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Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up - Politics - Nairaland

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Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by KEVIND: 5:39pm On Jun 13, 2021
By Gimba Kakanda

I wrote this think-piece in June, 2017, as my contribution to the lingering debate then around the question of Biafra. In it, I underlined my reason for opposing the idea of carving Nigeria up into two, and this is still my position. I must add that we all need to study the history of Yugoslavia, at the point it began to disintegrate following the collapse of the Soviet Union. In doing so, we may realize that it’s not guns and mortars that can stop our further descent into anarchy; it’s justice, all-inclusive governance. Find below my thoughts on the subject, reproduced as first written:

A few days ago, a friend asked me to explain my aversion to the idea of secession as championed by the neo-Biafra advocates of Southeast Nigeria. He had assumed it was the fear, as simplified in a certain series of propaganda, of the North’s foreseen inability to sustain itself economically post-breakup.

Since it was a private conversation, I elected to present my actual reason bit by bit, some of them I can’t express in public, and offered him a mirror which, when we were done, reflected a possibility that scared him too.

He saw that I was afraid of the break-up for the very reason a part of Nigeria seeks to leave. For cultural hegemony. This calculated domination of our diverse society by the elite using ethnicity, religion and all the binary identities, sentiments, affiliations and values available, to hold on to power, and to forestall criticism of them and a revolt of the masses.

How has cultural hegemony held Nigeria together? The reason Nigeria hasn’t degenerated into a full-blown autocratic regime is because of these conflicting cultural hegemonies that exist like a tripartite coalition government – an ethnic arrangement that restricts the tyranny of the three parts, the “Hausa-Fulani,” the Igbo and Yoruba. And as a diarchy constituted by the “Muslim North” and “Christian South.”

So, yes, there’s a mechanism of checks and balances of cultural hegemony as Nigeria stands today, along the ethnic lines of these three dominating ethnic groups, as there is along the lines of Islam and Christianity. This multiculturalism is, in my estimation, our most undermined stabilizing factor.

What happens after the breakup? I’ll address the question of the struggle for power in the North instead, even though this danger of political monolithism applies to the other two ethnic nationalities and geography. The region’s cultural hegemony, which the federating South has tackled, albeit not successfully, levers around Islam and the so-called “Hausa-Fulani” super-group.

A dissolution of this religious diarchy or ethnic tripartite government means, in Northern Nigeria, an unrestricted evolution of this cultural hegemony. The masses left deprived for too long and denied privileges of quality education are ever around to serve as willing foot-soldiers of perpetual manipulations that only serve as conduits to political power and relevance.

This arrangement favours characters like Senator Ahmed Yerima of Zamfara State, who as governor introduced a gimmick he called Sharia simply to protect his political capitals. His friends, realizing the success of such arrangement in building and sustaining a political force and financial aid pouring in from oil-rich Arab nations, joined him in that smokescreen to enrich themselves. Some of them are parties to pending cases of corruption at the Court or still under the radar of our anti-corruption agencies.

What saved Nigeria then was the existence of a member of another cultural hegemony, a Christian and Yoruba from the political South, as head of the national government. He was not only opposed to the northern political chessboard that was alienating him, he was challenged to protect the interests of the Christian, the Yoruba, the Southern and, very importantly, the minorities, in the political “coalition.”

The Yerimas of Northern Nigeria may be local champions now, but the moment their allies from other cultural hegemonies withdraw, a new order of tyrannical rule, in connivance with religious clerics and socio-cultural “ambassadors,” will manifest. And there won’t be a balancing part to protect the minorities in this outright distortion and manipulation of Islamic jurisprudence, an Islamo-fascism, to institutionalize oppression and enable corruption. One can only imagine the extent of its devastations with personality cults forming around some ascetic criminals.

I think this fear explains the convergence of some self-elected leaders of northern “minorities” who, calling themselves “Middle Belt Leaders’ Forum,” met last week in Abuja to debate their place and prospects in Nigeria, now and later. It’s not a coincidence that the Professor Jerry Gana-led gathering was dominated by Christians (and “other minorities”) out of political offices, and gasping for attention.

As a Muslim, there’s nothing that scares me like an attempt to police my private moralities in a secular political arrangement, especially when it does not evaluate and redeem the pseudo-religious Police. It’s fascism manifesting, and I’ll rather die fighting it than be consumed in silence.

So, my dear friends from the South, it’s not untrue that I do not want you to leave. But it’s not for your resources. Having assessed the welfare of my people, it’s sad to declare that these natural resources are inessential to us. We and I include you too, have neither access to decent hospitals nor schools, neither a good network of roads nor security. I only want you to stay to sustain the checks and balances of this hegemonic order. May God save us from us!

https://dailytrust.com/why-im-afraid-of-nigerias-break-up
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by ShadowCracker(m): 5:42pm On Jun 13, 2021
omonnakoda and seunmsg are also scared of Nijeriya breakup cheesy.

They abhor the idea of not having Fulani controlling both airport and seaport in Lagos.
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Nobody: 5:44pm On Jun 13, 2021
Reading
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by tchaik(m): 5:46pm On Jun 13, 2021
Aboki dey disguise.
All the grammar, yet no substance.

Just conduct the damn Referendum, let us start from there.

9 Likes

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Arda1000(m): 5:49pm On Jun 13, 2021
Does this even made sense to anyone cause I read it thoroughly but can't seem to understand a bit of it
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by nonyene: 5:52pm On Jun 13, 2021
if each region can harness their human resource, then nothing to be afraid off
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Obagreatdatoye(m): 5:54pm On Jun 13, 2021
You better get use to the fact that Nigeria is breaking into 4 to 5 country soon....nothing can hold this back...so get prepared!

6 Likes

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by ShenTeh(m): 5:56pm On Jun 13, 2021
He has said much, of nothing.

This still only supports the arguments of those in support of the breakup.

You do not want the south to go so that they can continue to serve as checks to your fascist politicians, meanwhile you throw everything under the table to ensure your ill-tutored religious fanatical politicians grab power at every election and hold all public appointments at all cost!

No. That is injustice and a poor attempt to slow the growth of the other party.

Deal with it.

5 Likes

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by mrvitalis(m): 5:58pm On Jun 13, 2021
So u want to hold me down for your own selfish interest ? Smh

1 Like

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Pentagon007: 6:46pm On Jun 13, 2021
Lol So all these grammar and turn-turn is because you want Biafrans to stay and serve as a balancing force against the Islamic feudalistic North, in protection of your ethnic minority group. Well, to be candid, you have a strong point but that should be part of the discussions that will hold during Deliberations for Biafra referendum.
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by IJOBA11: 6:47pm On Jun 13, 2021
ShadowCracker:
omonnakoda and seunmsg are also scared of Nijeriya breakup cheesy.

They abhor the idea of not having Fulani controlling both airport and seaport in Lagos.
INCLUDING VAUGHANLANREWAJ MONOGAMY CILICMARIN ADADIKE JULIUSMALEMA AND ONIONBANDIT


MEANWHILE GIMBA KAKANDA IS MAD angry

1 Like

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by MANNABBQGRILLS: 7:54pm On Jun 13, 2021
GOD BLESS NIGERIA

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by festacman(m): 8:07pm On Jun 13, 2021
Well...
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Rodwave: 9:40pm On Jun 13, 2021
Thunder fire the writer of this useless article.

You want me to remain with you because you are afraid of being consumed by your own stupidity. God punish you.

You can turn your land to another taliban Afghanistan, who cares? Nonsense
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by Igboid: 10:17pm On Jun 13, 2021
So you want us to stay and endure the misery of your Islamic brothers with you?

I'm not surprised, misery loves company.
But sorry, your Northern Muslim brothers are your problem not Igbo problem.

You should deal with your problems yourself. We have ours too and we don't ask your help to solve them.

2 Likes

Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by theTranslator: 11:48pm On Jun 13, 2021
Igboid:
So you want us to stay and endure the misery of your Islamic brothers with you?

I'm not surprised, misery loves company.
But sorry, your Northern Muslim brothers are your problem not Igbo problem.

You should deal with your problems yourself. We have ours too and we don't ask your help to solve them.
The writer took some bad weed cheesy grin
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by meccuno: 11:58pm On Jun 13, 2021
post=102690778:
GOD BLESS NIGERIA
Re: Why I’m Afraid Of Nigeria’s Break-up by esnbrutality: 12:29am On Jun 14, 2021
grin grin grin grin grin

post=102690778:
GOD BLESS NIGERIA

1 Like

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