A Nigeria Thread (Non-Music Division)

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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/16/dozens-die-in-double-suicide-bomb-attack-on-nigerian-mosque

I really hope the US can bring some stability to Nigeria. I know it seems unlikely but this seems to me like the kind of foreign intervention that the US can execute effectively and make a difference. It reminds me in many ways of the recent French intervention in Mali - and not just because I love music from both countries. For one, they actually seem happy that the US is there: http://news.yahoo.com/nigeria-welcomes-us-troops-cameroon-over-boko-haram-152233717.html

Mordy, Friday, 16 October 2015 03:02 (eight years ago) link

Also, although it gets a bad rating from the Democracy Index, surely the election in March and peaceful transition of power is an indication that democracy is much healthier in Nigeria than previously thought?

Mordy, Friday, 16 October 2015 03:04 (eight years ago) link

I met a guy from here this summer who was definitely not treating his job as a sinecure: https://www.cert.gov.ng/
I actually think that bodes well. A tiny anecdotal indicator but hey

BRAAAAAAMETHEUS (El Tomboto), Friday, 16 October 2015 03:11 (eight years ago) link

to unpack that a bit - having a national CERT function is a bit of a luxury, and having one that has senior staff who really seem to care, and want to work collaboratively with their peers and counterparts, is a sign that a state is investing in infrastructure in a pretty forward-thinking way. If you want an advanced economy then you invest in ICT capacity, and if you want the best ROI on your ICT investments then you sponsor security and risk management functions like a national CERT. If that is indeed where NG is heading then that's really exciting. This reminds me yet again that I need to pay more attention to G77 goings-on.

BRAAAAAAMETHEUS (El Tomboto), Friday, 16 October 2015 03:56 (eight years ago) link

just supplying intelligence not combat

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/14/us-nigeria-bokoharam-usa-defense-idUSKCN0S828F20151014?mod=related&channelName=worldNews

http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/14/us-nigeria-bokoharam-usa-idUSKCN0S823F20151014

U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the troops would provide intelligence to a multi-national task force being set up to fight Boko Haram and composed of troops from Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, Chad and Benin.

curmudgeon, Friday, 16 October 2015 15:08 (eight years ago) link

three months pass...

just in case you weren't sure if the boko situation was still a horrific mess: http://www.reuters.com/article/us-nigeria-violence-idUSKCN0VJ265

Mordy, Thursday, 11 February 2016 17:56 (eight years ago) link

Stealing NG's bandwidth
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/content/dam/news/photos/000/838/83851.jpg

Lurkers of the world, unite! (Sanpaku), Thursday, 11 February 2016 21:13 (eight years ago) link

Incredible thing is how much further it is to the absolute front.

I mean yeah the scale of the thing is grotesque and the traffic it results in is beyond insane but once you actually go to the camp and see the orphanage, rehab centre, soup kitchen, the schools, banks, the clinic, maternity centre and the jobs the whole outfit generates, Wole Soyinka grumbling about the Ibadan expressway seems somewhat irrelevant.

tsrobodo, Saturday, 13 February 2016 15:20 (eight years ago) link

nine months pass...

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/12/world/africa/niger-nigeria-boko-haram-food-crisis.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=first-column-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news

DIFFA, Niger — Only 2 years old, Fatouma Ouseini lay in a hospital room, undernourished and listless from fever.

She is among the nearly half a million children expected to endure the food crisis that has plagued the Lake Chad region in the past year, aid groups say, a disaster brought on by Boko Haram’s relentless campaign of killing, kidnappings and looting of entire villages.

Fatouma and her family fled from just across the border in northeastern Nigeria, the epicenter of the war with Boko Haram, where scattered areas have teetered on the brink of famine for most of this year, according to the United Nations. Now, some aid workers fear that similar conditions could spill over to bordering areas like here in Niger, putting even more children at risk.

More than 70,000 people fled their homes along the border between Niger and Nigeria in the first half of this year after militant attacks increased. Many have resettled in Diffa, living in labyrinth-like neighborhoods of mud-brick homes, competing with longtime residents for food and water.

Will see what the UN and ngos can do...

curmudgeon, Monday, 12 December 2016 19:31 (seven years ago) link

three years pass...

On the current mass protests against police brutality (that I mentioned in the Wizkid thread):

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/12/world/africa/nigeria-protests-police-sars.html

https://www.aljazeera.com/gallery/2020/10/14/in-pictures-protests-in-nigeria-2/

Queer activist Amara, one of the protesters profiled in that Al-Jazeera piece, ran into her own problems unfortunately:

A lady brought a 🌈 rainbow flag
and our fellow
protesters turned on us at Berger Roundabout Abuja.
they tore our placards and seized the flag.
I got it back but they refused that we fly it.
I wore it on my neck and they refused.
said we either take it off or leave.
I’m leaving pic.twitter.com/ZyaTzR7TQg

— Amara, the lesbian. (@the_amarion) October 14, 2020

Welcome to Nonrock (breastcrawl), Thursday, 15 October 2020 14:22 (three years ago) link

Good thread on the protests:

I’ve been looking for a thread to share with some context to the #EndSarsNow protests for my followers but I haven’t seen one yet – so I’ll do one. Feel free to quote tweet threads in the replies.

— Black as in Revolution. (@annie_etc_) October 11, 2020

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 10:20 (three years ago) link

that thread provides useful background - meanwhile, the government’s response is becoming increasingly horrifying:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/21/nigeria-president-calls-for-calm-amid-reports-of-protesters-shot-dead-in-lagos

Welcome to Nonrock (breastcrawl), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 14:34 (three years ago) link

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie on the protests and the crackdown:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/21/opinion/chimamanda-adichie-nigeria-protests.html

paywalled, so I’m putting it here:

Opinion

Nigeria Is Murdering Its Citizens

Under President Muhammadu Buhari, there is a sense that the country could burn to the ground.


By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Oct. 21, 2020

LAGOS, Nigeria — For years, the name SARS hung in the air here in Nigeria like a putrid fog. SARS, which stood for Special Anti-Robbery Squad, was supposed to be the elite Nigerian police unit dedicated to fighting crime, but it was really a moneymaking terror squad with no accountability. SARS was random, vicious, vilely extortionist. SARS officers would raid bars or stop buses on the road and arbitrarily arrest young men for such crimes as wearing their hair in dreadlocks, having tattoos, holding a nice phone or a laptop, driving a nice car. Then they would demand large amounts of money as “bail.”
SARS officers once arrested my cousin at a beer parlor because he arrived driving a Mercedes. They accused him of being an armed robber, ignored the work ID cards he showed them, took him to a station where they threatened to photograph him next to a gun and claim he was a robber, unless he paid them a large sum of money. My cousin is one of the fortunate few who could pay an amount large enough for SARS, and who was released. He is not one of the many tortured, or the many disappeared, like Chijioke Iloanya.
In 2012 Mr. Iloanya was 20 when SARS officers arrested him at a child dedication ceremony in Anambra State. He had committed no crime. His family tried to pay to have him released but were asked to bring more money than they had. So they sold their property to raise money and went back to the SARS office but Mr. Iloanya was no longer there. They have not seen him since. Photos of him on social media show a young man, still almost a child, with sensitive eyes and a future waiting for him. There are so many families like the Iloanyas who are caught between pain and hope, because their sons and brothers were arrested by SARS and they fear the worst, knowing the reputation of SARS, but still they dare to hope in the desperate way we humans do for those we love.
There have been End SARS protests, since 2016, but October 2020 was different, a tipping point had been reached. The protests signaled the overturning of convention — the protesters insisted on not having a central leadership, it was social rather than traditional media that documented the protests, and, in a country with firm class divisions, the protests cut across class. The protests were peaceful, insistently peaceful, consistently peaceful. They were organized mostly on social media by young Nigerians, born in the 1980s and 1990s, a disaffected generation with the courage to act. Their bravery is inspiring. They speak to hope and to the possibility of what Nigeria could become. Of those involved in the organization, none is more remarkable than a group called Feminist Coalition, set up by Nigerian feminists, who have raised more than $180,000, and have provided legal aid, security and food to protesters.
But the Nigerian government tried to disrupt their fund-raising. The Nigerian government has reportedly accused Flutterwave, the company through which the donation link was created, of accepting funds from terrorists, even though it is clear that Feminist Coalition’s members are not terrorists. Their fund-raising link suddenly stopped working. Still, they persisted, and began to raise money through Bitcoin.

From the capital city of Abuja to the small town of Ogbomosho, state agents attacked and beat up protesters. The police killed a few and detained many others, until social media and video evidence forced them to release some of the detained. Still, the protesters persisted.
The Lagos State government accused protesters of violence, but it defied common sense that a protest so consistently committed to peaceful means would suddenly turn around and become violent. Protesters know they have everything to lose in a country like Nigeria where the mere hint of violence gives free reign to murderous security forces. Nigeria’s political culture is steeped in state-sponsored thuggery. Politicians routinely hire thugs to cause chaos, especially during elections, and many people believed that thugs had been hired to compromise the protests. On social media, videos that attested to this — of thugs getting into SUVs that belonged to the government, of hardened and hungry young men admitting they were paid to join the protests and become violent. Still, the protesters persisted.

At about noon on Oct. 20, 2020, about two weeks into the protests, the Lagos State governor suddenly announced a curfew that would begin at 4 p.m., which gave people in a famously traffic-clogged state only a few hours to get home and hunker down. I feared that a curfew would provide an excuse for state violence, that in the name of restoring order, the army and police would unleash violence. Still, I was unprepared for the carnage that followed at the Lekki Toll Gate, the most prominent in Lagos. Government officials reportedly cut the security cameras, then cut off the bright floodlights, leaving only a darkness heavy with foreboding. The protesters were holding Nigerian flags, sitting on the ground, some kneeling, some singing the national anthem, peaceful and determined.
A blurry video of what happened next has gone viral — soldiers walk toward the protesters with a terrifyingly casual calm, the kind of calm you cannot have if you are under attack, and they shoot, not up in the air, which anyway would still be an atrocity when dealing with peaceful protesters, but with their guns at arm level, shooting into a crowd of people, shooting to kill. Sparks of gunfire taint the air. It is still unclear how many died. Those at the scene say that the Nigerian army took away some bodies, and prevented ambulances from getting in to help the injured, and that there was still shooting going on hours later, in the morning.
The Nigerian state has turned on its people. The only reason to shoot into a crowd of peaceful citizens is to terrorize: to kill some and make the others back down. It is a colossal and unforgivable crime. The brazenness is chilling, that the state would murder its citizens, in such an obviously premeditated way, as though certain of the lack of consequences.
It is anarchy, a friend told me. Nigeria is descending into chaos, another friend said. They may be right, but “anarchy” and “chaos” are different ways of using language to shield what is fundamentally to blame — a failure of leadership. It did not have to be like this. The government of President Muhammadu Buhari has long been ineffectual, with a kind of willful indifference. Under his leadership, insecurity has worsened; there is the sense that Nigeria could very well burn to the ground while the president remains malevolently aloof. The president himself has often telegraphed a contemptuous self-righteousness, as though engaging fully with Nigerians is beneath him. Twelve hours after soldiers shot peaceful protesters, Mr. Buhari still had not addressed the nation.

A movement cannot spread so organically and widely across Nigeria if it does not legitimately reflect the grievances of ordinary people. A democratically elected government that is unable or unwilling to fully address those grievances has failed.
In the first week of the protests, the president sent out a tweet and then gave a flaccid speech about ending SARS. The inspector general of police has announced that SARS has been scrapped, but the government has announced the dissolution of SARS a few times in the past, starting in 2017. Because Nigerians are so accustomed to the two-faced nature of their governments, to promises destroyed even before being made, it is unsurprising that the protesters distrust the government and are demanding clear actions rather than words.
For weeks I have been in my ancestral hometown, where we first buried my beloved father, and then a week later, buried his only sister, my Aunt Rebecca. Immersed in my own raw grief, the frequent moments of stunned sorrow, thinking of my father’s casket being lowered into the rain-softened earth, wondering if it might still all be a bad dream, I think with a new kind of poignancy about those who have been killed. I think of their families brutally plunged into the terrible abyss of grief, made more terrible by the knowledge that their loved ones were killed by their country. And for what? Because they peacefully asked to be allowed to live.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is a novelist and the author, most recently, of “Dear Ijeawele, or A Feminist Manifesto in Fifteen Suggestions.”

Welcome to Nonrock (breastcrawl), Thursday, 22 October 2020 17:48 (three years ago) link

If anyone wants to keep up to date, Al Jazeera’s reporting seems quite on the ball. Not sure what’s the most reliable Nigerian news site, but The Guardian (guardian.ng) appears not to be in bed with the Buhari government at least (it does have other issues tho, if Wikipedia is to be believed). Music/culture website Native (thenativemag.com) is good for its reporting and opinionating from a pro-youth, pro-feminist, pro-lgbtq+ perspective.

Welcome to Nonrock (breastcrawl), Thursday, 22 October 2020 18:09 (three years ago) link

I can't get al-jazeera america. Don't have cable. But ty for posting that article.

the unappreciated charisma of cows (Aimless), Thursday, 22 October 2020 18:11 (three years ago) link

I meant aljazeera.com, their news site, sorry if that was unclear.

Welcome to Nonrock (breastcrawl), Thursday, 22 October 2020 18:17 (three years ago) link

one year passes...

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