 Nigeria
By Regions nº 1768
Nigeria’s federal system and politics are deeply flawed,
contributing to rising violence that threatens to
destabilise one of Africa’s leading countries. Failing to
encourage genuine power sharing, they have sparked
dangerous rivalries between the centre and the 36 states
over revenue from the country’s oil and other natural
resources; promoted no-holds-barred struggles between
interests groups to capture the state and its attendant
wealth; and facilitated the emergence of violent ethnic
militias, while politicians play on and exacerbate intercommunal tensions to cover up their corruption. The
government has been quick to brand many of the symptoms, especially the rise of militancy, as simple criminality to be dealt with by more police and more troops. But unless it engages with the underlying issues of resource control, equal rights, power sharing and accountability, Nigeria will face an internal crisis of increasing proportions.
By Regions nº 953
Nigeria currently faces a three-pronged crisis involving Muslim-Christian relations, the Niger Delta region, and presidential term limits. The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) held a public workshop in March 2006 for the purpose of assessing the situation in Nigeria and considering ways in which the international community might respond.
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