Nigeria Sovereignty, Authority, and Power Jessica Shi Period 1.

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Nigeria Sovereignty, Authority, and Power Jessica Shi Period 1

Transcript of Nigeria Sovereignty, Authority, and Power Jessica Shi Period 1.

Page 1: Nigeria Sovereignty, Authority, and Power Jessica Shi Period 1.

NigeriaSovereignty, Authority, and PowerJessica ShiPeriod 1

Page 2: Nigeria Sovereignty, Authority, and Power Jessica Shi Period 1.

Precolonial NigeriaVarious indigenous politiesSophisticated + influential

societiesSome major polities:

◦Hausa states of Kano, Katsina, Zaria, and Gobir

◦Yoruba states of Ife and Oyo

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HausaNorthern NigeriaLoose alliances

◦Division of labor between statesLeadership based on ancestry1300s: Introduced to Islam

◦Honored traditional ways1800s: Conquered by Fulani

(Western Sudan)◦Created Sokoto Caliphate

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YorubaSouthwestern NigeriaAllegiance paid to large urban center

in area◦Confederation of rulers: no centralized

authority1700s: Civil war in Oyo between

minor leaders◦Rebels called Fulani for help◦Fulani conquered all of Oyo by 1830s

1880s: Treaty signed between warring factions with help from British

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Slave TradeArrival of Europeans = Slave

trade1/3 of Yoruba enslaved1/2 of Hausas enslavedBritish rule: 2 mil. to 2.5 mil.

enslavedTraded for European goods

◦Sokoto jihad and Yoruba wars: guns/gunpowder

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Colonial Nigeria1807: British legislation prohibits

British subjects from participating in slave trade◦Slave ships intercepted by Royal

Navy◦Some freed slaves migrate home,

become agents to allow British trade◦Encouraged palm oil trade, but failed

to undermine slave trade

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Colonial Nigeria1849: UK appointed consul over

bights of Benin and Biafra1861: UK annexed Lagos

◦To better abolish slave trade (Lagos was an export point)

◦To protect trade interests from Lagos1884: UK formed Niger Coast

Protectorate◦During Berlin Conference: “Scramble

for Africa”

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Colonial Nigeria1886: Royal Niger Company established

control over Southern Nigeria Protectorate and Northern Nigeria Protectorate◦Chartered company◦Competition with state-supported

protectorates of France and Germany◦1899: Charter revoked◦1900: Transferred territories to British

government1901: Nigeria became a British

protectorate

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Divisions between North and SouthSouth

◦View that Africans incapable of maintaining order

◦Mercantilist systemNorth

◦Frederick Lugard appointed High Comissioner

◦1902-1907: Period of fighting◦ Indirect rule: Throne retained by

cooperative chief with considerable power◦Budget deficit: Powerful merchants refuse to

tax trade

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Divisions between North and SouthSouth

◦British created political hierarchy, rule through traditional and non-traditional leaders

◦Rapid spread of Western education and Christianity

North◦Christian missionaries resisted by

Muslim leaders◦Traditional leaders kept

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Colonial Nigeria1912: Lugard becomes governor

of both northern and southern Nigeria

1914: Both regions united as the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria◦For economic purposes◦Still divided administratively◦Nigerian Legislative Council

established: no legislative powers

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Colonial Nigeria1922: Sir Hugh Clifford Constitution:

Elective legislative houses, but only for southern provinces

1946: Richards Constitution: Expanded Legislative Council, established three regions (Eastern, Western, Northern) to reconcile religious tensions◦East: Igbo◦West: Yoruba◦North: Hausa and Fulani

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Colonial Nigeria1951: Macpherson Constitution:

Greater autonomy, central government with Council of Ministers + House of Representatives◦Separate House of Chiefs for the

North, to reflect tribal authority1954: Lyttleton Constitution:

More revisions, paved way towards independence

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Colonial Nigeria1957: Internal self-government in West

+ East regions, federal prime minister1959: Internal self-government in the

North1950s: Ethnic cleavages

◦South committed to policies that would benefit the South because of wealth from export crops

◦North emirs want firm control on economics and politics, no intervention from federal government

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Independence1960: British Act of Parliament,

Nigeria became independent◦First constitution as sovereign state◦Retains Queen Elizabeth II as head of

state

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First Republic1963 Constitution: Federal

republic based on Westminster system

Joint Nigerian’s People’s Congress (NPC, conservative, Hausa-Fulani interests) + Nigerian National Democratic Party (NNDP, Yoruba interests)

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Military Rule 11966: Young Majors (Igbos)

overthrew NPC-NNDP government, assassinated prime minister + premiers of West + North◦Igbos in north massacred

1966: Major General Yakubu Gowon took over leadership◦Divided regions into 12 states

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Military Rule 11967: Igbo rejects the division

◦Emeka Ojukwu (Igbo officer) declares the Eastern region an independent nation: Republic of Biafra

1967-1970: Nigerian Civil War: Ethnic/political conflict over attempted secession of Republic of Biafra◦Biafra suffers the most: land-locked,

starving, surrenders

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Military Rule 11973: Rise of oil prices

◦Nigerian government becomes wealthy due to large reserves of petroleum (discovered in 1950s)

1975: General Murtala Mohammed staged bloodless coup◦Accused Gowon of oil corruption +

delaying promise of civilian rule

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Military Rule 11976: Mohammed assasinated1976: Chief of staff Lt. General

Olusegun Obasanjo takes over◦Oil prices plummet, economic crisis

+ political disorder

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Second Republic1979 Constitution: American-

style presidential systemNational Party of Nigeria (NPN,

Hausa-Fulani interests)Subdivisions increased to 19

states

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Military Rule 21983 Election: Disputes over vote

rigging, legal battle over NPN win◦Military overthrew Second Republic◦Major General Muhammadu Buhari

emerged as leader of the Supreme Military Council

1985: General Ibrahim Babngida overthrew Buhari◦Claimed misuse of power, violations of

human rights, failure to deal with economic crisis

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Third Republic1993 Constitution: Return of

democratic rule, never fully implemented

Babangida promised to return to civilian rule by 1990, then 1993

1989: Two established parties: National Republic Convention (NRC), Social Democratic Party (SDP)

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Third Republic1993 Presidential Election: Moshood

Abiola (Yoruba businessman) seemed to be winning a decisive victory in early votes, Babngida annulled the election

1993: Riots, >100 killed, Babangida handed over power to an interim government◦Ernest Shonekan (nonpartisan

businessman) is to rule until 1994 elections

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Military Rule 31993: Defense Minister Sani Abacha

forced Shonekan’s resignation (economic problems, political tension)◦Dissolved democratic institutions◦Replaced elected governors with military

officers1994: Abiola declared himself president1995: Activist Ken Saro-Wiwa arrested

for murder of rivals at a political rally, sentenced to death◦Worldwide outcry over lack of fair trial

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Military Rule 31998: Abacha died of heart

failure, replaced by General Abdulsalami Abubakar

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Fourth Republic1999 Constitution: Restored

democratic rule, in place todayPeople’s Democratic Party (PDP,

right-leaning)1999 Election: Olusegun Obasanjo

won◦Marked improvements in human

rights + freedom of press◦Still lots of violence over ethnic +

religious differences

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Fourth Republic2003: Obasanjo reelected2007: Umaru Yar’Adua elected

President (PDP), marred with electoral fraud

2010: Goodluck Jonathan (PDP) took over after Yar’Adua’s death

2011: Jonathan won reelections, current President of Nigeria

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Future ProblemsRebuilding a petroleum-based

economyEthnic + religious tensionConflict over oilNot a lot of constitutionalism

(because there were so many constitutions)

Poverty: gap between upper + lower class, very small middle class

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LegitimacyElection fraud (especially 2007)

◦Voting boxes vandalized/stolen◦Lack of privacy, police instructing

people who to vote for◦Underage voting

Military dependence◦Olusegun Obasanjo: former military

general◦Lack of rule of law under generals

Low levels of trust

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Political CulturePatron-client system

◦“Prebendalism”: sense of entitlement to government revenues

◦Large networks based on personal loyalty

◦CorruptionVoting

◦Unreliable statistics: estimated 2/3 of eligible voters voted in 2003

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MediaAll 36 states run their own radio

stations◦Radio: main source of information

>100 private + state-owned newspapers◦Reflects ethnic divisions

Illiteracy is an issueNational Broadcasting

Commission monitors broadcast media

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Supranational OrgnizationsOrganization of Petroleum

Exporting Countries (OPEC) member

Received assistance from the International Monetary Fund (IMF)

Participated in the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS)◦Ambitions similar to those of the

European Union (EU)

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PresidentsFirst Republic

◦1963-1966: Nnamdi AzikiweMilitary Rule 1

◦1966-1966: Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi

◦1966-1975: General Yakubu Gowon◦1975-1976: General Murtala

Mohammed◦1976-1979: Major-General Olusegun

Obasanjo

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PresidentsSecond Republic

◦1979-1983: Shehu ShagariMilitary Rule 2

◦1983-1985: Major-General Muhammadu Buhari

◦1985-1993: General Ibrahim BabangidaThird Republic

◦1993-1993: Ernest ShonekanMilitary Rule 3

◦1993-1998: General Sani Abacha◦1998-1999: General Abdulsalami Abubakar

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PresidentsFourth Republic

◦1999-2007: Olusegun Obasanjo◦2007-2010: Umaru Musa Yar’Adua◦2010-present: Goodluck Jonathan

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RegionsNorth: Hausa-Fulani,

predominately MuslimSouthwest: Yoruba, 40% Muslim

+ 40% ChristianSoutheast: Igbo, mostly Roman

Catholic, growing number of Protestant Christians

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Map

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Tic Tac Toe (sorta)