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Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Religious Riot In Bauchi Over Demolished Mosque (8451 Views)
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Re: Religious Riot In Bauchi Over Demolished Mosque by aligs: 8:07am On Jul 29, 2009 |
Dede 1, I attended ABU zaria and i spent 8 years in samaru village. i wil tell u one thing; education means imparting knowledge right!!!! what kind of education would you give a man who has spent all his life living in a village and not knowing that government is supposed to take care of them. In samaru they dont even have Water authority pipes running in the soil not to talk of having drinking water. the people there dont even know that govt has a responsibility to take care of them but yet they see students driving cars they have never seen before and they also see tall luxurious aprtments being built for the students. Knowledge to them is what they see and understand!!!! what do they understand and what knowledge do they have? that is the question. to me, the most educated people in these societies are the religeous leaders, politicians and tea/suya guys. therefore, if one crazy guy with a unique ideology comes along and convince them to do crazy things, they will do so based on their knowledge, understanding and perception of life as being unfair. they are a 100% different from u in terms of education and therefore it is impossible for you or me to comprehend their thoughts. i would love to meet one of this Boko haram followers and discuss bout his views and ideologies in order to try in my own way to set his perspectives straight. What ever it is that happened is not new in the north, we have had several groups that were squashed by the govt, they include the maitatsine and more recently the group that held kano seige last year. finally i feel these ideologies of violence are foreign and i think the govt should do something bout the borders especially those in the north which link to countries like chad, Niger, etc. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/af_nigeria_s_misery_analysis Analysis: Poverty, graft behind Nigeria violence Buzz up!33 votes Send Email IM Share Delicious Digg Facebook Fark Newsvine Reddit StumbleUpon Technorati Yahoo! Bookmarks Print Play Video Reuters – Nigeria death toll rises AP – In this image taken on Monday, July 27, 2009 in Maiduguri, Nigeria, bodies lie in the street in front … By MICHELLE FAUL, Associated Press Writer Michelle Faul, Associated Press Writer – Tue Jul 28, 1:34 pm ET JOHANNESBURG – Islamist militant attacks that killed scores in Nigeria this week appear to be abating, but Nigeria's woes show no sign of going away — and in fact are growing deeper. A country that should be rich on prodigious oil reserves is getting poorer by the day, Islamic radicals are seeking to impose a Taliban-style regime in the north, and Angola has surpassed Nigeria as Africa's biggest oil producer. The two-day outburst of violence is just the latest wave in a familiar cycle of bloodshed — and a sign that the corrupt government is unable or unwilling to confront the myriad problems that keep Africa's most populous nation mired in unfulfilled promise. At the heart of the radical Islamic insurgency that sparked this week's violence is dire poverty and political maneuvering — not religion. The attacks on police that have killed more than 80 people have been committed by frustrated, unemployed youths and orchestrated by religious leaders and politicians who manipulate them to retain power. "The outburst of violence is an explosion of pent up grievances, especially as hunger and unemployment create fertile grounds for unrest," political commentator Salisu Suleiman wrote in the new Nigerian newspaper NEXT. It's a similar situation to Nigeria's oil-rich delta, where attacks by militants demanding a greater share of the wealth their region produces have reduced oil output by a third — and led the way for Nigeria to lose its historic place as Africa's leading oil producer to Angola. The militants have carried out a string of devastating attacks on pipelines and other oil installations as well as kidnappings of petroleum company employees. When the oil militants attacked a fuel depot in Lagos, the economic capital — for the first time striking outside the delta — the government reacted by freeing a long-jailed leader of the movement and urging negotiations. But that fight likely will continue as long as the government fails to address decades-long grievances about the unrelenting poverty of the delta people. In the north, governments have done little over the years beyond commissioning reports after particularly bloody bouts of violence, never acting on them because those orchestrating the violence have links to well-placed members of the elite that has controlled successive governments. The foot soldiers are ill-educated manual workers who are easy to manipulate: one of the names of the radical sect behind the latest violence is "Boko Haram," which means "Western education is sin." It's one of the legacies of British colonization that never has been rectified. The colonizers ruled the north of Nigeria indirectly through sultans and caliphs. In the south, they governed directly and missionaries brought Western education. The gulf remains to this day. Corruption and inefficiency are blamed for the persisting poverty in Nigeria, the world's eighth-biggest oil exporter and fifth-largest source of U.S. oil imports. Some Nigerians were hopeful 10 years ago when decades of corrupt and brutal military rule ended, and again two years ago when they had the first handover of power from one civilian president to another. But both former President Olusegun Obasanjo and current President Umaru Yar'Adua have links to the powerful military — and that has helped perpetuate Nigeria's cycle of corruption. More than halfway through his term, Nigerians have lost hope in Yar'Adua's promises of reform, including a chaotic and corrupt electoral system that even Yar'Adua admitted left questions about whether he really won elections. Like previous Nigerian governments, he has failed to deliver even basic services like piped water, electricity and health care. His pledge to fight corruption remains unfulfilled, with state governors charged with stealing millions of dollars still on the loose. Many are asking whether he, like his predecessors, is a prisoner of corrupt vested interests that helped propel him to power. ___ |
Re: Religious Riot In Bauchi Over Demolished Mosque by naijaking1: 2:40pm On Jul 29, 2009 |
Your news report shows a more objective analysis of the situation. |
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