
Women mourn the victims of a bomb blast attack near a church in Suleja July 10, 2011. (Afolabi Sotunde/Courtesy Reuters)
Putting recent developments together, there is an unreality about Nigeria three months after the April elections.
Boko Haram violence continues to intensify and spread. According to press accounts, as many as forty people have been killed in a number of incidents since July 4. Boko Haram claimed victims in Suleja, Niger state, just north of Abuja. One Nigerian press source even claims that Boko Haram has established an operations base in Suleja. Boko Haram also claimed responsibility for weekend bombings in Kaduna, the former capital of the northern region and two hundred kilometers north of Abuja. In the capital itself there is a 10 pm curfew, and the press reports massive traffic jams because of police checkpoints. (See our Nigeria Security Tracker for a list of incidents.)
In the Delta, a government spokesman estimates that three hundred thousand barrels of oil are stolen per day, plenty to fund a threatened resurgence of the insurrection there associated with the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND). Ethnic and religious tensions around Jos remain high. Lagos, the economic capital of the country and one of the world’s largest cities, remains largely untouched by political violence, but flooding, a natural calamity, claimed a number of lives over the weekend.
Against this background of mayhem and natural calamity, President Goodluck Jonathan continues with the formation of his cabinet and his selection of advisors. He has created new ministries, bringing the total to forty. His ceremonial travel is unabated. On Saturday, he was present in Juba for the inauguration of South Sudan. According to Nigerian press sources, during his recent visit to Washington, President Obama reiterated a long-standing request for Nigeria to send peace keepers to Somalia. Yesterday, again according to the Nigerian press, Jonathan’s administration publicly confirmed that Nigerian peace keepers are enroute to Somalia, despite his obvious domestic security challenges.
Beneath the surface of seeming normality, however, there are signs that the government and its political allies are becoming more defensive. Malim Nasir el-Rufai, former minister of the Federal Capital Territory (the largest cabinet department), was arrested over the July 4 weekend for charging essentially that the government is too expensive. He was subsequently released after sixteen hours of captivity. El Rufai’s charges were echoed by incoming finance minister Ngosi Okonjo Iweala in confirmation testimony before the Nigerian senate, though unlike El Rufai, she did not emphasize the costs of the security services. At the same time, the security services are detaining alleged “sect” leaders under anti-terrorism legislation. Meanwhile, only three weeks after the two presidents met at the White House, the governor of Nassarawa state publicly charged that Boko Haram is a manifestation of the American prediction that Nigeria would disintegrate, and he called for an investigation of the linkage between the two. Such a claim seems especially bizarre given Boko Haram’s strongly indigenous character.




Mr. El-Rufai didn’t have too many problems with the cost of government when he was part of the Obasanjo regime.
Yar’adua treated Nuhu Ribadu pretty badly though. Nothing new here.
America does not get public diplomacy. It is one thing to predict that collapse of Iran (Iran is an enemy) but what public diplomacy dividend are you going to get by openly proclaiming that you expect Nigeria to implode by a given date?
Everyone in Nigeria knows Nigeria was built on a very shaky foundation hastily put together by cynical colonialists. So what exactly is the point of the 2015 date announcement?
Ambassador Campbell,
You need to sit around beer parlours to understand how easy it is for Nigerians to accept wild conspiracy theories. The Nassarawa State governors utterances could lead many Nigerians to draw a connection between the 2015 prediction and Boko Haram (i.e. CIA and Boko Haram).
Trust me, I’ve heard worse.
The US Government needs to be very careful about the kind of utterances it makes about nations where a significant proportion of the citizenry is either uneducated or poorly educated. These people will NEVER read your blog or US Government communications, but they will listen to local politicians.
This is from the “The Daily Independent” of February 14 2011:
“Gradually, White House is bringing Al Qaeda to Nigeria even when Nigeria has no issue with Al Qaeda. The US attempt to force its Africa Command (AFRICOM) base on Nigeria is responsible for the current bombings being tagged ‘Al Qaeda bombs’, so that Nigeria can accept the inevitability of US forces in Nigeria. What’s more, with CIA agents now prowling Nigeria, more bombings should be expected, as the US is determined to pursue its 2015 prediction that Nigeria will break-up.”
So the governor could have gotten his ideas from reading local newspapers. There is a very deep mistrust of both the British and the Americans in the Nigerian psyche. I really wish American diplomats understood that. Apparently, they don’t.
While we appreciate the effort of western policy think-tanks, what we really need is for western financial institutions to stop aiding in the laundering of assets from public officers. In our view, both terrorist, drugs and corruption lead to loss of lives. In the same way countries that receive funds from extremist and drug cartels are liable, so also are the western financial institutions that continue to bank corrupt leaders. The real price for corruption is that it excludes most competent and ethical people from the leadership process.
The situation In Nigeria is one that has to be taken very seriously, the group Boko Haram brings a very different dimension to violence and fear in Nigeria. The Majority of Nigerians denounce this sort of movement, as it tries to divide the country between religious lines.
It’s very true that this group gets support from elements in the north that really want to destabilize the Government of Nigeria by revealing security flaws, resulting in loss of innocent lives and property.
Reflecting on the situation, I researched on the events of the United States of America @50; just to compare with Nigeria @50.
One thing that stood out was that there was a war going on from 1833- 1842 (Second Seminole War) known as the Florida war. Even if the two situations, past and present don’t relate as the Florida war was over a treaty signed between the United States and the Seminole Indians, the other, Boko Haram is a growing terrorist group that I am still not sure want they stand for and who they hold a gorge against. I compare the situations because young nations like Nigeria are defiantly bound to face conflict as they grow even in the mist of the civilized world.
So we really need to give the Government of Nigeria the benefit of a doubt, and support them as they pass through turbulent times.
With all due respect to John Campbell, he does tell it as it is. The facts don’t lie on of so many issues but now is not the time to say I told you so, lives are being lost every day.
Now is the time to lend a helping hand of support and prayers, and hopefully the GON responds in a positive way. Put all differences aside and get to the problems of the day.
YES WHAT CAMPBELL IS SAYING IS TRUE
This issue of Boko Haram has been blown out of proportion to reality. The group do have weird conceptsbof Islam, but the fact remains that the government ttreated the group extremely harshly nsd the extra judicial killings did not help matters either.
Afterall all the hotair and posturing, the Government has failed woefully in upholding the rule of law. Nothing makes the life of as citizen fair target for the security forces and this fact has to be borne in mind. Why did governor Sheriff refused to meet eith Foi and why was the man murdered despite his surrendering himself to the police? The video from Al jazeerah was not made in a studio, and yet the government is pretending as if there was a “shootout”
with the childern and unarmed civilians shot out-of-hand. You cannot break the law in enforcement and expect the people to obey the same law, that is the problem and until this issue is resolved to the satisfaction of the Nigerian Public, there may not be peace in Borno and many states for a long tie to come, it has nothing to do with the predictions of the U.S. nor anybody for that matter.
Some of the wild conspiracy theories bandied about are precisely the very reason why Nigeria is in the sorry state that it is today. There is a deep distrust amongst Nigerians and between Nigerian citizens and the state.
For people like Seven Ezumba above with his baseless assertion that: “It’s very true that this group gets support from elements in the north that really want to destabilize the Government of Nigeria” who peddle such falacies are those that heat up the polity leading to unnecessary tension. Boko Haram is a warped, misguided reaction to dissatisfaction and mistrust of the Nigerian state. This is just one group amongst many other like OPC, MASSOB, NDPVF, MEND etc to take up arms against a State which they feel has failed them. Unless such fundamental issues as equitable redistribution of resources, addressing the widening gap of inequality, social justice, provision of basic infrastructure, employment opportunities are provided, more groups like Boko Haram will spring up in other parts of the country. Nigeria is in a state of national paranoia which is regurgitating the age-old national question. See: http://wp.me/p1iVSi-3k
Nigerians will be better off if people like Seven Ezumba did some little research before peddling such stories around that certain interests are trying to destabilize the government.
Afterall Jonathan is the Commander in Chief, there are more pressing problems at home and as Ambassador Campbell rightly notes “against this background of mayhem and natural calamity”…president Jonathan’s ceremonial travels continue unabated…well, we’re still waiting for someone’s good luck to smile on the nation…