangida launched a Primary Health Care plan in 1987
designed to
expand immunization and improve inadequate rural health
facilities and the geographic maldistribution of medical
facilities. Significant health progress had been made
nationally,
however, since World War II. One of the most challenging
health
problems of the early 1990s was the prevalence of acquired
and
human services immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS). In the
spring
of 1992, the minister of health announced that about
400,000
Nigerians (nearly 0.5 percent of the population) were
carriers of
the virus that caused AIDS.
The relatively high percentage of secondary school and
university graduates in Nigeria represented both an asset
and a
liability to the economy. Although an educated work force
was
useful in promoting technology and the professions, in the
recession of the late 1980s, Nigeria had an unemployment
rate for
secondary school graduates of 35 to 40 percent, a
potential
source of unrest. Efforts to decrease unemployment were
hampered
by the dependence of the economy on petroleum. In 1988 oil
produced 87 percent of the country's export income and 77
percent
of total federal revenues. This situation made the economy
very
vulnerable to world oil price fluctuations. For example,
the fall
in oil prices and output in the latter 1980s caused a
drastic
decline in Nigeria's gross national product
(GNP--see Glossary).
GNP went from US$830 per capita in 1983 to US$250 per
capita in
1989. As a result, in 1989, for the first time, Nigeria
was
listed by the World Bank as a low-income country. The fall
in the
price of oil caused Nigeria not only to incur a trade
deficit but
also to begin foreign borrowing, resulting in 1989 in the
largest
public debt of any sub-Saharan state.
In addition to petroleum, Nigeria's major exports in
the
early 1990s continued to be primary products such as cocoa
and,
to a lesser degree, peanuts, cotton, and palm oil
products. (In
1990 a law was passed banning the export of cocoa beans as
of
January 1991 in order to promote domestic processing. This
law
caused concern because despite various projects for
establishing
processing plants, Nigeria was unable to process all the
cocoa
beans produced.) The United States replaced Britain in the
later
1980s as Nigeria's best customer, but Britain remained
Nigeria's
largest single source of imports.
Babangida's introduction of the SAP in 1986 represented
an
effort to increase domestic production and to institute
financial
and import restrictions that would strengthen the economy.
Measures taken under the SAP entailed control of the value
of the
naira (see Glossary)
by creating the second-tier foreign
exchange
market, strict control of the money supply and credits, a
budget
deficit limited to 4 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP--see Glossary),
privatization of major state-owned companies
together
with a new industrial policy, easing of trade
restrictions, and
debt rescheduling. The SAP was still in place in early
1992; the
floating of the naira against international currencies in
March
1992 was a bold step but was expected to result in further
inflation.
Babangida's SAP was not Nigeria's first attempt at
economic
planning. Early government planning efforts, beginning in
the
late 1940s, had limited results; therefore, in 1990
Nigeria
adopted a three-year rolling plan system that could
readily be
modified when changed circumstances required. The major
goals
were to reduce inflation, which had averaged 20 percent or
more
annually between 1973 and 1984; to maintain the
infrastructure--
Nigeria had one of the best-developed transportation
systems in
Africa but maintenance had been poor; to achieve
agricultural
self-sufficiency, and to reduce the SAP burden. As with
most
other developing countries, the share that agriculture
contributed to GDP declined. It went from 65.7 percent in
fiscal year
(see Glossary) 1959 to 39.2 percent in 1988.
Moreover,
Nigerian's hope of achieving food self-sufficiency was at
least
temporarily dashed when in early 1991 drought forced
Nigeria to
increase substantially its food imports. Manufacturing's
share in
GDP gradually rose from 4.4 percent in fiscal year 1959 to
10.0
percent in 1988. The growth in manufacturing resulted in
part
from the Nigerian Enterprises Promotion decrees of 1972,
1977,
and 1981 that facilitated indigenous majority ownership.
These
decrees were relaxed in 1985, however, to encourage
foreign
investment and thus stimulate the economy.
The major goals of economic development were
integrating
agriculture and industry more closely, including
privatization or
commercialization of a number of parastatals and
government-owned
enterprises; improving the infrastructure with particular
reference to increasing electric power generation,
enlarging and
modernizing communications systems, and performing needed
maintenance on existing transportation systems; reducing
dependence on oil; and creating an effective national
planning
body. By the end of 1991, privatization measures had taken
effect
in such areas as agriculture, banking, railroads, and
telecommunications. Nigeria, however, for the most part
lacked
the capital necessary for large-scale development and
depended
upon foreign loans to implement its programs. For example,
it
received a 1990 European Economic Community grant for
rural
development and telecommunications of 3.54 billion naira
(for
value of the
naira--see Glossary)
under the (Fourth)
Lomé Convention (see Glossary)
and a 1991 British loan of £23.3
million to expand the electric power system. As a result
of such
borrowing, at the end of 1991 Nigeria owed an estimated
US$34
billion in external debt, 44 percent was owed to members
of the
Paris Club (see Glossary)
and 20 percent to foreign
commercial
banks. Throughout 1990 and 1991, Nigeria engaged in
extensive
debt rescheduling with Paris Club countries such as
Britain,
Italy, Japan, and Sweden.
Among other major development projects that Nigeria was
pursuing was the large Ajaokuta steelworks, begun with
Soviet
funding and subsequently funded by the World Bank, due for
completion at the end of 1992. On a smaller scale was a
European
currency unit (ECU) 48 million loan from the European
Investment
Bank under the Third Lomé Convention for the development
of palm
oil refining facilities. In addition, despite its efforts
to
diversify its economy, Nigeria was expanding its oil
production.
The expansion came, most notably, through the discovery of
an
offshore field near Akwa Ibom, which was scheduled to
increase
oil production by one-third by 1994. Expansion also
resulted from
the renovation of oil refineries at Warri and Kaduna; the
development of petrochemical plants; an oil condensate
project at
Oso on the Niger Delta coast; and the planned
construction,
beginning in 1992, of facilities to enable the export of
liquefied natural gas from Bonny.
Despite this economic progress, the implementation of
the SAP
led to decreased spending on social programs in the late
1980s.
The decrease caused some domestic dissatisfaction, which
was
reflected in strikes and student demonstrations. Since
achieving
independence in 1960, Nigeria has faced a number of
incidents
reflecting domestic discontent; in many instances the
incidents
were initiated by the army or its leaders. Such
dissension, of
which the most serious outbreak was the Biafran civil war,
has
led to twenty-two years of military rule; democratic
government
under the First Republic and the Second Republic was
limited to
ten years. Sources of military dissatisfaction have arisen
not
only from the personal ambitions of various military
leaders but
also from general dismay at the corruption, bribery,
favoritism,
and inefficiency prevalent in the government. Many
Nigerians
initially saw the army as the most effective body to
control the
country, but with the understanding that military rule was
an
interim measure and that plans must go forward for the
transition
to democratic government. In support of this view, a
number of
organized interest groups, such as professional
associations,
trade unions, student associations, women's organizations,
and
the media have exerted pressures in favor of democratic
processes.
The 1989 constitution that Nigeria adopted as the basis
for
its transition to democratic government was modeled on the
United
States federal system. It provided for a president; two
legislative houses, one based on population and the other
on
states; and an independent judiciary. A timetable was
established
for a series of elections at the local government area,
state,
and national levels. At first, officeholders in any
previous
government were barred from holding office in an attempt
to
eliminate corruption and undue political influence; in
mid-
December 1991 the ban was lifted, making only Babangida
ineligible.
In 1989 Babangida also rejected the applications of all
political entities to be recognized as political parties
and
instead in October 1989 created two parties: the
Republican
National Convention, "a little to the right of center,"
and the
Social Democratic Party, "a little to the left of center."
This
action, which generated considerable controversy, was
designed to
create parties that would cross ethnic, religious,
regional, and
socioeconomic lines. Results of the various elections held
in
1991 appeared to indicate that previously cohesive blocs
were
indeed being eroded. On August 27, 1991, the number of
states was
increased from twenty-one to thirty
(see
fig. 1).
Irregularities
in the gubernatorial primaries in October 1991 in nine
states
caused the election results to be canceled in November and
new
elections to be rescheduled for early December, with the
final
state gubernatorial and state assembly elections occurring
in
mid-December. Although by Nigerian standards the elections
went
relatively smoothly, there was some criticism of the
system of
open balloting by which voters stood behind a photograph
of their
chosen candidate and were counted.
Among the difficulties involved in encouraging the
democratic
process have been ethnic and religious tensions arising
among the
multitudinous groups in the country. Outbreaks of violence
caused
by religious tensions resulting in losses of life have
occurred
in the past and recurred in the 1980s and 1990s. Most
recently,
in 1991 and 1992 they took place in Bauchi, Benue, Kaduna,
Kano,
Taraba, and other states. Desire for ethnic self-assertion
and
for the power and financial wherewithal resulting from
statehood
have largely constituted the basis for the creation of new
states. Nigeria has moved from three regions at
independence to
four regions in 1963, twelve states in 1967, nineteen
states in
1976, twenty-one states in 1987, and thirty states in
August
1991. Government leaders including Babangida have
endeavored,
however, to diversify ethnic representation in a state so
as to
prevent the dominance of a single group. The move of the
federal
capital from Lagos to Abuja in December 1991 resulted not
only
from the tremendous overcrowding and pressure on
transportation
and other infrastructure facilities in Lagos but also from
the
desire to locate the capital in a central area that lacked
association with a particular ethnic group. Some issues
continued
to be controversial, such as the impact the move to Abuja
would
have on Lagos. Moreover, the relationship of states to the
federal government, with particular reference to the
division of
revenues among them, had as of early 1992 not been
resolved to
general satisfaction, nor had the highly controversial
matter of
the establishment of Muslim sharia courts of appeal in
southern
states.
Despite these domestic difficulties, Nigeria has
continued to
play a prominent role not only in West Africa but also in
the
world community. Nigeria was a prime organizer of the
Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and of the
ECOWAS
Cease-fire Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) that stemmed from it.
ECOMOG
provided a peacekeeping force for Liberia to which Nigeria
contributed 900 personnel in August 1990 as well as
leadership.
To reduce the financial burden on Nigeria of participation
in
African peacekeeping forces, Babangida, at the 27th annual
meeting of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), held
in Abuja
in June 1991, again raised the matter of a volunteer
pan-African
defense force, suggesting that such a force be organized
on a
regional basis.
In 1991-92 Babangida served as president of the OAU,
thereby
enhancing his mediator role. During this period, he met
with the
prime ministers of Chad and Niger and the president of
Cameroon
concerning border problems between Nigeria and these
countries. A
meeting of the four states in July 1990 had failed to
resolve the
Lake Chad boundary question, and in the summer of 1991
Cameroon
had occupied nine Nigerian border villages or islands.
Because it
had a higher standard of living than its neighbors,
Nigeria was
also facing an influx of workers from surrounding
countries. In
November 1991, in an attempt to deal with the problem,
Nigeria
announced that it planned to create a frontier force to
control
illegal immigration. Nigeria's major role in the African
continent was particularly highlighted by the visit of
South
African president Frederick W. de Klerk to Nigeria in
early April
1992. The visit laid a foundation for possible future
recognition
of a transitional South African government by the OAU and
other
African states.
Nigeria has sought to play a responsible role in OPEC
as well
as in various United Nations bodies. Nigeria's position
toward
the Arabs-Israeli dispute has been influenced by its
domestic
religious divisions. Babangida reinstated Nigeria's
diplomatic
relations with Israel in August 1991, and shortly
thereafter
invited Palestine Liberation Organization head Yasser
Arafat to
visit, greeting him with a twenty-one-gun salute reserved
for
heads of state. The same month Babangida suspended
Nigeria's
membership in the Organization of the Islamic Conference.
He had
initiated membership in 1986 without any prior
consultation, that
a move had created a furore among Nigerian Christians.
Because of
its position as a former British colony, its membership in
the
British Commonwealth of Nations, and its position as a
world oil
producer, Nigeria's national interests have led it to
align
itself primarily with the West, including the European
Economic
Community.
Nigeria's role as an African regional leader,
peacekeeper,
and mediator has emerged at the same time that the
country's army
was being drastically reduced from approximately 250,000
personnel during the civil war to about 80,000 in 1991.
Additional cuts were projected in order to bring the
forces to
approximately 60,000. This process, together with a
large-scale
restructuring of the armed forces beginning in 1990 and
still
underway in early 1992, occurred in preparation for
civilian
government under the transition to the Third Republic.
The size of the armed forces reflected not only
Nigeria's
expanse but also the domestic instability the country had
experienced since achieving independence in 1960. In the
period
between 1966 and 1985, Nigeria underwent no less than six
coups
d'état, in addition to several attempted coups. (A serious
recent
failed coup was that led by Major Gideon Ockar, a middle
belt
Christian, in April 1991. He advocated the "excising" from
Nigeria of the five northern Muslim states--the coup
attempt
occurred prior to the creation of Nigeria's nine
additional
states--on the grounds that the true Nigeria was the
Christian
southern part of the country.)
Economic and social conditions worsened in the 1980s,
increasing the discontent resulting from ethnic,
sectional, and
religious cleavages. To these forces for instability were
added
such factors as the potential for foreign subversion,
caused in
part by the large number of illegal workers from other
African
states; the fluctuation of oil prices and particularly the
impact
of decreasing oil income on the economy; the pressures of
the
rising foreign debt; and the growing Islamism, or Islamic,
activism (sometimes seen as fundamentalism), as well as
increasing Christian fundamentalism.
Public disenchantment with the military in the 1980s
and
1990s caused increasing demands for democracy, the
elimination of
military tribunals, and an end to Decree Number 2, passed
during
the Buhari regime. In 1992 this decree still permitted the
jailing of individuals for up to six weeks without charge
and set
limits on freedom of speech and the press. Pressure
groups, such
as labor unions, academic, and student groups, and
especially the
media, agitated for reforms and a greater role in
government
decision making, particularly in the economic field. Such
activity led the government to jail various individuals on
a
number of occasions. Another public concern was the rising
crime
rate, especially in urban areas, and the marked increase
in drug-
related crime and international narcotics trafficking.
Numerous
jail sentences resulted, leading to overcrowding and
causing
periodic amnesties to empty penal facilities.
Despite Nigeria's recent history of military domination
of
politics, in April 1992 Babangida appeared committed to
turning
over power to a new civilian government in January 1993.
Part of
Babangida's transition process entailed the
demilitarization of
the government. Demilitarization was accomplished in part
in
September 1990 by retiring from military service all
cabinet
ministers except for Babangida and the minister of
defense. The
officers continued to serve in a civilian capacity. The
post of
chief of the General Staff was likewise eliminated; the
incumbent, Vice Admiral Augustus Aikhomu, who had also
been
retired from the military, was named vice president. In
addition,
numerous state military governors were retired and
replaced by
lower-ranking officers; in each state, a civilian deputy
governor
served under the military governor in order to become
familiar
with the duties entailed. In December 1991, the newly
elected
civilian governors took office.
Serious questions remained, however, as to whether or
not
Babangida's goals for the professionalization of the armed
forces
and the reeducation of the military concerning their
subordinate
role in a forthcoming civilian government were attainable.
Concurrently, Babangida stressed educating the citizenry
about
their responsibilities for active, knowledgeable
participation in
government. The question was also raised as to whether or
not
democracy could be achieved by a military government that
established rules for the transition but that
simultaneously
imposed strict limits on the democratic process and sought
to
silence critics both of the domestic political scene and
of the
government's economic policies, particularly the SAP. The
House
of Representatives elections and the Senate elections
(which will
return senators from each state and one from Abuja to the
newly
structured 61-member Senate) scheduled for November 1992
and the
presidential elections scheduled for December 1992 would
be the
final test in the transition to the Third Republic slated
to
occur in January 1993.
April 15, 1992
Helen Chapin Metz
Data as of June 1991
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