5.1. Interrogating the Roots of Intolerance and Violence in Nigeria
Multiple factors account for religious intolerance and violence in Nigeria. These include: weak co-operation among the constituting part of the federation; distrust along the lines of ethnicity, religion, class, and creed; the cycle of poverty; inconsistency of the federal government in handling ethnic-related issues; lack of education; and manipulative agenda of the powerful elite. These factors create a fertile soil in which conflict and violence have erupted and could break out at any point in time. Additionally, militant groups such as Boko Haram, Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND), Niger Delta militants, Oodua People’s Congress (OPC), and the Egbesu Boys have become grim precursors of conflict and violence across the nation.
Since 1999, bottled-up political frustrations such as ethnic marginalisation, suppressed during the long and dark decades of military rule exploded from all parts of the federation—in the north, the introduction of Sharia law; in the southwest and the Niger-Delta, multiple ethnic groups and movements—some violent, others less-aggressive—all sought to address perceived and real oppression. In the Middle Belt, confrontations over landownership and power became a perennial problem (
Obi-Ani 2008). These conflicts centred mainly on legitimation of power, how order prevails in society through force or dialogue, and definitions of social classes in the context of material interest. These observations by Weber three decades ago are still apt in describing roots of intolerance in Nigeria (
Weber 1978). Conflict is thus created when groups attempt or succeed in carrying out their will by overcoming the resistance of other groups or infringing upon the rights of others.
From the lenses of political economy, violence in society is a product of irreconcilable differences between the dominant and oppressed classes (
Lubeck 1985). Capital is unrepentantly consumed with the drive to reproduce itself while labour, on the other side, is fundamentally opposed to crude capital accumulation at the expense of workers’ welfare. Within this premise, it is therefore the case that social conflict and violence will increasingly break out in societies with scarce economic resources in which capital and labour compete (
Kukah 1993). In the Nigerian context, conflict is a manifestation of a power tussle, class struggle, ethnic difference and religious tension between the North and South.
Conflict and violence in Nigeria have resulted in unnecessary deaths, destruction and suffering. Worse still, conflict threatens national unity. Especially in the north, religious conflicts are usually a manifestation of deep-seated dissatisfaction with social and economic realities of poverty and deprivation (
Khan and Chen 2016). Conflict there often takes on a religious colouration, even if the issue of contention is political or socioeconomic. Ethnic disputes also take on religious camouflage. For instance, the Maitatsine riots of 1980 to 1984 in Kano, Bulunkutu near Maiduguri (1982), Rigasa in Kaduna (1982) and Jiemta near Yola (1984) later assumed a measure of religious dimensions (
Isichei 1987). Additionally, the 2000 riots over the implementation of the Sharia legal code in Kaduna assumed ethnic confrontation between the Hausa-Fulani and other ethnic groups, notably the Kajes, Katafs, Ibos, and Yorubas (
Olurode 1989). This suggests a direct link between religion and conflict on the one hand while, on the other, it reveals a pattern of discernible regional suspicion that had existed prior to independence in 1960. The combination of religion, ethnicity and politics has constantly aggravated the mutual distrusts and the incessant ethnoreligious violence and conflict that threatens Nigeria’s unity.
Independent Nigeria was founded on the principle of separation of church and state. However, as politics became entrenched in ethnic sentiments and regional biases, violence and conflict disrupted the gradual evolution of the political process. Contestation of political power and access to state resources by politicians from different ethnic groups led to the recruitment of religious leaders as means to an end— public support. Once recruited, religious leaders used their platforms and engaged their followers by emphasising differences, especially religious differences. In this way, these clerics became significant catalysts to violence, but not all violence is purely religious in nature (
Adesoji 2011).
Religious leaders have used heated public rhetoric, such as the introduction of Sharia laws and the ban of Christian Religious Studies (CRS) in secondary schools’ curricula. These have led to an escalation of misunderstanding and a more divided, sectarian Nigeria. While religion at present is one dimension of the problem, continued misuse of religion as a tool to foster political, economic, or ethnic discord has increased sectarian hostility across the region. A section of Muslims in the north such as the Maitasine uprising in Kano in 1980 and Boko Haram are demanding that the Federal government implement Islamic laws. They believe Nigeria should be founded on Islamic law, devoted to the teaching of Islam. These religious sects constantly call on their fellow Muslims to rise up in rejecting the conformist dogma that Nigeria is a secular state (
Kendhammer 2013).
These sects are funded from abroad by countries who share their Islamisation agenda. On their part, local clerics recruit from a bundle of unemployed youths to fight their cause
Loimeier (
2012). Politicians on their part use their platform to drum up support for extreme religious ideologies. These religious groups have grown dissatisfied with the Nigerian political system, which they believe is too corrupt and too slow in promoting their Islamisation agendas. The government’s failure in providing a means to livelihood leaves the unsuspecting public with little option but to join and engage in suicide bombing and extreme violence to threaten and paralyze the system.
Keddie (
1998) and
Hasenclever and De Juan (
2007) argued that the politicisation of religion increases the risk of a violent escalation of a conflict, which is principally rooted in political or socioeconomic problems.
5.2. Political Complicity and Religious Violence in Northern Nigeria
The factors that perpetuate recurring religious violence in northern Nigeria can be grouped under three broad headings: historically embedded social divisions that mirror religious and geographical division, political corruption and elite manipulation; and the imposition of Sharia law in secular, constitutionally governed, democratic Nigeria. These groupings are not mutually exclusive but overlap in fundamental ways in the Nigerian context.
5.2.1. Religion, Ethnicity, and Geographical Divide
In Nigeria, religion plays a crucial role in determining the trajectory of elections and political relations. This is why the religion of a presidential candidate shapes the dynamics of an election significantly. Religious differences between the North and the South, particularly the juxtaposition of Muslim/Christian concentrations, has flared up tensions in Nigeria’s political space. We argue that the ethnoreligious crisis that erupted shortly after 1999 is symptomatic of the character and politics of the Nigerian state. At the centre of most violence and conflict, we believe, is the problem of intolerant ethnic sentiments and toxic religious views that lay at the foundation of intermittent outbreak of violence within the north and along its boundaries with the Middle Belt.
At independence, nationalist leaders who emerged as state inheritors of power were faced with widening inequalities between the north and south. Ethnic suspicions and confrontations over resource control, revenue allocation and political leadership were not only unresolved but, in more ways than one, threatened the very existence of Nigeria. As
Ochonu (
2014) puts it, colonialism many not been the cause of inter-ethnic skirmishes, but it worsened it as ethnoreligious politics—introduced during decolonisation in the 1950s—festered and endured. For
Osaghae (
1988), the decision to force essentially incompatible groups together under an unworkable system not only laid the foundation of political suspicion and mistrust, but also proved costly after 1960. Independent Nigeria was therefore internally divided along regional and religious lines. These issues escalated into major political crises that prompted the first military coup in 1965, and subsequent coups in 1966, the infamous Nigerian/Biafra Civil War (1967–1970) and more coups thereafter.
Identity politics, corruption, scarcity of opportunities and socioeconomic challenges within the larger Nigerian system have inspired organised insurgency, especially in the north. Although violence is more prevalent in the northeast, it is a reflection of the political and social environment of the region. Especially in the north, there are complexities involved in the interpretation of the concept of Islam and its central role in politics, ethnic relations, and the resistance to foreign influence from the West. Religion is important in politics to the extent that religious leaders operate as part of or at par with the ruling elite. Clerics have vested interest in political power and are determined to collaborate with politicians in maintaining control of the system. This observation highlights the connection between politicians and religious leaders in the north as they mutually influence each other in the national and regional political arena.
Although successive governments since independence attempted to forge a Nigerian identity, each component part—East, West, Middle Belt and North—retained its unique identity with moderate allegiance to a united Nigerian identity. When civil rule was re-established in 1999, the ethnic and religious composition of each region did not change. More than elsewhere, the north remained ethnically homogenous, united under a single language, culture, religion, and spiritual head—The Sultan of Sokoto. Evidence indicates that prior to and since independence, power brokers in northern Nigeria have deliberately distanced themselves from Western influence through rhetoric, resistance to Western education and rejection of Anglo-American civilisation. Through these resistances and ensuing violence, elites in the north benefit from the promotion of ethnoreligious conflicts as they seek to profit, politically, ideologically and strategically from the associated arithmetic of numbers underpinning the conflicts, which may translate into increasing security votes, contracts, the creation of local governments and/or states as well as swelling representation in the National Assembly.
This study identified politicians as the main drivers of conflict and violence across the north. Although more than one factor fuels conflict in the north, politics of who receives what has become a catalyst that frequently fuels the growing sectarian violence and conflict to a frightening magnitude. It could be argued, and rightly so, that the spate of conflict and violence in northern Nigeria has its roots in the social and economic disposition, which have helped to escalate the crisis to its present terrifying point. Most states in the north straddle the country’s ethnic and religious divide, stemming predominantly from competition over political control, ethnic and religious grounds. Complicity works when vested interest in political positions get sucked into the rhetoric associated with victory-at-all-cost politics. This escalates to frightening proportions when personal financial gains mix with parochial ethnic and regional interest.
A case in point was in 1965 when thugs were used to deal with political rivals in order to perpetuate a certain group in power. All parties at the time played dirty politics—the Northern People’s Congress (NPC) in the north, the National Council of Nigeria, and the Cameroons (NCNC) in the east, the Action Group (AG) in the west. National elections that year were the most violent in Nigeria’s political history, as elections were openly rigged and ballot boxes were stuffed with extra ballot papers, culminating into widespread rioting from October 1965 to January 1966. Political thugs from each party were all out to rob, loot, burn and kill (
Ebimboere 2017).
Similar conflict occurred in 1979, 1983, 1993 and, more recently, in 2007 and 2011 when political parties engaged the use of thugs to disrupt orderly democratic processes. Certain religious sects across the north of Nigeria have become veritable obstacles to the emergence of a truly democratic culture. Islam in the north is more than religion but a radical ideology and a political identity. Those who do not identity with Islam and are of southern origin are pushed so far as to steer clear of any political intentions within the region. Non-Muslims have never occupied any significant political positions at any level of government in the north.
5.2.2. Political Corruption, Manipulation and Complicity
Data from this study indicate that politicians engage in manipulating the populace, using religion to create mistrust while seeking and perpetuating themselves in power. They use their broad platforms to spread inflammatory statements and religious sentiments, thus whipping up intolerance among their followers and agitating non-followers. This tactic is used to polarise the public and create a “we-against-them” divide. We argue that political elites will tender religious bids if religious legitimacy seems to be rational to secure their own survival. This assertion highlights the role of political leaders in the context of religious charging prior to, during and after elections. A case in point occurred in 2011 when supporters of Retired. General Mohammed Buhari who contested for and lost the presidential election poured into the streets across the north to demonstrate, destroy and terrorise non-supporters of their candidate, especially southerners living in the north. We found no evidence of Mohammed Buhari calling for restraint or appealing to his followers to exercise restraint.
De Juan (
2009) argued that successful mobilisation, however, requires that politicians find allies in religious leaders who share similar interests. This mutually beneficial relationship requires politicians to promote and fund Islamic causes at the national and regional level, while religious leaders on their part convince their followers, using political interpretations that are likely to drum up support and win votes for certain politicians on the one hand, while on the other hand, demonise others. Northern Nigerian has been infected with religious chauvinism and exploitation by politicians and religious clerics who have become the ideological hand maidens of an unjust social order, contrary to the basic teachings of the Quran. Most clerics have downplayed their spiritual responsibilities towards their followers in the race to acquire material wealth.
This has ignited debate over whether state governments should help prevent religious violence by issuing licenses to preachers, thereby establishing norms that religious leaders, such as Mohammed Yusuf, would have to adhere to in order to lead a congregation. While this may seem to many Westerners like an infringement on free speech or an intrusion of the state into religious affairs,
Paden (
2008) notes that there is a history of such licenses in Nigeria, based on the argument that when a preacher “cries fire in a crowded (religious) theatre”, their rights to “free speech” are no longer protected. Many northern governors who should set up mechanisms to monitor preaching in order to have a better idea of when conflicts are likely to occur are beneficiaries of the current system and may seek to preserve it.
The spate of violence and consequent bomb blasts in the north is a tragedy, not only because of the unnecessary loss of lives or wanton destruction of properties but because it exposes the flaws of politicians and their religious enablers that constantly put the safety and wellbeing of the region at risk in exchange for parochial, personal needs (
Bintube 2015). While ethnic and regional diversion between the north and south hides the spiralling tragedies that occur across the three geopolitical zones in the north, it is reprehensible that political and religious leaders are failing to protect and advance the interest of their primary constituents.
It is equally interesting to note that in the north, the political class who are recipients of modern scientific and technical education from the West push fundamentalist and ideological philosophies that negate the uptake of Western education by the public. Rather than promote enlightenment, they use religion to hold back the public on the one hand, while on the other hand, they blame outsiders, particularly southerners and the West, as enemies of the north. Politicians in the region therefore use religion to distract from the critical task of state building and human development. It is no surprise that states in northern Nigeria have the worst development indices nationally. The challenges of poverty, food insecurity, mass illiteracy, youth unemployment and infrastructural development are well documented in the literature (
Lubeck 1986;
World Bank 2020); yet, politicians, whose families are Western-educated, call on a socio-economically backward, poorly educated, malnourished and mostly disenfranchised pool of discontent citizens to reject Western education and civilisation. They easily incite them to go on a rampage and resist change.
Evidence shows that some politicians induce an individual or group, by creating an enabling environment for tensions to flare and violence to occur. In such cases, politicians are straightforwardly causal modes of tensions and complications. Although, there are other modes of complicity that facilitate the commission of violence; for example, when the Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati wal-Jihad, also known as Boko Haram, turned the spotlight on the political elite and security agencies, revealing how their activities and failings have undermined national security because the same authority recruited them for their political gains; the leader of the group went further to implicate the sponsors. The complicity of politicians and religious leaders to incite violence and terror have wreaked significant havoc on the region.
“The truth is that politicians are the root cause of this Boko Haram problem. For instance, in Borno State, the governor sponsors a group of armed youths known as ECOMOG. It is this ECOMOG that the governor formed and looks after, above the police, State Security Service and other security agencies. In Gombe State, the governor has the Kalari. I was once contacted by a governorship candidate to kill an opponent for a fee”. Aliyu Tishau, the sect co-founder and coordinator in Gombe, Bauchi and Plateau states, 29 September 2011 Interview with Punch Newspaper.
Some politicians even placed a stamp of validation on sectional conflict and violence and intolerance with homicidal propensity in the name of religion. Politicians who have associated with such religious conflict through inflammatory pronouncement and inciting rhetoric have become the true sponsors of violent organisations such as Boko Haram. In some sense, Boko Haram is not really about a detestation of Western or other forms of education, but the expression of a malignant outcrop of fanaticism and intolerance.
Findings also demonstrate that at the extreme end of the spectrum, there is a section of the elite in the north who emphasise involuntary Islamisation by taking over state governance, including the take-over of state power by democratic or military means—a holistic or totalitarian idea that combines religious and political order. The alliance between religion and political authority has shifted to new dimensions by reason of incessant bomb blasts evidenced by the attacks of June 16th 2011 on the national headquarters of the Nigerian Police Force and the United Nation Building in Abuja of 26 August 2011, and violent kidnapping of students for ransom. These have resulted in significant changes in the north.
5.2.3. Sharia Law in Secular Nigeria
Since 1998, religion-related, intercommunal violence in the north has resulted in the death of thousands of people and many more thousands displaced, with numerous churches, mosques, businesses, vehicles, private homes and other facilities burnt and destroyed. The most severe incidents have occurred in the Middle Belt region including Jos, Plateau State (September 2001, November 2008, January 2010, March 2010, December 2010, and January–April 2011); Bauchi State (January 2011); Kaduna State (February and May 2000 and November 2002); Kano State and Yelwa, Plateau State (February–May 2004); and Northern and South-eastern Nigeria (February 2006). Additionally, clashes between herders and farming communities continued in the Middle Belt in Jos and Benue. Conflicts over the role of religion in politics and society have emerged in at least twelve Northern states including Zamfara, Sokoto, Kano, Niger, and Adamawa states.
In 1999–2000, the establishment or re-emergence of Sharia law (Islam’s legal system derived from the Koran, the life of prophet Muhammad (SAW), and fatwas—the rulings of Islamic scholars) in secular, democratic Nigeria has its roots in the 1980s and 1990s when proposals were made to the National Assembly—Nigeria’s highest law-making institution—to establish the Federal Sharia Court of Appeal. Though these attempts failed, the idea survived. With Sharia, most northern states continued to mix religion and politics without clear-cut delineation. Violence inspired by religion thereafter became an intractable crisis. Sharia became the weapon with which political and radical Muslim elites used to institutionalise suspicion, hatred, division, and antagonism against non-Muslims within the region. Sharia’s imposition also emboldened fanatics and gave legitimacy to Islamic fundamentalism. We believe that Sharia laid the foundation for the radical, violent, anti-government campaign of Boko Haram that took off in August 2009 when the group attacked police stations near the town of Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, setting off days of fighting, leading to loss of lives and destruction of properties.
What Sharia also symbolises is an ideology that legitimises a tradition of violence, war and Jihad against infidels—non-Muslims. Although Islam is proclaimed as peaceful, it endorses the use of force and aggression for its self-preservation and expansion. Violence thus becomes a form of acceptable practice in Islam. This suggests that the problem of Islam goes much deeper than a contradiction between theory (proclamations of peace) and practice (endorsed violence), but instead, a conflict between two important and fundamental aspects of the religious: one part treats peace as holy, while the other endorses violence as holy. There is a deep connection between authoritarian religion and authoritarian politics. It is rare for someone who promotes authoritarian politics to accept democracy in their religion or for someone who promotes authoritarian religion to fully accept democratic politics. Problems arise, however, when these same people assert claims to social and political power, which they would then employ to push the same choices on the rest of us, whether implicitly or explicitly.
Findings indicate that the real reason for politically motivated violence is not ethnic or religious differences but the scramble for land, scarce resources, and political clout. Poverty, joblessness, and corrupt politics drive extremists from both sides to commit horrendous atrocities. The emergence of Boko Haram (with ties to Al Qaeda) can also be understood from the deprivation and poverty framework. Boko Haram—which literally means “Western education is forbidden”—was mostly comprised of dissatisfied young people and unemployed university students and graduates (
Khan and Chen 2016). Accordingly, this reflects the general frustration at the grassroots level, especially among semi-educated youth who feel frustrated and disenfranchised.
The ideologists of Boko Haram reject the division of Nigeria into modern states. To them, the only boundaries that matter are between Islam (of which they believe they are the only authentic representatives that dictates the code for ruling the nation) Josiah Idowu-Fearon, Bishop of the Anglican Diocese of Kaduna (2012).
In northern Nigeria, the form of modernisation being pushed on the public by the political and religious elite is significantly different from the realities of the “elites”. While the former is tied to radical Islam, the latter are beneficiaries of secular institutional privileges, state power and Western education. Nowhere else in modern Nigeria are the battle lines between modernity and religious tradition so starkly complicated in sharp contrast with much less confusion about the roles of the state, the rhetoric of the powerful elite and the experience of the masses. This suggests that in the north, religious radicalisation and confrontational violence and conflict are the exclusive preserve of the public, while modernity and liberalisation are the privileges of the upper class. Inevitably, violence and conflict across the northern states has denied liberal “Muslim” people the choice of being less extreme to explore different ways to be Muslim.