Last
month, we Nigerians received some startling news from the army:
Abubakar Shekau, the leader of the militant Islamist group Boko Haram,
which has killed some 3,000 people in northern Nigeria over the last
four years, “might have died.”
The government has provided no proof of this claim. No corpse has
been displayed, and Boko Haram, whose name loosely translates as
“Western education is sinful,” has been silent on the matter. Just a few
days ago, Boko Haram militants set up a roadblock in the northern town
of Benisheik and shot at least 87 people to death as they were trying to
flee.
This would not be the first time we had heard false rumors of his
death — there was one in 2009 — and many Nigerians believe the
announcement was merely a ruse, designed to provoke Mr. Shekau into
making a public appearance or statement, in the hope of flushing him
out. The theory is not so crazy: Boko Haram released a video a few days
before the August announcement that purported to show Mr. Shekau, but
the government said the man in the video was “an impostor.”
Given that the United States has placed a $7 million bounty on his
head — a figure that puts him well up there in the terrorists’ league —
there is plenty of incentive to get hold of Mr. Shekau, especially for
soldiers in the three states in northern Nigeria where the sect is
believed to be holding out, and where a state of emergency was declared a
few months ago.
Little is actually known about Mr. Shekau, except for his taste for
killing. In a rare video clip released early last year, he said, “I
enjoy killing anyone that God commands me to kill — the way I enjoy
killing chickens and rams.”
Mr. Shekau’s ascent to power — and the concomitant increase in
violence — followed the extrajudicial execution of the sect’s founder,
Mohammed Yusuf, by the police in 2009. This singular event, which was
also videotaped, gave Mr. Shekau the excuse he needed to start bombing
churches and schools in what quickly became a reign of terror. But the
virulence of his murderous campaign points to a much deeper problem: the
power struggle between the largely Islamic north and the largely
Christian south.
From independence in 1960 until the return of democracy in 1999,
Nigeria was ruled almost exclusively by elites (largely military) from
the north, who practically believed that they had a divine right to
govern. By 1999, the elite accepted that its monopoly on power was no
longer feasible, and allowed a southerner of its choosing, Olusegun
Obasanjo, to emerge as president for two four-year terms, on the
understanding that the presidency would return to the north afterward.
A northerner, Umaru Yar’Adua, indeed took over in 2007, but he died
in office nearly three years later, and was succeeded by his deputy,
Goodluck Jonathan, a southerner, who was supposed to act as a caretaker
but then decided to run in 2011. He initially promised to serve just one
full term, but has now reneged and talks about pursuing a second term
in the next election, in 2015.
Why does this regional struggle matter? It’s partly a curse of the
bonanza of crude oil in the south, the control of which is the raison
d’être of our government. As one northern ruler put it during the
oil-price rises of the 1970s, Nigeria’s problem is not money, but how to
spend it.
Decades later, Nigeria — the world’s seventh most populous country —
is the world’s second-largest importer of Champagne but is unable to
deliver more than a few hours of electricity a day.
The southerners who inhabit the oil-producing Niger Delta, which
financed the northern elite’s decades-long party, have awakened to the
theft of their resources and started demanding greater political
representation. Some have purloined their region’s crude wealth to buy
military hardware on the high seas. Unlike Boko Haram, however, these
militants are mostly focused on securing autonomy for the delta, not on
imposing a radical religious ideology.
By the time Boko Haram started its own, far more ferocious, brand of
violence four years ago, the case for a continued northern monopoly on
power seemed lost. That’s why some Nigerians believe that the northern
elite quietly tolerated — or even abetted — the sect, as a way to bog
down Mr. Jonathan’s government, and to preserve the privileges of
political patronage by keeping resources flowing to the north.
Mr. Jonathan himself has accused some leading northern politicians of
consorting with Boko Haram. Muhammadu Buhari, a northern leader, former
military officer and frequent presidential candidate, who plans to run
again in 2015, has declined to condemn the terrorist group and has
accused the government of hypocrisy. Niger Delta militants “were given
money, and a training scheme was introduced for their members,” he said,
while in contrast, “when Boko Haram emerged, members of the sect were
killed.”
This is a ludicrous comparison, but a sad measure of the gulf between the two sides fighting for the soul of this country.
The problem goes beyond Boko Haram, which in any case appears to be
splitting into several splinter groups, some expanding their reach
beyond Nigeria. It may have been just such a splinter group that
kidnapped members of a French family over the border in Cameroon in
February and held them for two months.
As the latest deadly attacks in the north show, it hardly matters
whether Mr. Shekau is dead or not. The killings continue, which is why
the state of emergency is unlikely to end anytime soon.
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