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Are Things Falling Apart? The Military and the Crisis of Democratisation in Nigeria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 November 2008

Extract

The return of the generals to power following the coup d'état of November 1993 has posed fundamental challenges to the survival of the nation. On the one hand, it has brought out the worst in Nigerian politics: repression, intimidation, violence, corruption, betrayals, and the manipulation of primordial loyalties. On the other hand, it has exposed the nature and extent of the Nigerian political rot, and provided the still weak and fledgling civil society with added strength and legitimacy. Could the resurgence of military rule in Nigeria have been predicted? Could anyone have foreseen that General Sani Abacha would become such an all-powerful President? Was it possible to anticipate the popular protests and bloody confrontations which culminated in the hanging of nine environmental activists in November 1995? What is the way forward for the contending political communities?1

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1996

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References

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37 Named after a section in the Nigerian Criminal Code, ‘419’ refers to the now well-known ‘fax scam’ through which foreigners and other business persons are defrauded of huge sums of money.

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68 To be sure, many popular groups are weak and led by individuals with little of no political experience and credibility. This has implications for their ability to remain relevant, to mobilise the people, and to serve as viable platforms for challenging military dictatorship.

69 Campaign for Democracy, ‘CD Rejects the Latest Military Coup’, Press Statement, CD secretariat, Lagos, 19 November 1993.

70 According to ‘The Military Must Go’, interview with Chief Michael Ajasin, in TELL, 10 April 1995, this leader of the Awoist group was unable to persuade Lateef Jakande not to serve in Abacha's cabinet, and was not even consulted by Ebenezer Babatope before the latter did likewise.Google Scholar

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