Independent Nigeria
Nigeria was granted independence on October 1, 1960. A new constitution established a federal system with an elected prime minister and a ceremonial head of state. The NCNC, now headed by Azikiwe (who had taken control after Macaulay’s death in 1946), formed a coalition with Balewa’s NPC after neither party won a majority in the 1959 elections. Balewa continued to serve as the prime minister, a position he had held since 1957, while Azikiwe took the largely ceremonial position of president of the Senate. Following a UN-supervised referendum, the northern part of the Trust Territory of the Cameroons joined the Northern region in June 1961, while in October the Southern Cameroons united with Cameroun to form the Federal Republic of Cameroon. On October 1, 1963, Nigeria became a republic. Azikiwe became president of the country, although as prime minister Balewa was still more powerful.Official name | Federal Republic of Nigeria | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Form of government | federal republic with two legislative houses (Senate [109]; House of Representatives [360]) | |||
Head of state and government | President: Goodluck Jonathan | |||
Capital | Abuja | |||
Official language | English | |||
Official religion | none | |||
Monetary unit | Nigerian naira (₦) | |||
Population | (2014 est.) 177,156,000
Collapse
| |||
Total area (sq mi) | 356,669 | |||
Total area (sq km) | 923,768 | |||
Urban-rural population | Urban: (2011) 49.6% Rural: (2011) 50.4% | |||
Life expectancy at birth | Male: (2007) 46.4 years Female: (2007) 47.3 years | |||
Literacy: percentage of population age 15 and over literate | Male: (2008) 71.5% Female: (2008) 48.8% | |||
GNI per capita (U.S.$) | (2013) 2,760 |
After a brief honeymoon period, Nigeria’s long-standing regional
stresses, caused by ethnic competitiveness,
educational inequality, and
economic imbalance, again came to the fore in the controversial census
of 1962–63.
In an attempt to stave off ethnic conflict, the Mid-West
region was created in August 1963 by dividing the Western region.
Despite this division, the country still was segmented into three large
geographic regions, each of which was essentially controlled by an
ethnic group: the west by the Yoruba, the east by the Igbo, and the
north by the Hausa-Fulani. Conflicts were endemic, as regional leaders
protected their privileges; the south complained of northern domination,
and the north feared that the southern elite was bent on capturing
power. In the west the government had fallen apart in 1962, and a
boycott of the federal election of December 1964 brought the country to
the brink of breakdown. The point of no return was reached in January
1966, when, after the collapse of order in the west following the
fraudulent election of October 1965, a group of army officers attempted
to overthrow the federal government, and Prime Minister Balewa and two
of the regional premiers were murdered. A military administration was
set up under Maj. Gen. Johnson
Aguiyi-Ironsi, but his plan to abolish the regions and impose a unitary
government met with anti-Igbo riots in the north. The military
intervention worsened the political situation, as the army itself split
along ethnic lines, its officers clashed over power, and the instigators
and leaders of the January coup were accused of favouring Igbo
domination. In July 1966 northern officers staged a countercoup,
Aguiyi-Ironsi was assassinated, and Lieut. Col. (later Gen.) Yakubu Gowon came to power. The crisis was compounded by intercommunal clashes in the north and threats of secession in the south.
Gowon’s attempt to hold a conference to settle the constitutional
future of Nigeria was abandoned after a series of ethnic massacres in
October. A last-ditch effort to save the country was made in January
1967, when the Eastern delegation, led by Lieut. Col. (later Gen.) Odumegwu Ojukwu,
agreed to meet the others on neutral ground at Aburi, Ghana, but the
situation deteriorated after differences developed over the
interpretation of the accord. In May the Eastern region’s consultative
assembly authorized Ojukwu to establish a sovereign republic, while, at
the same time, the federal military government promulgated a decree
dividing the four regions into 12 states, including 6 in the north and 3
in the east, in an attempt to break the power of the regions.
The civil war
On May 30, 1967, Ojukwu declared the secession of the three states of the Eastern region under the name of the Republic of Biafra,
which the federal government interpreted as an act of rebellion.
Fighting broke out in early July and within weeks had escalated into a
full-scale civil war. In August Biafran troops crossed the Niger, seized Benin City, and were well on their way to Lagos before they were checked at Ore, a small town in Western state (now Ondo state). Shortly thereafter, federal troops entered Enugu,
the provisional capital of Biafra, and penetrated the Igbo heartland.
The next two years were marked by stiff resistance in the shrinking
Biafran enclave and by heavy casualties among civilians as well as in
both armies, all set within what threatened to be a military stalemate.
Peacemaking attempts by the Organization of African Unity (now the African Union)
remained ineffective, while Biafra began earning recognition from
African states and securing aid from international organizations for
what was by then a starving population.
The final Biafran collapse began on December 24, 1969, when federal
troops launched a massive effort at a time when Biafra was short on
ammunition, its people were desperate for food, and its leaders
controlled only one-sixth of the territory that had formed the Biafran
republic in 1967. Ojukwu fled to Côte d’Ivoire on January 11, 1970, and a Biafran deputation formally surrendered in Lagos four days later.
General Gowon was able, through his own personal magnetism, to
reconcile the two sides so that the former Biafran states were
integrated into the country once again and were not blamed for the war.
The oil boom that followed the war allowed the federal government to
finance development programs and consolidate its power. In 1974 Gowon
postponed until 1976 the target date for a return to civilian rule, but
he was overthrown in July 1975 and fled to Great Britain. The new head
of state, Brig. Gen. Murtala
Ramat Mohammed, initiated many changes during his brief time in office:
he began the process of moving the federal capital to Abuja,
addressed the issue of government inefficiency, and, most important,
initiated the process for a return to civilian rule. He was assassinated
in February 1976 during an unsuccessful coup attempt, and his top aide,
Lieut. Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, became head of the government.
Comments
Post a Comment