03/10/2022
RESCUING NIGERIA
The country’s present situation has warranted Nigeria’s placement by Fund for Peace in the top 20 on the failed state index for the 6th consecutive time. Even, a former Nigerian Head of State, Olusegun Obasanjo, reiterated that Nigeria is fast becoming a failed state. Rather than take bold steps to rescue the nation from the brink, the ruling elite seems to live in denial and are less enthusiastic about taking critical steps to fix the nation’s predicaments.
This week’s newsletter highlights indices to suggest how close Nigeria is to being a failed state. It also outlines some solution ingredients to rescue the country from state collapse. Whilst understanding why Nigeria is profiled as a state at the risk of failure, it becomes imperative to outline the features of a failed state. According to the Fund for Peace (FFP), the fundamental attributes of a failed state include a government’s loss of physical control over its territory and use of the instrument of violence, loss of legitimate authority to make decisions, and loss of stability to fully interact with others as a member of the international community.
In Nigeria, the objective realities indicate that the government is losing grip of physical control of its territory and the instrument of violence. From late 2014 to the start of 2015, Boko Haram had seized around 20 Local Government Areas (Reuters, 2015). The seeming unfettered weapons inflow into Nigeria through the porous land and sea borders indicate loss of monopoly over instrument violence. This situation accounts for the audacity of violence in various parts of the country. In the North East, the Nigerian government has been fighting Boko Haram insurgents for more than a decade. Since the group emerged in 2009, it has reportedly claimed 35,000 lives (Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, 2022). The group has reportedly claimed responsibilities for several mass abductions, including the 276 Chibok schoolgirls in Borno State in 2014, 110 Dapchi schoolgirls in Yobe State in 2018, 317 Jangebe schoolgirls in Zamfara state in March 2021, and more than 300 Kankare schoolboys in Katsina State in 2020 (The Guardian News). All over the country, kidnapping for ransom is becoming a sort of cottage industries for idle but able-bodied youth in Nigeria.
In the oil-rich but impoverished Niger Delta region, extortion through pipeline sabotage has become legendary. In 2019, International Maritime Bureau (IMB’s) Piracy Reporting Centre logged 44 crew abductions off Nigeria’s coast. The number of cases increased in 2020 to 62. There has been an increasing wave of attacks on the security formations in the country. No fewer than 150 security agents, comprising the Police, Soldiers, Navy, NDLEA officers, NSCDC and prison wardens, have been killed in different part of the country within the first half of 2022 (Premium Times 2022)
Apart from physical insecurity, Nigeria is at risk of becoming a failed state by its present socio-economic predicaments. With 95.1 million Nigerians projected to be living in extreme poverty by the end of 2022 (A Better Future for all Nigerians: 2022 Nigeria Poverty Assessment) . As a
direct corollary of the challenging economic conditions in the country, many Nigerians have resorted to migrating abroad for succour. But this has engendered social relation dilemma for these economic migrants. The social relations between many of these diaspora Nigerians at the individual level have been frustrating. Inhuman, cruel, degrading and detestable treatments are meted on them in different countries such as Malaysia, Oman, India, U.A.E, China, Qatar and even African countries. In recent times, Nigerians have been refused entry into U.A.E despite having a valid Visa. On April 2, 2021, Cape Verde reportedly barred three Nigerians from entry its territory while allowing white foreign travellers. Rescuing the Nation from the brim of becoming a failed state, the following solution ingredients are paramount.
Political participation: Patriotic Nigerians, especially those less tainted by politics of extraction and ethnonationalism, should mobilize to take over power through the ballot box come 2023 from the crop of the ruling elite who have been re-circulating themselves with the same mantra. The 2023 general elections may be the last crucial stepping stone to turn the page on the nation’s political history of poor leadership.
Restoration of citizens’ confidence: Effective security governance and stability are essential for restoring citizens’ confidence in the state. The pillar for effective security governance and stability are strong state institutions. To achieve this, it is critical to focus on rethinking, rebuilding and strengthening legal frameworks and institutions.
Economic empowerment schemes: The government, in collaboration with the private sector organisations and international development agencies,needs to focus attention on the improvement of the welfare of the citizens through poverty alleviation, employment generation and infrastructural development. This policy will deplete the army of youth readily available for engagement in illicit businesses and violent activities within and outside the country.
Peace education: Due to low capacity of the state to manage conflicts and ensure fairness to all, a culture of “might is right” seems to have been entrenched in the minds of many Nigerians. To address this, relevant stakeholders, including civil society organisations, need to undertake serious efforts to de-escalate tension, facilitating reconciliation and peacemaking. To actualise this, the stakeholders must cultivate a cordial and harmonious relationship deliberately.