ETHNIC AND RELIGIOUS CRISES IN NIGERIA A SPECIFIC ANALYSIS UPON IDENTITIES (1999-2013)
Ethnic and religious crises in NigeriaA specific analysis upon identities (1999-2013)BY HALDUN ÇANCI AND OPEYEMI ADEDOYIN ODUKOYA 29 AUG 2016
Abstract
Today, Africa is laced with some of the most
obstinate conflicts, most of them constructed from differences in religious and
ethnic identities. Religious and ethnic nationalism has led to conflicts about
control of state power, unequal allocation of resources, citizenship issues,
state collapse, economic decline and ethno-religious clashes. Nigeria has been
pushed hither and thither by recurrent crises of regional or state illegitimacy,
often impairing efforts at economic transformation, democratisation, national
cohesion and stability (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:4). With this continental
background in mind, this research paper seeks to examine the relationship
between religion, ethnicity and conflict in Nigeria, focusing mainly on issues
in the North of the country. The question is: To what extent are conflicts
emerging from ethnic or religious sources? This paper also looks at the notion
of Identity and how it explains the crisis of development and complexities in
modern Nigeria.
Ethnic and religious crises in NigeriaA specific analysis upon identities (1999-2013)
Introduction
Nigeria is synonymous with deep divisions which
cause major political issues to be vigorously and violently contested along the
lines of intricate ethnic, religious and regional divisions. Issues that raise
the most dust are those regarded essential for the existence and the validity
of the state. Opposing and contending assemblages have a tendency to assume an
exclusionary winner-take-all approach. These issues include the control of
state power, allocation of resources and citizenship. As a result, states with
such divisions are disposed to be delicate and unstable because almost by
definition, they have very little in common with regard to convergence and
harmony which are necessary to reduce the centrifugal forces that rip them
apart (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:4).
Therefore, breakdown, breakaway, civil strife, civil
war, minority nervousness, and violent clashes, all of which would typically be
regarded unusual in normal states are common forces or actual occurrences in
divided states (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:4). Because of a complicated network of
politically silent identities, coupled with a history of protracted and
seemingly stubborn wars and instability, Nigeria is high on the list as one of
the most unstable states in Africa. Since its independence, Nigeria has been
driven hither and thither by recurrent crises of regional or state
illegitimacy, often impairing efforts at democratisation, stability, economic
transformation and national cohesion. A peak of the crisis appears to have
occurred during the civil war of the 1960s, which began shortly after
independence (Okpanachi 2010). Since 1999 when Nigeria transited into civilian
rule, the country has witnessed a rapid increase in the number of conflicts.
The aim of this study is to examine the relationship between religion,
ethnicity and those conflicts in the country. It looks at the notion of
Identity in an attempt to explain the crisis of development and the
complexities of modern Nigeria.
A high level of corruption and the looting of state
resources is another serious and ‘pandemic’ (Dike 2005) problem that makes all
forms of conflict and trouble worse in Nigeria. The country is ‘richly endowed
with natural resources and high quality human capital’ (Ogbeidi 2012:1), but
corruption is one of the main reasons that affect the development of the
country in a negative way. The appropriation of state resources by certain
hands makes poverty and bitter anger inevitable aspects of daily socio-economic
and political routine. In this sense, though corruption is not peculiar to
Nigeria, many sources call it the ‘bane of the country’ (Dike 2005; Ogbeidi
2012:21). And of course, corruption is considered to be one of the main causes
of ethno-religious conflicts (Nwankwo 2015). Poverty and injustice caused by
corruption weaken any sense of mutual tolerance, social solidarity or
coexistence, while reawakening social hatred, radicalism and violence. For this
reason, corruption is seen as one of the most important issues that has to be
resolved in order to cope with ethno-religious conflicts in Nigeria.
The
identity factor
From a socio-political perspective, ‘identity’ bears
a personal and a social meaning. Processes related to identity are ‘located at
the core of the individual and yet in the core of his community culture’
(Erikson 1968:57; Okpanachi 2010). Thus, identity can be said to be an
individual’s ‘sense of belonging to a group if (it) influences his political
behavior’ (Erikson 1968:57; Mary Anderson 2010; Okpanachi 2010). Identity is
built into an individual’s physiological ‘givens’ and in social roles (Erikson
1968:57; Okpanachi 2010). Identity is characterised by features such as an
’emotive tie to a group’, ‘love and belief for a group’, ‘pledge to a cause’,
and ‘commitments and duties to a group’ with which a person identifies (Smyth
and Robinson 2001:7-11; Okpanachi 2010).
General studies in identity underscore the fact that
identity implies similarity and contrast at the same time (Jenkins 2004;
Okpanachi 2010). ‘For an individual, or for a group, there may be a plurality
of identities. Yet, such a plurality is a source of stress and contradiction in
both self-representation and social action. This is because identity must be
distinguished from role-sets’ (Okpanachi 2010).
According to Castells, notions of identity are
present only when social actors co-opt them (Okpanachi 2010; Castells 2010:8).
Oftentimes, self-definition of identity overlaps with role expectations, but
identities are more stable springs of meaning than those social roles. This is
because identities establish the meaning, while social roles shape the
functions (Okpanachi 2010; Castells 2010:7). However, identity is not uniform
or stable among groups or individuals. Its strength and importance is dynamic
and differs from group to group. While identities are somewhat stable, identity
consciousness keeps on changing to reflect the fluctuating role of the
identities and the swelling magnitudes (Jega 2000:11; Okpanachi 2010). This
elasticity of identity avoids coming up with an all new identity for the
particular role and circumstance. Social forces, then, strongly affect identity
building and formation (Okpanachi 2010).
Recent studies on religious identity have also
underscored the positive function of religion in promotion of peace. On the
other hand, however, mobilisation of identity has been used to incite political
groups to struggle and religious groups to legitimise wars and various modes of
brutal and violent acts (Alger 2002:101; Okpanachi 2010).
Politics
of ethnic identity in Nigeria
Ethnicity is a social phenomenon that is manifested
in interactions among individuals of different ethnic groups within a political
system where language and culture are the most prominent attributes. The formation
of dialects within languages was one of the ways in which ethnicity – both
small-scale and large-scale – became fixed in Nigeria. Although there are over
400 languages in Nigeria, only three are considered important while the rest
are considered minor languages. However, the distribution of these languages is
directly proportional to both political and socio-economic power, and therefore
the language group to which one belongs defines his/her status in the society.
Missionaries and local politicians created standard languages and hoped that
they would homogenise language and ethnicity, and create more harmonious ethnic
identities.
Ethnicity is natural in almost all societies made up
of more than one ethnic group. This observation tends to offer the suggestion
that the interaction between different ethnic groups within a single political
set-up generates ethnic identity. An interaction of this kind can create ‘a
common consciousness of being one in relation to other relevant ethnic groups’
(Eriksen 1996:30). That in turn, results in the emergence of in-group and
out-group confines which come to be guarded jealously over time. Based on this
approach, ethnicity thus becomes a process through which ethnic identities are
politicised (Eriksen 1996:30).
Historically, identities have played a significant
role in the Nigerian political process during the colonial period and in the
post-colonial era. During the colonial period, the administrators allowed the
emergence and aggravation of an ‘us’ versus ‘them’ syndrome, where Muslims were
pitted against Christians, Northerners against the Southerners, Hausa-Fulani,
Yoruba and Igbo against each other, and so on (Adefemi 2003:14; Okpanachi
2010). In this era religious and ethnic differences became prominent factors in
instituting and executing socio-economic strategies and applications.
Therefore, the differentiating outcomes of colonialism became the forerunner of
the socio-economic disequilibrium among the different regions, and then this
became an important factor in the stimulation of identity awareness so as to
efficiently ‘divide and rule’ (Fearon and Laitin 2003:82; Okpanachi 2010). But,
as a counter argument it must be said that internal factors are more
determinant than the external ones in creating the cleavages in Nigeria. This
is also the case in many other countries.
Ethnicity is seen as the most basic and politically
salient identity of Nigerians. This argument is based on the premise that in
their competitive and non-competitive contexts, Nigerians tend to define
themselves in terms of ethnic affinities as opposed to other identities
(Osaghae and Suberu 2005:8). A survey conducted in Nigeria by Lewis and Bratton
found that almost half of Nigerians (48.2%) labelled themselves with an ethnic
identity compared to 28.4% who labelled themselves with respect to class and
21% who identified with a religious group (Lewis and Bratton 2000:27; Osaghae
and Suberu 2005:9). This means that over 66% of Nigerians view themselves as
members of an elemental ethnic or religious group. What is even more
interesting is the fact that religious and ethnic identities are more salient
than class identities (Lewis and Bratton 2000:26; Osaghae and Suberu 2005:9).
However, this is not at all that surprising, especially if one considers that
ethno-religious formations are the most persistent behavioural units in Nigeria
(Nsongola-Ntalaja 2004:404; Osaghae and Suberu 2005:9).
Nevertheless, notwithstanding the fact that
ethnicity is the most salient, and the large number of studies conducted on
this issue, the total number of ethnic groupings in Nigeria remains unknown
(Osaghae and Suberu 2005:9). Some sources put it at 374 (Otite 1990:34;
Okpanachi 2010), while some other sources count more than 250 different ethnic
identities (Central Intelligence Agency 2016). However, the population
percentages of the majority of these groups are small when compared with the
seven largest ethnic groups constituting about 88% of the country’s population.
These are Hausa and Fulani (29%), Yoruba (21%), Igbo (18%), Ijaw (10%), Kanuri
(4%), Ibibio (3,5%), and Tiv (2,5%) (Central Intelligence Agency 2016). This
population disproportion when combined with the disparities in the political
influence of individual ethnic groups roughly classifies the Nigerian population
into two major groupings: the majority and minority ethnic groups. When the
Hausa-Fulani, the Yoruba and the Igbo form the majority, the rest of the ethnic
groups are fitted into the minority classification which in itself possesses
different degrees of status relative to their size and political influence
(Rakov 1990; Paden 2008:4; Okpanachi 2010).
The Hausa-Fulani and other smaller ethnic groups
that inhabit the north of the country are Muslims while the Igbo and the other
smaller groups residing in the South are primarily Christians. Groups lying in
the middle comprise a mixture of Christians and Muslims while the Yoruba found
in the Southwest are almost half Muslim and half Christian. This Muslim North
and Christian South cleavage enhances ethnic fractionalisations in Nigeria,
especially in Northern Nigeria where Islamic identity plays a dominant role
(Paden 2007:8; Okpanachi 2010). It is clear that nearly the entire Northern
half of the country consists of states with Sharia law.
Of course, exceptions should not be overlooked for
both parts of the country. There is a considerable population of Muslims in the
South, especially in the Southwest, and a sizeable number amongst the Benin in
Edo State. Even in the Southeast, amongst the Igbo, there has been a rising
number of Muslims, causing the governors of some Igbo-speaking states to
introduce state programmes for Muslims. The same goes for Christians in the
North, where the considerable number of Christians cannot be disregarded in any
analysis of religious groupings in Nigeria.
Lewis (2007:6) attributes the historical prominence
of Islam during the formation of Northern states in the early 19 century to the
continued prominence of Emirs and religious authorities in framing identities
in Northern Nigeria. Lewis argues that a number of principles of ethnicity are
used by political leaders and others to frame their arguments as to how things
should be accomplished. First, ethnic identity is the most important and
consistent basis of social identity in the country. Second, ethnicity is seen
as a way for collective action. Finally, ethnicity is presumed to be a
destabilising factor with far-reaching impacts on democracy. These principles
breed a number of outcomes. Because political competition is played along lines
of ethnicity, the resultant ‘democratic’ but authoritarian government
ostensibly has an ethnic character (Lewis 2007:2).
Lewis states that civilian governments supposedly
promote the creation of an ethnic politicisation and political schism. On the
other hand, non-democratic regimes like military rules are usually
repercussions from the side of the political elite. In most cases, therefore,
mechanisms of political governance are formed on the basis of ethnicity via
custom-made patronage systems (Lewis 2007:2). For instance, in Nigeria the
ethnic factor is seen when political parties are formed and during elections.
The Northern People’s Congress (NPC) was formed in the first Republic and it
was a Hausa-Fulani party. Similarly, the Igbos belonged to the National Council
of Nigeria and Cameroon (NCNC) while the Yoruba prided themselves as members of
the Action Group (AG) (Cohen 1968). These parties later transformed into The
National Party of Nigeria (NPN), the Nigerian People Party (NPP) and the Unity Party
of Nigeria (UPN) during the second republic (Edoh 2001:87). The third Republic,
attributed to the Social Democratic Party (SDP) and National Republican
Convention (NRC), was disbanded by annulment of the June 12, 1993 elections due
to ethnic reasoning when it became clear that the Northern political hegemony
risked being lost forever. Thus, here it is possible to detect that stimulation
of ethnic awareness easily turns into a conflict in order to get more from
scarce societal resources. And this situation provokes political tensions and
cleavages among the ethnic groups. Nigeria is not the only country in the world
where such things are experienced.
In recent times, socio-economic and political
changes have taken place and transformed the delineations of identities and
politics in Nigeria. To begin with, patterns of group mobilisations have
shifted. In the traditional models of Nigerian ethnic politics, emphasis was on
competition among the country’s three largest groups – the Hausa-Fulani, the
Yoruba and the Igbo. The minority groups comprising over 250 smaller ethnic
groups have often been regarded as inconsequential in political contests.
However, since 1999, Nigeria’s political arena has been changing following
political action by groups in the Niger Delta and the ‘middle-belt’ communities
who have increasingly become vocal in national politics and economy (Soludo
2007). Ethnic solidarity has also faced opposition from religious mobilisations
by the Muslims and the Christians especially in the Muslim North.
Since the restoration of democratic rule, ethnic
identity and mobilisation in the Nigerian political landscape has often
resulted in political instability. Between 1999 and 2013, more than 11 000
deaths have occurred as a result of more than five hundred incidents of
communal violence. Ethnic violence has been witnessed in almost all regions in
the country but with particular frequency in the Niger Delta, the Muslim North
and Northwest, and along the middle-belt (Uzodike and Whetho 2011:220). The level
of insecurity witnessed during the post-military period is considerably higher
than that experienced during the three decades of military rule that ended in
1999. It is often assumed that there exist stable identities in Nigeria and
consistent group motives in the approach to ethnic politics (Rotberg 2002:88).
However, the upsurge of ethnicity in Nigeria in recent years leads researchers
to re-examine identity formation.
Religious Identity
Nigeria is the most crowded African country with a
population of about 182 million by 2015 (World Population Prospects 2015:21). A
majority of the scientific academic sources accept that the half of the
population is Christian, the other half Muslim. However, there is uncertainty
about the exact percentages, hence various sources give different figures. In a
report published by Pew Research Center in 2010 the numbers from different
sources are compared in the report’s Appendix B. If we mention them
chronologically for instance, the 1963 Census certified 36% Christian, 48%
Muslim and 16% other. However, the Demographic and Health Survey gave 53%
Christian, 45% Muslim and 2% other in 2008. Similarly, Afrobarometer found 56%
Christian, 43% Muslim and 1% other, also in 2008. And finally, Pew Forum
declared 46% for Christians, 52% for Muslims and 1% for others in 2009 (Pew
Research Center 2010). Whatever the exact percentages are, it is clear that
Nigeria is a country with very large Christian and Muslim populations. This
situation makes this country a potential fault line between the two different
identities and even civilisations. In this sense, Nigeria, with the largest
Christian plus Muslim population in the world, can be defined as a ‘cleft
country’ and then a ‘test case’ of Huntington’s Clash of Civilisations thesis
(Paden 2007; Olojo 2014:7).
Although the general presumption is that ethnic
identity is a more prominent and stable source of identity in Nigeria, some
researchers have demonstrated that religion was more significant than ethnicity
as a source of identity and conflict in Nigeria (Ruby and Shah 2007; Pew
Research Center 2010; Green 2011). In fact, in the Hausa-Fulani North,
religious identity is more pronounced than ethnic identity and only serves to
stimulate ethnicity (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:10). Therefore, of the two major
ethnic groupings in the country, the Yoruba are more likely to identify
themselves with their ethnic group than are the Northern Hausa-Fulani (Lewis
and Bratton 2000:20; Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11).
Nigeria has three major religious identities:
Christian, Islam and traditional religions (Omorogbe and Omohan 2005:557;
Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11). Traditional religions are the most politically
inactive of the three groups, ‘numbering several hundreds of ethnic groups and
sub-groups, villages, clans and kin groups; and, involving the worship of
different gods and goddesses’ (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11). On the other hand,
Christian and Muslim identities have continued to be the backbone of religious
disparity and conflict (Lewis and Bratton 2000:5; Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11).
This differentiation underlies the North-South cleavage.
It is worth noting that, within the wide Christian
and Muslim categories, there lie many sub-cleavages and intra-group conflicts
that have either been active politically in the past or have a potential of
being salient in the future. Among the Christians, sub-cleavages include the
Protestants (Anglican 10%, Baptist 8%, Methodist 5%, and Lutheran 5%), the
Catholics 15%, the Evangelical Church of West Africa 2%, Jehovah’s Witnesses 5%
and a myriad of other local (Aladura, Cherubim and Seraphim, Celestial Church
of Christ 20%) and Pentecostal churches 30% (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11).
The Pentecostal churches form the fundamental
division of Christianity in Nigeria which has experienced rapid growth in
numbers of followers in the last few years with the majority of adherents,
especially the youths, joining the church from the older and more traditional
denominations. The church has played an important role in civil society in
anti-military struggles and democratisation. This has been made possible
through umbrella bodies such as the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), the
Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria (PFN), and the Catholic Bishops Conference
(Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11). However, politicisation of Christianity has been
reliant on moves by the Muslims and the interventions of the government. Still,
Protestant-Catholic cleavages have continued to play an important role in
elections among the Igbo communities living in the Southeast of Nigeria
(Osaghae and Suberu 2005:11).
Muslims also belong to a number of sub-cleavages
that include Ahmadiyya 12%, Sanusiyya 5%, Tijanniyya 3%, and Quadriyya 8% which
have in turn been in conflicts. And as among the Christians, the Muslims also
have umbrella bodies which aim at propagating different understandings of
Islam. Notable among these organisations is the Jamaatu Nasril Islam (JNI)
which was established by Sardauna of Sokoto in 1961. Following events in Iran
during the Islamic revolution of 1979, radical fundamentalist activities
increased among Muslim youths. These conditions resulted in the formation of
fundamentalist Muslim factions such as the Maitatsine, the Isala movement, the
Shiites, the Talibans and most recently the Boko Haram (Fayemi 2011) which
demanded the establishment of a purist Islam based on Sharia law, the abolition
of unorthodox innovations, and the creation of an Islamic theocracy (Osaghae
and Suberu 2005:11). These relatively new sentiments that depend on a unique
and radical interpretation of Islam provoke conflicts with the traditional
and/or more moderate understandings.
Ethnic and religious crises in Nigeria
A specific analysis upon identities (1999-2013)
Ethno-religious
conflicts
The fact that an average Nigerian is very religious
was observed by some sources (Oluduro 2010:209; Ekundayo 2013:29). Religion
plays a critical role in Nigerian society and has expressed itself as a potent
force in the geopolitical development of the country. This force which has been
used to unite Nigerians is the same force that has led to numerous conflicts in
the country. Nigeria has been engulfed in numerous religious crises and/or
conflicts between 1980 and 1994 (Warner 2012:38).
Due to their tendency to spread into other areas
after an early stage in one area, ethno-religious conflicts have gained
notoriety as the most violent crises in Nigeria. Most of these conflicts occur
in the middle-belt and along the culturally borderline states of the
predominantly Muslim North, and also take place between Hausa-Fulani groups and
non-Muslim ethnic groups in the South (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:19). In
conflicts of this nature occurring along the convergence of ethnic and
religious lines, it is often very difficult to tell the differences between
religious and ethnic crises because the dividing line between them is slimmer than
thin. Examples of such ethno-religious conflicts are the Kafanchan-Kaduna
crisis that occurred in the 1980s and 1990s, the Kaduna Sharia riots of 2000
and the Jos riots of 2001 (Osaghae and Suberu 2005:19). Several hundred lives
were lost during the Kaduna crisis of 2000 and the Jos insurrection of 2001.
The crises caused violent ripple effects that spread beyond Kaduna and Jos
(Enukora 2005:633).
Other recent ethno-religious conflicts include the
July 1999 conflict among the Oro cultists in Sagamu in Ogun state who claimed
that the Hausa women had come outside when the cultists were outside with their
gnome. The result were arguments that finally turned into a full-scale crisis.
Many Yoruba and Hausa people were killed before a dusk to dawn curfew was imposed
on the Sagamu town. Even as the infamy was being put under check in Sagamu,
reprisal attacks continued in Kano, in Hausa city, leading to deaths and
destruction of property worth billions of Naira (Kura 2010:33-34).
Another ethno-religious conflict that had far
reaching impacts on the people of Nigeria was the October 2000 Lagos-Kano
(Idi-Araba/Oko-Oba) conflict which was caused by a misperception between the
Hausa inhabitants and the Yoruba living in Lagos over the use of a convenience
by a man from Hausa. The mayhem resulted in the death of many Yoruba. As a
consequence, the O’dua People Congress (a Yoruba militia) was formed and
worsened the situation as the violence later spread southwards to Kano (Enukora
2005:633; Kura 2010:34).
Worse still, in September 2001, ethnic friction
between the Tivs and the Iunkuns in the Plateau state reached fever pitch
following what came to be referred to as ‘mistaken identity’. ‘What this means
is that some Tivs took some nineteen soldiers to be Iunkuns in fake army uniform.
The Tiv youths captured them and slaughtered them one by one’ (Kura
2010:34-35). And then the Nigerian army embarked on devastating reprisal
attacks in Saki-Biam. According to some controversial numbers at least a
hundred people died in the army attacks (Human Rights Watch 2001). Violence
spread to Jos plateau especially after a Christian was appointed as a Local
Council Chairman. By the time the menace was brought to a standstill, over 160
lives had been lost (Kura 2010:35).
A
case of the North: Boko Haram
Between 1999 and 2013, numerous conflicts have been
witnessed in Nigeria. The most important among them is the Boko Haram crisis
which is on-going. This group has started a bloody campaign to impose a
sui-generis Islamic regime based on Sharia in the Muslim North of the country.
Actually, it is hard to argue that Boko Haram is a religious or ethnic
conflict. In the former case, it targets more Muslims than Christians. In the
latter, it is mostly an ethnic Northern conflict. For this reason, though Boko
Haram uses a religious discourse, it may be more appropriate to call it simply
a terrorist organisation.
With regard to the numerous conflicts and the Boko
Haram menace in particular, the country’s stability is under constant threat.
Boko Haram has introduced into Nigeria’s political and social life a level of
insurgency never witnessed before. The insurgency became violent in 2008 even
before the country could heal from previous ethno-religious conflicts (Shehu
2011:3).
Boko Haram was founded in 2002 by Muhammad Yusuf. It
is formally identified by its members as ‘ Jama’at ahlis Sunnah lid Da’wat wal
Jihad’, which means ‘people committed to the propagation of the Prophet’s
teachings and jihad’. The name of the group ‘Boko Haram’ is loosely translated
from the Hausa language to mean ‘western education is sinful’. This meaning is
extended to mean any western culture is prohibited. It is for this reason that
followers of this outfit advocate for a government based on Sharia as opposed
to a democratic one. It is possible to count Wahhabism, Salafism and Islamic
fundamentalism as the basic items of the Boko Haram’s ideology. The group which
was founded in 2002 in Maiduguri did not become militant until 2009 when its
leader was captured and killed by the Nigerian army. Since then, the group has
engaged in gun battles, arson, bombing and stabbing, in promoting their
ideology (Warner 2012:40). Moreover, Boko Haram has captured a territory in and
around Borno state in the Northeast part of Nigeria in 2014. However, the
territorial control of the group has been removed by the Nigerian army in 2015.
Boko Haram can be examined in various ways. Firstly,
it refers to a long history characteristic of Northern Nigeria and the
continued radical Islamic movements. Secondly, the group has its foundations in
the socio-economic marginalisation of the country’s northern population.
Thirdly, Boko Haram is understood as seeking revenge especially in response to
unacceptable behaviour of the law enforcers. The fourth understanding is based
on the perception that Boko Haram is utilised by the elites from the North to
express their grievances over lack of interest demonstrated by the central
government. Finally, the group can be understood as developing as an offshoot
of the Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) and probably Al-Shabaab (Warner
2012:39).
It is important to note that apart from the group
targeting national events, markets and churches, they are sometimes engaged in
sporadic bombings in major towns in Northern Nigeria including Kaduna, Saria,
Jos, Kano, Maiduguri, and in Damaturi. During such instances, the fighters kill
indiscriminately – Muslims and Christians alike. Despite everything, the group
leaders have often stated that they are still fighting for justice and the
Islamisation of Nigeria (Roach 2012:4). The group has declared its allegiance
to the Islamic State (IS), as has been done by a series of terrorist groups
from various parts of the world. In this context, Boko Haram can be seen as yet
another reflection of the religious looking international terror campaigns now
sweeping the globe scene.
Inter-religious conflicts
Inter-religious conflicts in Nigeria form part of
the dynamics of identity politics. Political elites in Nigeria have always
sought to reap advantages from the multidimensional identities, more so during
electioneering periods, and this has resulted in conflicts and instability.
This politicisation of religious identities during contests for political
office often lacks any sustaining unifying ideology. Somehow, politics in
Nigeria are fashioned on the appeasement of religious motives. As a
consequence, religion attains the level of deification that is difficult to
challenge or overpower. In their quest to assume power and state resources, the
elites constantly modify patterns of political domination. In this perpetually
changing pattern of domination, fears and anxieties are bred that motivate an
upsurge in struggle and intolerance (Ibrahim and Kazah-Toure 2003:18; Okpanachi
2010).
Since the return of civilian rule in 1999 following
a protracted period of military rule, Nigeria has continued to experience
recurring ethno-religious conflicts. Although some of these struggles are
low-intensity contestations and rancorous wars of words, other have degenerated
into bloody sectarian fights. Thousands of Nigerians have been left dead,
wounded and homeless over the years due to constant religious strife pitting
people of different religions against each other (Okpanachi 2010).
The main forms of inter-religious conflicts in
Nigeria are between the Muslims and the Christians. The conflicts are sometimes
so intense that they have turned into wars in different parts of the country,
and they range from the Kano revolt (1980), Bulunktu Bisarre (1982), Kastina
crises (1999), Samfara conflict, Kaduna revolt, Bauchi crises and Sokoto
(1999). More recent examples are the Jos crises and the current conflict by
Boko Haram against Christians and moderate Muslims. These are only a few
examples of inter-religious conflicts in Nigeria, since not a year passes
without three to four incidences of inter-religious conflicts.
Inter-religious conflicts are brought about by a
number of factors. One of these causes is the clashing interests of those in
authority. The ruling class has applied a number of processes to express their
dissatisfaction with exclusion from important decision-making processes of the
country. The methods employed include religious violence and military coups
d’état. A majority of the religious conflicts in Northern Nigeria are reported
to be due to the large number of rich Southerners who reside there. Many
Northern elites are hurt by the business inventiveness of the Southerners and
employ religious calls to incite people to destroy property belonging to non-natives.
The results are wars fought under the pretence of being religious (Falola
1998).
Major
causes of ethno-religious conflicts in Nigeria
Unlike other forms of social conflicts,
ethno-religious conflict entails different ethnic groups that belong to different
religions. It is essential to advert that both religious and ethnic causal
agents have always acted together in the majority of social conflicts in
Nigeria. At different levels and times in the past, the Nigerian people have
complained of religious and ethnic discrimination. Most ask for religious and
ethnic rights within their state. Another cause of the conflicts has been the
state’s use of religion and ethnicity in political discourse or action.
Therefore, it is clear that accusations and allegations of neglect, oppression
and domination are the major causes that fuel ethno-religious conflicts
(Ikelegbe 2001:14; Kura 2010:35-36; Salawu 2010:348).
Nigeria, like many other countries in the world,
lacks a consensus on how necessary changes and reforms are effected. This is
caused by the fact that different religious and ethnic groups have varying
benefits in which case some groups will have their interests met while others
will not. This means that tension occurs when individuals who feel that they
are deprived attempt to increase their stake of power or wealth or to alter the
central beliefs, values, norms and philosophies. In Nigeria therefore, there
appears to exist a contentious interaction of politics, ethnicity and
religions, which has resulted in an increased sense of belonging and militancy.
It is important to note that the general outcome of this is the intensification
of numerous ethno-religious struggles in Nigeria. And this intensification can
be seen as the main source of ongoing discrimination, subordination and
domination in this country (Kura 2010:36).
From one perspective, the ‘failure’ of the Nigerian
political elite to enact good governments, promote national integration and
foster good economic progress via thoughtful and pronounced policies has
resulted in massive unemployment. This has in turn led to the rise of communal,
ethnic and religious conflicts that are characteristic of the Nigerian
politics. Since poverty and unemployment have acted as the mainstay for various
ethno-religious conflicts in the country, an accumulation of pauperised people
can end up acting as paid militants. This could be the reason why any conflict
in Nigeria is usually characterised by a large number of fighters (Kura
2010:36; Mu’asu 2011:19-20).
There is a correlation between ethno-religious
conflicts and low standards of democracy due to protracted military
interferences in politics. This appears to legalise the application of coercion
and violence as tools for social change and for the achievement of anticipated
desires and objectives (Kura 2010:37). Based on this understanding, it is
common in Nigeria to observe that as a consequence or an after-effect of a
military period, the application of both force and intimidation as a means of
settling a misunderstanding has become very frequent. When this is coupled with
easy acquisition of illegal fire arms, violence erupts more quickly and there
is more difficulty in negotiating peaceful settlements.
The absence of vehicles of social control that were
characteristic of traditional African societies, such as kinship, religious and
political systems concerned with the well-being of the community, has led to
the escalation of ethno-religious conflicts. The failure of these institutions
is partly to blame for the ethnic and communal conflicts witnessed in Nigeria
today. Broken families and the inability to make ends meet in many homes have
led to an increase in the level of immorality while at the same time providing
a reservoir of youths who readily take up arms to execute ethno-religious
conflicts at a fee.
Conclusion
This study in one sense has tried to look at the
emergence of identities and their impact on the conflicts in the most crowded
African country, Nigeria. From social and political perspectives, ‘identity’ has
a personal and social meaning. Identity can be defined as distinct qualities,
characteristics and beliefs of an individual or a group of people. And it is an
individual’s sense of belonging to a group which often has an impact on his/her
political behaviour (Erikson 1968:57; Mary Anderson 2010).
Identity has been a significant aspect of the
Nigerian political process, during the colonial period and in the post-colonial
era. Ethnicity is a social phenomenon that is related to interactions among
individuals of different ethnic groups within a political system where language
and culture are the most prominent attributes. Both ethnicity and religiosity
have emerged as the most basic and politically salient identities of the
Nigerians.
In Nigeria, structures of political control are
formed on the basis of ethnicity and religiosity via a custom-made patronage
system. These identities have been a constant source of conflict and cleavage
in the country. Since the restoration of democratic rule, ethnic identity and mobilisation
in the Nigerian political landscape has often resulted in political instability
and constant conflicts. A number of uprisings and concomitant mayhem have been
reported since 1999 and have resulted in the loss of thousands of lives and the
destruction of property. In recent times, for instance, the militarisation of
Boko Haram has undermined Nigeria’s stability and placed the country under
constant threat.
Despite some exceptions, such as the Yoruba being
made up of both Christian and Muslim segments, ethnic identities generally
overlap with religious identities in Nigeria. For that reason, it is difficult
to distinguish ethnic conflicts from religious ones in this country. However,
it can be said that ethnic differences in Nigeria would not have been such a
prominent cause of conflict if they had not overlapped with the religious
identities, or vice versa. In other words, in many instances, religion provides
a mobilisation frame for conflict and this effect is amplified when religious
and ethnic cleavages run parallel. And there is no doubt that inter-religious
conflicts in Nigeria form part of the dynamics of identity politics. As stated
above, while some sources (Lewis and Bratton 2000) reveal the importance of
ethnicity as a causal factor of cleavages, others (Ruby and Shah 2007; Pew
Research Center 2010; Green 2011) underline religious identities as a more
determinant element in the perception of difference. The diversity in the
scientific findings and literature was probably caused by researchers focusing
on different groups in Nigeria. Basically this means that for some groups
ethnicity is more binding, while in others religion plays a dominant role in
group identification and a sense of belonging. Since this paper has been mostly
concentrated on conflicts in the North, the religious factor might be
highlighted – due to the decisive religious cleavages in this region.
Of course, there is much ethno-religious conflict in
Nigeria, not only in the North and in the Delta, but also in the Middle Belt.
However, the importance of the conflict in the North comes from its global
origin. It is apparent that this conflict is a manifestation in Nigeria of
religiously oriented global-scale violence. There are similarities between Boko
Haram and other radical Islamist groups like Al-Qaeda, Al-Shabaab, Al-Nusra and
the IS in terms of discourse and praxis. This makes the conflict in the North
more interesting for the rest of the world and this is the main reason for the
emphasis on the subject in this paper.
It is generally accepted that the inefficacy of
politicians in Nigeria at the points of good governance, national consolidation
and economic development has caused political cleavages, social disintegration
and massive unemployment (Kura 2010:36; Mu’asu 2011:19-20; Ogbeidi 2012:21).
This, together with the absence of social control mechanisms and a high level
of corruption, has stimulated ethno-religious conflicts.
Finally, the nation-state model is in danger in
Nigeria, as in many other so-called nation-states. Of course, globalisation
feeds this process, but the main reason is related to inherent features of the
model. The majority of modern states consist of different groups and usually
one of them tries to rule the system while provoking the objections of others.
Consequently, the ethnic, religious and maybe ideological groups compete for
dominance and this weakens the basis of any achieved unity. This is then seen
as the inevitable character of heterogeneous nation-states (Gordon Anderson
2010; Çancı and Åžen 2010:290).
Notes
1. One of them was the Maitatsine revolt in 1980.
Maitatsine’s original name was Mohammed Marwa and he was a religious preacher
willing to impose his sui-generis
religious ideology. ‘Maitatsine’, in Hausa language
means ‘the one who damns’. His militants, who were called as ‘Yan Tatsine’,
attacked other religious groups in 1980. And later the Nigerian army was
involved in the dispute and throughout the fights approximately 5000 people
were killed. Maitatsine also lost his life in the revolt.
2. In each of those conflicts, sides were keeping
distinct religious plus ethnic identities. And therefore none of these crises
could easily be classified as solely religious or ethnic. For example in the
Kafanchan-Kaduna crisis in 1987, a conflict occurred between Christian and
Muslim students from different ethnic groups, and the violence spread to some
other regions. Extreme leaders from both sides played effective roles to
motivate the young people to take part in this ethno-religious conflict.
No comments