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NIGERIA ….basics Peshwa Acharya [email protected]

Nigeria overview

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Page 1: Nigeria overview

NIGERIA ….basics

Peshwa Acharya [email protected]

Page 2: Nigeria overview

Nigeria Overview

Page 3: Nigeria overview

Political Cleavages

• Ethnic

• Religious

• Regional

Page 4: Nigeria overview

Religion

• Major religions

– 50% Muslim

– 40% Christian

– 10% indigenous religions

Page 5: Nigeria overview

Ethnic Groups

• Nigeria, which is Africa's most populous

country, is composed of more than 250 ethnic

groups; the following are the most populous

and politically influential:

• Hausa and Fulani: 29%

• Yoruba: 21%

• Igbo (Ibo): 18%

Page 6: Nigeria overview

Languages

• English (official)

• Hausa

• Yoruba

• Igbo (Ibo)

• Fulani

Page 7: Nigeria overview

Socialization

• Family is important. Polygamy accepted in

various ethnic groups. Extended family as a

means of social security.

• Schools have expanded and the last twenty

years have seen large rises in enrolment.

English as the language of instruction for the

most part.

• Media are very active in Nigeria, although there

is the constant threat of government

punishment and censorship.

• Religion as a mobilizing political force in the

North

Page 8: Nigeria overview

Similarities to British System

(1960)

• Parliamentary democracy

• House of Representatives (patterned after

British House of Commons) elected in single

member districts

• Senate (patterned after British House of Lords)

with tribal chiefs and traditional leaders playing

a ceremonial role in the political process

Page 9: Nigeria overview

Colonial

boundaries divided

people with a

common ethnic

heritage and threw

together disparate

ethnic groups

Page 10: Nigeria overview

Similarities to American System

(1960)

• Federal system developed by British during

colonial period retained

• Written constitution with powers of government

and rights of citizens (Bill of Rights)

promulgated

• Supreme Court created

Page 11: Nigeria overview

Federalism

Page 12: Nigeria overview

Alternation Between Military

Rule and Attempts at Democracy

Page 13: Nigeria overview

Democratization

• Each attempt has been halted by a military

coup

• Present regime has successfully held two

competitive elections

• Regime is still plagued by corruption

Page 14: Nigeria overview

Oil

• The oil boom of the 1970’s led Nigeria to

neglect other industries such as agriculture and

light manufacturing in favor of oil.

• Oil accounts for 97% of export earnings and

80% of federal revenue.

Page 15: Nigeria overview
Page 16: Nigeria overview

Economic Reform / Structural

Adjustment Program • Abolition of most foreign exchange and import

controls

• Abolition of most price controls

• Privatization of some state-owned enterprises

• Abolition of dual exchange rate system, which

distorted budgets and encouraged corruption

• Liberalized rules for foreign investment

• Ended indirect fuel subsidies, allowing fuel

prices to double

Page 17: Nigeria overview

1963

• Nigeria became a republic

• Effectively, this meant that the British monarch was no longer the head of state

• Nnamdi Azikiwe was first president and new head of state

• Nigeria, nevertheless, remained a member of the British Commonwealth

Page 18: Nigeria overview

Elections of 1964-1965

• Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, who had been

elected Nigeria’s first Prime Minister (head of

government), led his Northern based party to

victory.

• Balewa formed a new government.

Page 19: Nigeria overview

1967-1970: Biafra Civil War

• Ironsi killed less than a year later in another

coup

• Lieutenant Yakuba Gowon named head of the

Federal Military Government, a northern

Christian

• Igbos, especially unhappy with his distribution

of eastern oil revenues, established the

independent Republic of Biafra under the

leadership of the region’s governor.

• Thousands of combat casualties and possibly

over a million civilian deaths

Page 20: Nigeria overview

Gowon and Muhammed

• Unpopular due to corruption, high inflation, and

poor economic planning of his rule during the oil

boom years

• Replaced by Murtala Muhammed, a Muslim

Hausa-Fulani from the north, in 1975

• Assassinated a year later and replaced by

Olusegun Obasanjo, a Christian Yoruba, who

laid the groundwork for the Second Republic

Page 21: Nigeria overview

Nigerian Regimes Since lndependence

Year Head of State Type of

Regime

1960-1966 Tafawa Balewa Republic

1966 J. T. U. Aguiyu lronsi Military

1966-1975 Yakubu Gowon Military

1975-1976 Murtala Muhammed Military

1976-1979 Olusegun Obasanjo Military

1979-1983 Shehu Shagari Republic

Page 22: Nigeria overview

Nigerian Regimes Since lndependence

Year Head of State Type of

Regime

1984-1985 Muhammadu Buhari Military

1985-1993 lbrahim Babangida Military

1993 Ernest Shonekan Military

1993-1998 Sani Abacha Military

1998-1999 Abdulsalmi Abubakar Military

1999- Olusegun Obasanjo Republic

Page 23: Nigeria overview

1979: Second Republic

• Constitution based on U.S. Constitution

• 19-state federal republic

• Presidential system

• Designed to limit the impact of ethnicity on

politics:

– Obasanjo reasoned that 19 states would be less

easily manipulated than 3.

– The president was required to win a majority of the

popular vote with at least 25 percent of the vote in

12 of the 19 states.

Page 24: Nigeria overview

End of Second Republic

• 1983 coup led to rule of Major-General Muhammed Buhari, a northern Muslim Hausa-Fulani

• Replaced federal government with Supreme Military Council

• Banned political parties

• Dissolved the legislature

• Overthrown in another coup in 1985 by lbrahim Babangida, a Muslim from the middle of the counry, who ruled under the banner of the Armed Forces Ruling Council

Page 25: Nigeria overview

Third Republic

• 1992 new constitution written

• Two political parties chosen to contest in 1993

elections

• Elections for legislature and president held in

1993

• Babangida annulled the elections, when he lost

to Chief Mashood Kastumawo Olawale Abiola

• Riots in the cities, as a result, forced Babangida

to resign

Page 26: Nigeria overview

Fourth Republic

• Succeeded by General Sani Abacha

• Died in 1998 (heart attack) and replaced by

Abdulsalami Abubakar

• Abubakar held democratic elections in 1999

• Olusegun Obasanjo returned to power by

winning the presidential election

• Won reelection in contested elections in 2003

and has been in power ever since

Page 27: Nigeria overview

Institutions of Government

today?

Page 28: Nigeria overview

Executive

• President is popularly elected, serving a

maximum of two four-year terms.

• President is head of government, head of state,

and commander-in-chief.

• President appoints government ministers, who

are confirmed by Senate

• Ministers must come from all 36 states

• President and ministers comprise the Federal

Executive Committee, which assures that

enacted laws are properly implemented.

Page 29: Nigeria overview

Legislative Branch

• Bicameral legislature

– Senate: 109 members (three from each state and one from capital Abuja)

– House of Representatives: 360 members

– Members from both houses popularly elected

– Both houses serve four-year terms

• All laws must pass both houses and be signed by the President

Page 30: Nigeria overview

Judiciary

• Court’s ensure actions and legislation passed by

other branches is in accordance with the

constitution

• Supreme Court is highest court in land; there is

also a Court of Appeal and a Federal High Court.

• For each of the 36 states and Abuja there is a

High Court, a Sharia Court of Appeal, and a

Customary Court of Appeal.

Page 31: Nigeria overview

The Military

• Not democratic by nature

• One of the few institutions that is national

in character

• More representative than political parties

and other government institutions, which

are subject to ethnic based patronage

Page 32: Nigeria overview

Want to know more …write to [email protected]