Military Governance and Civil War: Ethnic Hegemony as a Constructive Factor in Nigeria

Table of contents

1. Introduction

"The dominance of the NPC and the perceived dominance of the North in the centre were like a threat to the presumed more enlightened and better educated Southerners who believed they were the backbone of the movement for Nigerian independence but did not succeed the colonial power to run the affairs of the state. So with that background one can now lay the foundation of the perception of the military struggle in Nigerian politics. (Major General IBM Haruna). 1 "The failure of the Aburi meeting.., and the outbreak of ethnic hostilities and the indiscriminate killings in the North and East further complicated and aggravated the situation....There was also the growing inter-ethnic rivalry and suspicion between the three major ethnic groups-Hausa/Fulani, Igbo and Yoruba.... (General Yakubu Gowon). 2 he existence of heterogeneous caption of Nigeria cannot be pulled off without the colonial stratagem which provides ill-fated matrimony of divergence pluri-ethnic groups for the smooth running of British colonial occupation in Nigeria. Nigeria is a country estimated with over 160 million people, comprised of three dominants ethnic groups (Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo), concomitantly, with more than 250 minority ethnic classes, therefore replicates pluralistic rhetoric of Nigerian amalgamation; it was observed that ethnic consideration serves as a significant value in determining the political leadership of the country since independent. The proxy of ethnicity with meritocracy has continued to hampering the political survival, its affiliation with political leadership has hijacked the political control of the country amid its reflection in daily governmental businesses in Nigeria. Thus, ethnic fondness protracts to frustrate numerous steps taken to sustain the amalgamation of the various social groups; the fear of marginalization of minority groups utterly contributes to the ethnic consciousness in the political array of Nigeria.

The intercession of Military personnel in politics has been conventionally chastised as an aberration, despite their forbidden operation in political engagements, various countries of the world such as Nigeria, France, Ghana, Uganda, Sudan, Somalia, Tanzania, Thailand, Iraq, Libya, Algeria, Afghanistan, Bangladesh, China, Azerbaijan Cambodia, Democratic Republic of Congo, just to mention a few, have experienced military skyjacking of political power at one time or the other. It is usually proclaimed that the involvement of military in governance habitually resulted in absolute crippling down of political system; this has crafted an enduring damage to many political systems all over the world. Observably, the military intervention in Nigerian body politics has rooted in ethnic chauvinism which metamorphosed into civil war in 1967. Notably, during this political clampdown, which was later transmuted into ethno-religious violence, myriad of Igbos were lynched while their properties were either looted or destroyed in the Northern region.

Ethnic consciousness was so pronounced in Nigeria that the old national anthem adopted at independence read in part "though tribe and tongue may differ in brotherhood we stand ... ." Subsequent events that plunged the country into ethnically enhanced political crisis showed that much more was needed than mere lyrics of a national anthem. The civil war, militarism, and military intervention in politics, enabled one ethnic group to perpetuate its domination of governance to the bitter exclusion of the other component nationalities. The long history of ethnic intransigence to rule the roost of central political vigor has continued to fabricate incongruous political character of diverse ethno-linguistic Nigerian society. The application of favourism and nepotism in military governance immensely has effectual connotation on Nigerian amalgamation which is currently endangering the political togetherness in Nigeria 3 Ako-Nai cited in Ojo posits that ethnic politics and rivalry had been the handiwork of colonial manipulators who used the method of divide and rule to govern. The ethnic groups were used against one another for the colonizers' economic gain. At the inception of colonization, the British authorities emphasized separation. It is against this background that one can readily appreciate the nature of continued conflict among the major ethnic groups even after independence was attained in 1960.

. The history of military governance and civil war cannot be completed without mentioning unquantifiable roles of some military heroes like Majors Nzeogwu, General Benjamin Adekunle, General T.Y. Danjuma, Major General Aguiyi-Ironsi, General Yakubu Gowon, General Murtala Mohammed, General Olusegun Obasanjo, General Muhammadu Buhari, General Ibrahim Babangida, General Sani Abacha, General Abdulsalam Abubakar, Martins Adamu, Captain Mamman Shuwa, Hassan Katsina, Ifeajuna, Adaka Boro, Philip Effiong and the rebel leader, Colonel Ojukwu. Nigeria gained political independence from imperial Great Britain in 1960. In 1966 its elected civilian regime was toppled in a coup d'etat that ushered military rule into Nigeria's public affairs. Since 1966, Nigeria has been dominated by military rulers. Even during the two brief non-military periods, in which civilians were voted into office, military men were never far away. Few Nigerians have bothered to probe the gory details of the coups that have maimed Nigeria's post-independence history 5 . as the military took over in the mid-1960s, and the economic situation worsened, ethnic tensions broke out 6 The goals of military takeover in Nigeria or most part of the world was to effect changes. In trying to achieve these, they often engaged in bloody revolution. When in January 15th 1966 Major General Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu and those loyal to him staged a coup, these were their intentions, to eradicate: "our enemies who were the political profiteers, swindlers, the men in the high and low places that seek bribes and demand ten percent, those that seek to keep the country divided permanently so that they can remain in office as ministers and VIPs of waste, the tribalists, the nepotists, those that make the country look big for nothing before international circles, those that have corrupted our society and put the Nigerian political calendar back by their words and deeds. These good intentions are insurmountable. Yet, military intervention can never be a panacea to civilian inadequacies since their intervention in politics is unconstitutional. Venturing into politics negates the tenets of their traditional roles . 7 Ethnic politics has always been the major source of growing political tension in Nigeria which has resulted in periodic outbreaks of violence between different ethnic groups in the country. This scenario has been detrimental to national unity and socioeconomic development of the country. Ethnic tensions increased after a military coup in January, 1966 led by Major Kaduna Chukwuma Nzeogwu. The coup was seen by the Northerners as an attempt by the Igbos to dominate the country. This led to a counter coup led by the Northerners few months later. In the counter coup, Aguiyi Ironsi, an Igbo Major General who was the then Head of State was killed and widespread reprisals were unleashed against the Igbos in the Northern part of the country. Fearing marginalization within the state, on May 30, 1967 the Eastern region dominated by the Igbos declared its independence as the Republic of Biafra .

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From the onset of independent government in Nigeria in 1960 to the end of 1990, the military had ruled for twenty-one years. Altogether there were five coups d'état involving changes of government: those of January 15, 1966; July 29, 1966; July 29, 1975; December 31, 1983; and August 27, 1985. There was . 5 Omoigui .N. (undated) Nigerian Civil War File Federal Nigerian Army Blunders of The Nigerian Civil War (1) available at www.dawodu.com/omoigui25.htm 6 BBC News, Thursday, 13 January, 2000 7 General Murtala Muhammad, was killed in February 1976, and another was nipped in the bud in December 1985. An attempt to overthrow General Ibrahim Babangida was made in April 1990. Of these coups, only those of January 1966 and December 1983 were against civilian governments. Several explanations of military intervention have been added to those given by the coup plotters themselves. Whereas the latter have cited economic mismanagement and corruption, other explanations have ranged from the continuation of ethno-regional politics by military means to the personal ambitions of officers 9 . The coups and counter-coups that started with the bloody coup of January 1966 heralded into the Nigerian governance institution, an ethnically biased and one-sided military. The various military regimes did very little to repair this ethnic relationships within the force or in Nigeria. The military took many decisions that aggravated the ethnic situation in the country. This gave rise to national question 10 II.

3. Theoretical Framework

. Axiomatically, this has been the origin of ethnic sexism in politics after independent which has been an injurious to political solidarity of divergence ethnic caste towards sustainable amalgamation in Nigeria. Premised from the above background analyses, this study therefore explores ethnic hegemonic as a constructive factor for military takeover and civil war in Nigeria.

Ethnicity is a cultural heritage shared by a category of people. Objective criteria are those of ancestry, cultural practices, language, and dress while subjective criteria are those involving the internalization of a distinctive identity 11 . Ethnicity is a group of people having a common language and cultural values 12 . Ethnicity refers to a selected cultural and physical characteristic used to classify people into (ethnic) groups or categories considered to be significantly different from others 13 . It is defines as a subgroup that shares a common ancestry, history, or culture, ethnicity is determined by a number of factors: geographic origins, family patterns, language, values, cultural norms, religion, literature, music, dietary patterns, gender roles, and employment patterns 14 . Ethnic groups are defined as a community of people who share cultural and linguistic characteristics including history, 12 Rakov S. (1990) Ethnicity in Nigeria; Vassar College '92 (English 32, Fall 1990) 13 Ibid 3 14 Ibid 12 tradition, myth, and origin. Ethnic conflicts are therefore often caused by an attempt to secure more power or access more resources 15 Ethnicity and nationalism, interethnic conflicts, and secessionist movements have been major forces shaping the modern world and the structure and stability of contemporary states. In the closing decades of the twentieth century, such forces and movements emerged with new intensity. Drawing examples, from a wide variety of multiethnic situations around the world . 16 "If you are born poor, you may die rich. But your ethnic group is fixed" , with a great emphasis on African nations. 17 . So goes the "primordialist" way of thinking about ethnic identity. According to it, each of us belongs to one and only one ethnic group that group membership remains fixed over a lifetime and it is passed down intact across generations. Wars begin and end, states grow and die, economies boom and crash, but through it all, ethnic groups stay the same. Although theories of the formation of ethnic groups are driven by the constructivist assumption that ethnic identities can change over time, theories of the effect of ethnicity on economic and political outcomes are driven by the primordialist assumption that these identities are fixed 18 Ethnic identity can be expressed either in action or feeling, or combinations of these, and the kinds of situations in which it is expressed are nearly limitless .

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. Once a group has won control over the country's riches, however, it faces the task of enforcing the exclusion of non-members. Agents not belonging to the winning group will attempt to infiltrate it, so as to participate in the distribution of the spoils. For example, they will apply for land titles, mining concessions, scarce places in higher education, or for government jobs. This infiltration defeats the winning group's purpose, as it dilutes the dividend each original member receives 20 15 Irobi .E. (2005) Ethnic Conflict Management in Africa: A Comparative Case Study of Nigeria and South Africa; The Beyond Intractability Project, The Conflict Information Consortium, University of Colorado . The on-going agitations by various ethnic groups are a direct result of what has widely became known in Nigerian lexicon as "marginalization." The Hausa/Fulani of the North are complaining about marginalization in the area of education and economic development. The Igbo are crying marginalization in almost every aspect of national endeavor, including political, military, and senior civil service appointments and promotions, as well as economic and social development. They also complain about the non-implementation of the Reconciliation, the end of the civil war in 1970. The Yoruba are displeased, among other things, with the early retirement of their qualified and experienced nationals from the civil services during the military dictatorships. The South-South, which comprises the oil-rich states of Nigeria, are pushing for full control of their natural resources 21 . Therefore, Ethnocentrism channels the competition along ethnic lines; and the power differential determines whether either group will be able to subordinate the other 22 . Ethnicity has been used as a ploy by the military to perpetuate itself in power at the expense of national development. The military slove for power stems partially from a love for wealth and partly from its self-image as the custodian of the independent and corporate existence of the country 23 Previous research on civil wars, in the same vein as the research on riots, tends to treat ethnic groups as unitary actors and ethnic identities as given ex ante, automatically salient, fixed during the conflict, and predictive of individual political behavior .

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. Ethnicity as a Social phenomenon associated with the identity of members of the largest possible competing communal groups (ethnic groups) seeking to protect and advance their interest in a political system. The relevant communal factor may be language, culture, race religion and/or common history. Ethnicity is only one of the phenomena associated with interactions among communal groups (ethnic groups). Others include trade, diplomacy, friendship enmity, corporation, selfabnegation and self extension. What is peculiar to ethnicity is that it involves demands by one group on other competing groups 25 A severely divided society is one in which ascriptive cleavages are highly salient in politics (more salient than alternative cleavages such as social class), a few groups contend for power at the center, and there is a history of interethnic antipathy . . The relative wealth of the country and the large size of some ethnic groups has allowed them to express their ethnicity in remarkable and sometimes problematic ways that are not mirrored in other similar countries. Dominance of particular ethnic groups in certain sectors of the economy has significant implications for equity. The pattern of dominant and excluded minorities is embedded in the administrative and economic 23 subsystems and has important implications for access to justice and equitable resource-sharing. Ethnic conflict has been a perennial feature of the Nigerian scene since pre-colonial times 27 The Nigerian socio-topography comprises three major ethnic groups, that is, Hausa/Fulani, Igbo and Yoruba with other minority groups, as Rakov validates it that the Hausa are themselves a fusion, a collection of Sudanese peoples that were assimilated, long ago, into the population inhabiting what is now considered Hausaland. They believe in the religion of Islam. Their origin is a matter of dispute: legends trace them back to Canaan, Palestine, Libya, Mecca and Baghdad, while ethnologists hold them to be from the Southern Sahara or the Chad Basin. The Fulani are also Muslims, and, like the Hausa, their origin is more or less an open question. Once a nomadic people, they believe themselves to be descended from the gypsies, Roman soldiers who became lost in the desert, a lost "tribe" of Israel, or other groups such as the relatives of the Britons or the Tuaregs, who inhabit the southern edge of the Sahara in central Africa. The second majority ethnic group is the Ibo, who like the Hausa-Fulani are a synthesis of smaller ethnic groups. In this case the smaller groups are the Onitsha Ibo, the Western Ibo, the Cross River Ibo, and the North-eastern Ibo. Their origins are completely unknown, as they claim to be from about nineteen different places. The third ethnic majority group, the Yoruba, is like the others made up of numerous smaller collections of people. Those who are identified as Yoruba consider themselves to be members of the Oyo, Egba, Ijebu, Ife, Ilesha, Ekiti or Owu peoples. The Yoruba are united, however, by their common belief in the town of Ife as their place of origin, and the Oni of Ife as their spiritual leader. Their mythology holds that "Oduduwa" created the earth; present royal houses of the Yoruba kingdoms trace their ancestry back to "Oduduwa," while members of the Yoruba people maintain that they are descended from his sons . 28 In the post independent regime, ethnicity serves as an instrument of development until someone used it to garner votes for political and economic gains of one of the zones, the South West, following which, the military elevated the abuse of ethnicity to an unimaginable level . . The original justification for military rule in Nigeria arose from the claim that the country's civil politics were unruly and required a dose of military discipline. This naive assumption overlooked the universal historical fact that since the invention of the nation-state some five centuries ago, its civil politics have been disorderly. Order and discipline were the military's twin mantras. But the Nigerian military's meaning of discipline was completely defective. Overthrowing a government which military officers had sworn to protect was in fact an act of indiscipline. Discipline signifies an inner code of behavior that honors important societal principles. Coups d'etat have no redeeming values as acts of discipline; because they destroy respect for a societal institution of governance 30 Why we have been fighting along ethnic, regional and religious affiliations for years is caused by the elites competing for the control of political and economic powers????.. But because of competition among the elites, they instigate the people to fight one another while the elites convert the resources of the nation for their personal benefits , it is believed that ethnic manipulation has been a handiwork of political elites in Nigeria, as it was stated that: 31 Therefore, ethnicity has been an apparatus of political manipulation to get to power. The origin of military takeover in Nigeria was as a result of thrilling ethnic dogma to control the affairs of the nation in Nigeria.

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6. III. Causes of Military Intervention in Nigerian Politics

Military intervention in Nigerian politics has been part of the unrelieved ethnic competition for power. There are various reasons for military occupation in politics, among them are the following: i. Ethnicity: The major problem facing Nigerian State is sketches' along ethnic competition for power. The 1966 military coup was colorized as an attempt to exclude Northerners from the cloak of political leadership which was later corrected through another coup devised by the Northern military officers calculatingly to recuperate their political credence in Nigeria.

ii. Political Upheaval: Political crisis has been a major reason for military intervention in politics as it was reflected in the South-Western Nigeria political crisis during the first republic. The intervention of military to quench the flame of political tension resulted in synchronized usurping of political power from the incumbent civilian government.

iii. Corruption: In many occasions, the civilian government were accused of been corrupt, dwelling on this premise, military takeovers were justified as it was experienced in the past military coups in Nigeria.

7. IV. The Historical Rootage of Military Governance and Civil War in Nigeria

This section of the paper examines various military regimes from 1966-1999. Military rule instigated against the government of Abubakar Tafawa Balewa in Nigeria on January 15, 1966, the military coup d'e-tat was led by Major, Chukwuma Nzeogwu, and therefore, the Balewa's regime was short-lived with the immediate replacement of Major-General J. T. U. Aguiyi-lronsi. In another military coup, General Yakubu Gowon (1966 -1975) which also witnessed the Nigerian Civil War (1966 -1970) and the regimes of Brigadier (later General) Murtala Mohammed (1975 -1976) and Lt. General Olusegun Obasanjo (later General) (1976 -1979). General Olusegun Obasanjo handed over to democratic regime of President Shehu Shagari (1979 -1983) which was overthrown by a military coup on December 31, 1983. Thereafter, the successive military regimes were headed by General Mohammadu Buhari (1983 -1985), General lbrahim Badamasi Babangida (1985 -1993), which later handed over to ersatz-civilian regime headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan (August -November, 1993), this regime was later truncated by General Sani Abacha (1993 -1998), after the demise of General Sani Abacha, General Abdulsalami Abubakar ruled from 1998 -1999. In 1999 Abdulsalami Abubakar handed over power to civilian regime which signals the winding-up of military administration in Nigerian politics. Brief History of Military Government in Nigeria ? General Aguiyi Ironsi 1966-1966 Following the assassination of Tafawa Balewa (Nigerian Prime Minister) in the first republic, Dr Nwafor Orizu (the Acting President) was informed by General Ironsi to handover power either voluntary or forcefully, this scenario led to the handing over of power to military government in a broadcast announced by Dr Nwafor Orizu. Contributively, the political crises that enveloped the political parties system strengthened military takeover in 1966.

Misunderstanding between the political leaders, tribal or ethnic interests, or nationalist impetus played a vital role in the January 15, 1966 military coup d'etat. The docile nature of the post-independence ruling elites also contributed to the first coup in Nigeria. The smoldering volcano of rampage, arson, pillage, and jungle justice, triggered off by the allegations that the Western region elections were rigged, provided a fertile ground for the military to seize power on January 15, 1966. Announcing the reasons for the coup, Major C.K. Nzeogwu, said:

In the name of the Supreme Council of the Revolution of the Nigerian Armed Forces, I declare martial law over the Northern provinces of Nigeria ... We seized power to stamp out tribalism, nepotism and regionalism ... The constitution is suspended and the regional government and elected assemblies are hereby dissolved. All political parties, cultural, tribal and trade union activities, together with all demonstrations and unauthorized gatherings, excluding religious worships, are banned until we established a strong, united and prosperous nation, free from corruption and internal strife ... All treaty obligations previously entered into with any foreign nation will be respected, and we hope that such nations will respect our country's territorial integrity and will avoid taking sides with enemies of the revolution and enemies of the people 32 I have to-night been advised by the Council of Ministers that they had come to the unanimous decision voluntarily to hand over administration of the country to the armed forces of the Republic with immediate effect . . . I will now call upon the General Officer Commanding Nigerian Army, Major General Aguiyi-Ironsi, to make a statement to the nation on the policy of the administration .... At the same time, in exercise of his constitutional prerogatives as the Senate president, Dr. Nwafor Orizu, who by virtue of his office was then the Acting President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, made the following broadcast to the nation: 33 32 Ibid 16 33 Ibid 16

Citing a laundry list of complaints against the political class, there was a military rebellion in Nigeria against the first republic. Led by a group of Majors who were predominantly of eastern origin, the Prime Minister, a federal minister, two regional premiers, along with top Army officers were brutally assassinated. A number of civilians were also killed. The coup succeeded in Kaduna the northern region capital, failed in Lagos the federal capital and Ibadan the western regional capital, but barely took place in Benin the Midwestern capital, and Enugu the eastern capital. The majority of those murdered were northerners, accompanied by some westerners and two Midwesterners. No easterner lost his young army officers to overthrow the civilian government of Alhaji Tafawa Balewa at the dawn of 15th January 1966 the five military officers who initially planned and executed the coup were Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu (Chief Instructor, Nigerian Military Training College, Kaduna), Major Wole Ademoyega, Major Christian Anuforo, Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna and Major Donatus Okafor 35 A mistake in the execution of the 1966 coup was viewed with a mind full of vengeance, and desire to take over the ruler ship and dominium of Nigeria by some military officers from the Northern zone, such that they launched a counter-coup, followed by genocide against the Igbos in the North, leading the country to a 30-month civil war. But these officers kept blaming ethnicity as their reason . Aptly, the above mentioned names mirrored ethnic agendum of some Igbo military officers to takeover the government forcefully from Tafawa Balewa who is a Northerner.

Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi was killed a few months later, and was followed by Lt-Col Yakubu Gowon from the Christian North. Relations became extremely poor between the federal government and the Ibos of the Eastern Region. In 1967, the Eastern Region proclaimed its independence as the Republic of Biafra (BBC News, Monday, February 15, 1999) . Therefore, these two political epochs signifies the beginning of ethnic distrust in Nigerian politics which later transformed into civil war in 1967, the allusions that the Igbos were been sentimental in plotting 1966 military coup resulted in the death of Tafawa Balewa and other Nigerian politician, therefore, class and the military institution itself, encouraged a few or her life. (Omoigui 34 . The deep division in the political dictated the emergence of General Aquiyi-Ironsi (an Igbo man) as first military Head of State which prompted Northern military officers in the Nigerian Army to safeguard their tribe from ethnic subjugation of Ironsi, unequivocally led to the origin of ethnic suspicious after independent. ? People in the North were generally dissatisfied with Ironsi's handling of the officers who carried out the January 1966 coup. The coupists were not officially tried and sanctioned in accordance with military regulations.

? The January 1966 coup was perceived in the North as an attempt by Southerners, especially the Igbo to regain power from the North. The urge for revenge and the need to retake power was always there.

? The decision by Ironsi government to turn Nigeria into a unitary state was unpopular in several parts of the country ? The government of General Ironsi was weak and, was unable to act on several reports of attempts to overthrow it 37 37 Ibid 34 . The assassination of many Igbo military officers prolonged the ethnic problem facing Nigeria. Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu refused to cooperate with the new regime of Yakubu Gowon due to killings of some highranking military officers originated from Igbo dynasty. Concomitantly, the Republic of Biafra was declared by Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu, this led to three years civil war in Nigeria. In May 27 th , 1967, 12 states were created in order to weaken the regional government and also to arrogate power to the central government along federal structure. The civil war ended on 15 th January, 1970 in which General Yakubu Gowon proclaimed three political agenda including reconciliation, reconstruction and rehabilitation in order to bring Igbo back into Nigerian political system. In July 29 th , 1975, General Yakubu Gowon was overthrown in a bloodless coup; therefore, marked the end of his military administration.

Volume XIV Issue IV Version I 25 ( F ) 38 . President Babangida pledged to transfer power to a civilian administration in 1990 though in 1987, this transitional period was extended until 1992. A comprehensive timetable to democracy was published, local government elections were held, and a draft constitution was drawn up. Political parties were legalized in 1989. A military coup was attempted in 1990, but was suppressed on the same day. Elections to the bicameral National Assembly were held in 1992. Presidential elections were due to be held later in the year, but electoral irregularities led to their postponement. When the presidential elections were finally held in June 1993, confusion over the election meant that only around 30% of the registered electorate actually voted. The initial results from the elections indicted that Chief Moshood Abiola had won the majority of votes in 19 states and he declared himself president. A couple of days later, however, the results were annulled by the ruling National Defence and Security Council, and Mr Babangida said that the polls had been marred by widespread irregularities. The annulment of the election was condemned internationally 39 ? General Sani Abacha 1993-1998 . Therefore, this led to major protest by the Yorubas in South-Western Nigeria unequivocally lengthen ethnic suspicious between Yoruba and Hausa tribes. To appease Yorubas tribe, General Babangida handed over power to Interim National Government (ING) headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan who happened to be a Yoruba by origin. The regime of Chief Ernest Shonekan was trampled upon by a military coup synchronized by General Sani Abacha.

Following the military coup which overthrown Chief Ernest Shonekan interim national government in October 17 th 1993, General Sani Abacha emerged as a new military Head of State. Abacha's regime showcased the true nature of authoritarian tradition of military administration; this is evident in the killings of Ogoni environmental activists, namely; Ken Saro-Wiwa, Saturday Dobee, Nordu Eawo, Daniel Gbooko, Paul Levera, Felix Nuate, Baribor Bera, Barinem Kiobel, John Kpuine. The Sani Abacha regime witnessed another attempted coup d'état which was foiled by the military in Nigeria. The principal stakeholders in the coup were Lieutenant General Oladipo Diya, Major General Tajudeen Olanrewaju, and Major General Abdulkarim Adisa circumcised with Yoruba ethnic background.

General Sani Abacha's regime could be credited with the following: ? Prominent members of the opposition such as Ebenezer Babatope , Olu Onagoruwa, Lateef Jakande, and Alex Ibru were appointed as ministers by the Abacha government in 1993 but they were all dropped in the first cabinet reshuffled about one year later. Soon after, Alex Ibru was shot by people suspected to be agents of the government. The first son of Onagoruwa was also killed in mysterious circumstances, ? The government organized the 1995 Constitutional Conference. Although widely boycotted in Western Nigeria, the conference achieved some modest success. The report of the conference was submitted to the government in 1996. Some of the recommendations such as division of Nigeria into six geo-political zones have proved to be of great political significance long after the collapse of that government.

? Five political parties were registered by the government in readiness for election scheduled for the end of 1998, although the five political parties later adopted Abacha as their joint presidential candidate, a development which appeared abnormal in a competitive party system.

? The government creates six additional states on 1 st October, 1996 bringing the number of states in Nigeria to 36 ? The Abacha government was able to put in place the vision 2010 programme, which was acknowledged as far sighted. The Obasanjo government did not however find it useful. the infamous military incursion into governance in Nigeria in 1966, life was good and expectation for a better and greater nation was high. The regional leaders between 1960 and 1966 were competing to out-do one another in their respective regions. It was indeed a people-focused government providing free education to all school age children, irrespective of which part of the country they come from, also as part of its cardinal programme, free medical services, clean pipe-borne water supply, integrated agricultural programme, among others, were undertaken. The schools were well laid and equipped with both educational and sporting facilities and a maximum of 30 pupils to a teacher was the standard. Unfortunately, it is not only the old Western region's socio-political and economic life that has become estranged from our realities. The whole of Nigeria has become alienated from the modern and democratic world. Nigeria and Nigerians have also become victims of socio-economic stagnation, imposed fear, insecurity, unprecedented psycho-cultural damage and trauma. Between 1966 and 1999, except for the interlude of four years of civilian regime of Alhaji Shehu Shagari (1979-1983), the military through many coups and countercoups ruled Nigeria without the consent of Nigerians 41 . 41 Vanguard Newspaper, June 28, 2011 Nigeria's First Republic dated October 01, 1963 -January 15, 1966 was terminated on January 15, 1966. In an attempt to overthrow the federal government, a group of young army officers led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu assassinated the Prime Minister, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, the Premier of the North, Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Premier of the West, Chief Samuel Akintola, and the Federal Minister of Finance, Chef Festus Okotie-Eboh. It was an abortive coup that led to Nigeria's first military regime headed by General J. T. U. Aguiyi Ironsi, the GOC of the Nigerian Army. General Ironsi, an ethnic Igbo, caused the arrest of the coup plotters. Since the coup was aborted and the plotters arrested, the federal government was secured. However, as there were no civilian successors from the federal cabinet willing to take over power, General Ironsi was therefore compelled to fill the void as head of Nigeria's first military government. That the coup plotters were ethnic Igbo, and there were no Igbo politicians among those assassinated, the coup attempt was perceived as an Igbo-inspired plot. In a series of coups and counter coups, the military subsequently ruled Nigeria from 1966 to 1979, and from 1983 -1999, for a total of 29 years since independence on October 01, 1960 (Natufe, 2006) 42 . David Muffett, a British colonial officer outlines the Igbo elite's detailed plan to take control of not only the political structures but even the social structures of the North by killing all the then northern emirs in the final 43 .

Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, Prime Minister of Nigeria, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello, Premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ladoke Akintola, Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh, Minister for Finance etc. The coup caused indignation in Northern and Western Nigeria as the people of these two regions saw the coup as one targeted against their people. Thus, there was a countered coup on July 29, 1966 that was executed by army officers of Northern extraction. The Head of State, Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi was killed along with his host and Governor of Western Nigeria, Lt. Col. Francis Adekunle Fajuyi. After the countered coup, Lt. Col. Yakubu Gowon was appointed Head of State 44 . The Igbos had made the secessionist move with the promise from Chief Obafemi Awolowo in the Southwest that the Yoruba would follow suit. The plan was if the southeast and southwest broke away from the Nigerian federal union, the federal government would not be able to fight a war on two fronts. Awolowo, however, failed to honour his pledge, and the secession proved a nightmare for the Igbos. Awolowo in fact became the Minister of finance of the federal government during the civil war 45 . In similar vein, The Origins of the civil war could be located in a complexity of factors ranging from the remote which includes the military coups d'état of January 15, and July 29, 1966. Other remote factors are the regional election crisis in Western Nigeria in 1965; the Tiv riots of 1964; the Federal Elections of 1964; the killing of the Igbos living in Northern Nigeria from May to September 1966 46 ; the structural imbalance of the Nigerian federation; and, most importantly, the asymmetrical distribution of power among the various ethnic and geopolitical groups 47 The January coup led by Major Kaduna Nzeogwu, an Igbo, saw the demise of two senior Northern political leaders and four senior Northern soldiers. Given the ethnic distribution of the casualties of the January coup and the fact that the leader of the coup and Ironsi were both Igbo, allegations were levied against the new regime as being an attempt at domination of the country by the Igbos .

8. 48

. The January 1966 coup brought to the fore the ethnic factor in the makeup of Nigeria in that most of the leaders of the coup were of Igbo ethnic nationality but the victims were largely from some other ethnic nationalities of the then Northern and Western Regions. In May 1966, a wave of ethnic hatred and cleansing erupted in the North which was targeted at the Igbo and resulted in the violent and 44 Daily Independent, Saturday, June 14, 2014 45 Sahara Reporter, October, 21 2012 46 premeditated death of hundreds of thousands of the people. This was quickly followed by the July 1966 counter coup, the end result of which was the three year Nigerian-Biafran war of 1967 to 1970 (The Nigeria Ethnic Nationalities Movement) 49 . A mistake in the execution of the 1966 coup was viewed with a mind full of vengeance, and desire to take over the ruler ship and dominium of Nigeria by some military officers from the Northern zone, such that they launched a counter-coup, followed by genocide against the Igbos in the North, leading the country to a 30-month civil war. But these officers kept blaming ethnicity as their reason. Ever since the 'Araba' of 1966 in the North of Nigeria, the life of an Igbo man means very little to an average Northerner till date. That is why the Igbos could be killed in the North and nothing is done; foreigners would be killed there and nothing is done 50 , up to 30,000 Ibos were killed in fighting with Hausas, and around 1million refugees fled to their Ibo homeland in the east. On 30 May, 1967, the head of the Eastern Region, Colonel Emeka Ojukwu, unilaterally declared the independent Republic of Biafra 51

For 10 months we have accepted the federal government's legal right to our support in a 'police action to defend the integrity of the state'. On that basis we have watched a civil war result in the death of about 100,000 people, and the employment of mercinaries by both sides. We watched the federal government reject the advice of Africa to talk instead of demanding surrender before talks could begin. Everything combined gradually to force us to the conclusion that Nigerian unity did not exist . Supportively, many African nations recognized the existence of Republic of Biafra, among them are Tanzania, Zambia, Ivory Coast. Tanzania was the first country to recognize Biafra nation on 13 The Igbos who ran for their lives during the pogroms and war returned to find their positions had been taken over; and when the war was over the government did not feel any need to re-instate them, preferring to regard them as having resigned. This reasoning was also extended to Igbo owned properties and houses. People from other regions were quick to take over any house owned by an Igbo, especially in the Port Harcourt area. The Nigerian Government justified this by terming such properties "abandoned". This, however, has led to a feeling of injustice as the Nigerian government policies were seen as further economically disabling the Igbos even long after the war 53 .

The crises and killings that led to the civil war were fallout of the bitter 'politicization of ethnicity, feigned by the corrupt elite', who encourage the gullible members of their ethnic group to cast aspersion on other ethnic nationals. Therefore, one would better conclude that the civil war started as a result of the coup and counter-coup led by dissident military officers against corrupt politicians and military leaders. The unfortunate incident was hijacked by berserk civilians, with support from undisciplined army officers, who engage in callous killings everywhere, due to the failure of the coup 54 . Ethnicity therefore has become a strong factor in the political life of Nigeria. Most often ethnic sentiments are used to replace merit and skills, such that round pegs are no longer found in round holes. This chauvinistic behavior affects the efficiency and productivity of Nigeria 55 . Therefore, the old ethnic and religious tensions remained a constant feature of Nigerian politics 56 Since Nigeria achieved political independence in 1960, there has been struggle among the various ethnic nationalities in the country over control of political power and natural resources which led to the civil war from 1967 -1970 .

9. 57

. Lieutenant Colonel Odumegwu Ojukwu's declaration of the state of Biafra on May 30, 1967, was the immediate factor responsible for the civil war. Before this declaration, the Nigerian polity was geographically divided into 3 regions. These are the Northern, Western and Eastern regions. The Igbos are of Eastern extraction. Ojukwu's declaration will effectively excise the eastern part of Nigeria out of the federation. Thus, it was the effort of the federal government of Nigeria to truncate the east's secession from the federation and Ojukwu's desire to ensure the survival of Biafra that started the civil war in 1967. Like all civil wars, the Nigerian civil war was unique in the context of the nation's history. This is because it was the most vivid expression of a country turned against itself 58 ? The counter coup of July 29, 1966 which led to the killing of Head of State, General Aguiyi Ironsi and unguarded statement of the new head of state, Colonel Yakubu Gowon (as he then was) that the North should take consolation from the fact that . In foregoing, the following are the remote causes of the Nigerian civil war: .

10. ?

The struggle for resources control

11. ?

The fear of ethnic marginalization in the political affairs of the country

12. ?

The concentration of power at the centre which makes Nigeria to have unitary outlook, therefore, parroting suspicious of Hausa/Fulani domination of the central government.

The following analysis explicates how Eastern Nigeria was captured by Nigerian Army during the civil war:

"another Northerner has come to power" and there was no basis for Nigerian unity" 59 . "The greatest single massacre occurred in the Igbo town of Asaba where 700 Igbo male were lined up and shot as terrified women/children were forced to watch" 63 "Federal troops, killed, or stood by while mobs killed, more than 5000 Ibos in Wari, Sapele, Agbor" 64 ? Backwardness in socio-economic development:

The war had adverse effect on socio-economic development; as many infrastructural facilities that have been put in place were destroyed during the war.

? The war cost Nigerian federal government huge amount of money, as Alade, cited in Akinbade buttresses this statement that the war cost federal military government about $158,000 a day 65 ? The reconciliation, reconstruction and rehabilitation projects embarked upon by the federal government . 60 impound a huge amount of money from the nation's financial purse ? The war cost the Igbos a great deal in terms of lives, money and infrastructure. It has been estimated that up to three million people may have died due to the conflict, most from hunger and disease 66 ? Many properties own by Igbos were confiscated and tagged as "abandoned properties" by the government especially in Port Harcourt, therefore, this led to persistence injustice in Nigerian political landscape.

13. X. Untapped Opportunity in Nigerian

Civil War

During the Nigerian Civil War, the Igbo scientists and engineers gave good account of themselves in terms of technological inventions. In the heat of the civil war, the leader of the young Biafra Republic, Lt. Col. Chukwuemeka Ojukwu called a meeting of engineers and scientists, and challenged them to produce a counter weapon to all that Britain and Russia were providing to the Nigerian Government. The Biafran inventors were led by Ugah Aguata, a science genius, Engineer Roy Umenyi, Ben Nwosu, Godian Ezekwe, Emma Osolu, Sam Orji, Njoku Obi etc manufactured unfathomable weapons not expected of young nation like Nigeria that got independence only six years back. Thus, the Igbo engineers first invented shore batteries with which they devastated marine craft. They also invented anti-aircraft weapons which they used to control the excesses of the federal fighting jets 67 . Biafran scientists from the research think tank RAP-the Biafran Research and Production Unit developed a great number of rockets, bombs, and telecommunications gadgets, and devised an ingenious indigenous strategy to refine petroleum 68 The Biafran Army made a bomb they called "Ojukwu Bucket" or "Ogbunigwe," which means the mass killer. Dr. Sam Orji, a world-renowned nuclear physicist and bomb expert and Dr. Felix Oragwu, also a nuclear physicist played a crucial role in sustaining the Biafran war effort by inventing bombs for the secessionist Briafra. Engineer William Achukwu, an Agricultural Engineer actually fabricated the metallic bucket that was used for making the Ogbunigwe bomb. The Biafran Armed Forces engineers also manufactured armoured cars which were very effective and comparable to those made by advanced nations. They invented ground to air missiles, assault rifles, gun boats for amphibious attacks, rocket launchers, rocket . 66 Ibid 52 67 Daily Independent, Saturday, June 14, 2014 68 Achebe .C. (2012) There Was a Country: A Personal History of Biafra; Published by Allen Lane an imprint of Penguin Books propelled grenades, etc. They built refineries with which they refined their crude oil; ambulances were manufactured; bunkers and other war armaments 69 69 Ibid 64 . After the civil war, these prominent engineers and nuclear scientists were not assembled by the Nigerian government to foster economic and technological development in Nigeria. This would have been a grand opportunity to manufacture locally made weapon for Nigerian military capacity.

Figure 1. 4 3
4Orji .E. (2001) Issues on Ethnicity and Governance in Nigeria: A Universal Human Rights Perspective; Fordham International Law Journal; Volume 25, Issue 2 4 Ojo .J. (2014) An X-ray of Inter-Governmental Relation Conflicts and Resource Control in the Fourth Republic in Nigeria; International Journal of Educational Administration and Policy Studies, Vol 6(3)
Figure 2.
9 U.S. Library of Congress Studies 10 Ako-Nai .R. (2008) The Politics of "Marginalization" in Nigeria: Challenges of the 4 th Republic "in" Nigeria and Globalization Discourses on Identity Politics and Social Conflict; published by Centre for Black and African Arts and Civilization (CBAAC). 11 Macionis .J.& .L. Gerber, (1995) Sociology; Fifth Canadian Edition; Pearson Education
Figure 3.
Figure 4. Table 1 :
1
Year 2014
21
Volume XIV Issue IV Version I
( F )
Global Journal of Human Social Science
Note: © 2014 Global Journals Inc. (US) -Council of States It consists Head of State as the Chairman, the Military Governors, some top Military officers and Chief of Staff Supreme Headquarters This organ serves as advisory in nature. It advises the government on any related matter affecting the country Source: By Author
Figure 5. Table 2 :
2
NAME POSITION BACKGROUND
Major-General Johnson Aguiyi-Ironsi GOC -Nigerian Army East: Igbo
Commodore Joseph Wey Commanding Officer -Nigerian Navy Mixed Yoruba/eastern minority
heritage
Brigadier Samuel Ademulegun CO -2 nd Brigade -Kaduna West: Yoruba
Brigadier Zakariya Maimalari CO -1 st Brigade -Lagos North: Kanuri
Brigadier Babafemi Ogundipe Nigerian military attaché in London West: Yoruba
Colonel Thimming CO -Nigerian Air Force German expatriate officer
Brigadier Varma CO -Nigerian Military Training Indian expatriate officer
College -Kaduna
Year 2014 Colonel Kur Mohammed (Acting) Chief of Staff at Army HQ -Lagos (in place of Colonel Robert Adebayo North: Kanuri
Colonel Ralph Shodeinde Deputy-Commander, Nigerian Military West: Yoruba
22 Training College: Kaduna
Colonel Robert Adeyinka Adebayo Attending a course in London West: Yoruba
Volume XIV Issue IV Version I Lt-Colonel Yakubu Gowon Lt-Colonel Francis Fajuyi (was on leave in his home town of Abeokuta during the coup) Lt-Colonel Hilary Njoku Lt-Colonel George Kurubo Lt-Colonel Abogo Largema Ojukwu Lt-Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Preparing to take over command of the 2 nd battalion from Hilary Njoku CO -1 st Battalion -Enugu CO -2 nd Battalion -Lagos CO -3 rd Battalion -Kaduna CO -4 th Battalion -Ibadan CO -5 th Battalion -Kano North: Angas West: Yoruba East: Igbo East: Rivers North: Kanuri East: Igbo
( F ) Lt-Colonel James Pam Adjutant-General of the Nigerian Army North: Birom (his father was the Chief of Jos and his brother was in the air
Global Journal of Human Social Science Lt-Colonel Arthur Unegbe Lt-Colonel Ime Imo Major Hassan Usman Katsina Major John Obienu Source: Siollun, (2005) Quartermaster-General of the Nigerian Army CO -Lagos Garrison CO -2 nd Reconnaissance squadron -Kaduna CO -1 st Reconnaissance squadron -Abeokuta force) Mid-West: Igbo East: Igbo North: Fulani East: Igbo
Note: © 2014 Global Journals Inc. (US) -Note: Those whose names are italicised in the above table were killed in the coup of January 1966. May their souls rest in peace.
Figure 6. Table 3 :
3
NAME ETHNICITY YEAR OF RULING
Aguiyi Ironsi Igbo 1966-1966
Yakubu Gowon Hausa 1966-1975
Murtala Muhammed Hausa 1975-1976
Olusegun Obasanjo Muhammadu Buhari Ibrahim Babangida Yoruba Hausa Hausa 1976-1979 1983-1985 1985-1993 Year 2014
Sani Abacha Hausa 1993-1998 23
Abdulsalam Abubakar Source: By Author Hausa 1998-1999 Volume XIV Issue IV Version I
( F )
Global Journal of Human Social Science
Note: © 2014 Global Journals Inc. (US) -Military Governance and Civil War: Ethnic Hegemony as a Constructive Factor in Nigeria V.
Figure 7.
36
34 Ibid 4
35 Madiebo, 1980 cit in Akinbade .J. (2008) Government Explained;
Macak Books Ventures, Lagos
Note: 36 Vanguard Newspaper,August 23, 2013
Figure 8. Table 4 :
4
Names Ethnicity
Major Chukwuma K. Nzeogwu Igbo
Major Emmanuel Ifeajuna Igbo
Major D. Okafor Igbo
Major C.I. Anuforo Igbo
Major I.H. Chukuka Igbo
Major T. Onwuatuegwu Igbo
Major Adegboyega Yoruba
Captain G.O. Oji Igbo
Captain Gbulie Igbo
Captain E.N. Nwobosi Igbo
Lt. B.O.O. Oyewole Igbo
2nd Lts. N.S. Wokocha Igbo
2nd Lts. Ojukwu Igbo
2nd Lts. Azubuogu Igbo
Victims
Brigadiers Sam A. Ademulegun Non-Igbo
Brigadier Z. Maimalari Non-Igbo
Colonel .K. Mohamed Non-Igbo
Colonel Ralf A. Sodeinde Yoruba
Lt. Colenel. Y. Paur Igbo
Lt. Colenel .A.C. Unegbu Igbo
Major Sam. Adegoke Non-Igbo
Source: Adapted from Orji, 2001
? General Yakubu Gowon 1966-1975 Aguiyi-Ironsi, Ironsi was assassinated during a state visit
Following the bloody coup d'état of 29th July, to the western region; Lt. Colonel Adekunle Fajuyi was
1966 which led to the killing of Major-General Johnson the military governor of western Nigeria in this political
epoch. In this coup, General Ironsi, Colonel Adekunle
Figure 9. Table 5 :
5
coup of July 29, 1966
Name Ethnicity
Victims
Lt. Colonel I.C. Okoro Igbo
Lt. Colonel G. Okonweze Igbo
Majors T.E. Nzeogwu Igbo
Majors B. Nnamani Igbo
Majors C.C. Emelifeonwu Igbo
Majors J.I. Obienu Igbo
Majors P.C. Obi Igbo
Majors Ibanga Ekanem Non Igbo
Majors O.U. Isong Non Igbo
Majors A. Drummond Non Igbo
Source: Adapted from Orji, 2001
Figure 10. Table 6 :
6
Date Combatant Advancements
1967
6 July Fighting breaks out between the federal and Biafran troops
10 July The First Division of the Nigerian Army under Colonel
Mohammed Shuwa captures Ogoja. Biafran aircraft bombs
Lagos
15 July Shuwa captures Nsukka
25 July Third Marine Commandos Division of the Nigerian Army under
Colonel Benjamen Adekunle captures Bonny
9 August The rebels invade Mid-West and capture Benin. Later, in a
hurried response, a Second Division of the Nigerian Army under
Colonel Murtala Mohammed is formed
10 August Gowon declares total war. Lagos bombed again
29 August Murtala recaptures Ore and thus halts Biafran threat to Ibadan
and Lagos
14 September Murtala recaptures Benin
4 October Shuwa captures Enugu
9 October Murtala captures Asaba. Subsequent attempts to cross the
Niger and capture Onitsha proved abortive
18 October Adekunle captures Calabar
1968
January After the abortive attempts to capture Onitsha from Asaba
Murtala moves up the Niger, crosses it at Idah and advances
down to Awka and Onitsha
21 March Murtala captures Onitsha
5 April Shuwa captures Abakaliki
21 April Shuwa captures Afikpo
Late April The entire South Eastern State liberated by Adekunle
6 May Adekunle captures Bonny Oil field in Rivers State
19 May Adekunle captures Port Hacourt and thus completes the sealing
off of Biafra from the sea
26 May Colonel I.B.M Haruna replaces Murtala as G.O.C. Second
Division
29 July Adekunle captures Ahoada, last major state in Rivers State
4 September Adekunle captures Aba
10-11 September Adekunle captures Oguta and advances on the Uli airstrip which
was Biafra's major link with the outside world
15 September Biafrans retake Oguta
16 September Adekunle captures Owerri
30 September Shuwa captures Okigwi
November/December Nigerian airforce begins air strikes on Biafran airstrips especially
Uli but with little effect
21-24 December Biafran offensive to recapture Owerri and Aba foiled
1969
22 April Biafra recaptures Owerri
12 May Major reshuffle of Nigerian's Army commanders. Obasanjo
takes over from Adekunle, Jalo from Haruna and Bisalla from
Shuwa
27 December Third Division links up with the first at Umuahia
1970
7 January Third Division recaptures Owerri
11 January Ojukwu flees Biafra for Ivory Coast
12 January Obasanjo captures Uli airstrip. Lieutenant-Colonel Philip Effiong
who took over from Ojukwu brocasts surrender over on Radio
Biafra
13 January Gowon accepts Biafra surrender
Source: Adapted from Muhammadu & Haruna (1979)
Figure 11.
Figure 12. Table 7 :
7
Name Year Location Affiliation Position Nature of Ethnic Killer
of Death killings Identity
1 Tafawa Balewa 1966 Lagos Northern Prime Gunshot Hausa Military
People's minister and
Congress Head of
(NPC) Government
2 Ahmadu Bello January Sokoto Northern Premier of Gunshot Hausa Military
15, 1966. People's Northern
Congress Nigeria
(NPC)
3 Aguiyi-Ironsi July 29, Lagos Nigeria Military Military Head Gunshot Igbo Military
1966 of State
4 Adekunle Fajuyi July 29 th Oyo Nigeria Military Military Gunshot Yoruba Military
1966 Governor of
western
Nigeria
5 Ladoke Akintola January Oyo Action Group Premier of Gunshot Yoruba Military
15 th 1966 western
region
6 Alfred Rewane October 6, Lagos National Business Gunshot Ijaw Military
1995 Democratic man, Elder
Coalition statesman
(NADECO) and
NADECO
financier
7 Shehu Musa December Abakaliki Military Military chief Poisoned Hausa Military
Yaradua 8 th 1997 prison of staff and
SDP
Presidential
candidate
8 Muritala Feb 13, Lagos Nigeria Military Head of Gunshot Hausa Military
Mohammed 1976 State
9 Tunde Idiagbon 1999 Ilorin, kwara Nigeria Military Military vice Poisoned Yoruba Yet to
state president be
identifie
d
10 Ken Saro-Wiwa November Gokana (MOSOP) Leader of Hanged Ogoni Military
and other 10 th 1995 Environmental (MOSOP) state
Ogoni activist Ogoni
compatriots Environment
al activist
11 Saturday November Gokana (MOSOP) Member of Hanged Ogoni Military
Dobee 10 th 1995 Environmental (MOSOP) state
activist Ogoni
Environment
al activist
12 Nordu Eawo November Gokana (MOSOP) Member of Hanged Ogoni Military
10 th 1995 Environmental (MOSOP) state
activist Ogoni
Environment
al activist
13 Daniel Gbooko November Gokana (MOSOP) Member of Hanged Ogoni Military
10 th 1995 Environmental (MOSOP) state
activist Ogoni
Environment
al activist
14 Paul Levera November Gokana (MOSOP) Member of Hanged Ogoni Military
10 th 1995 Environmental (MOSOP) state
16
19
42

Appendix A

Appendix A.1

Source: By Author XI.

Appendix A.2 Concluding Remarks

From 1966-1999, Nigeria has experienced eight military regimes, Hausa ruled for (6) six years, Igbo (1) year, Yoruba (1) one year which showcase ethnic hegemony of Hausa military officers; military have ruled without the consent of the citizens through many coups and counter coups branded with ethnic hegemonic doggedness. Ethnicity has been a fervent dominant component in the historical evolution of Nigeria; it plays a major role in the daily political and economic businesses in Nigeria. This study therefore has carefully explored how ethnicity influences military takeover and civil war in Nigeria. it is believed that ethnic suspicious claimed the blow-up of civil war and general social unrest from Nigeria independent; the fear of marginalization that has been maneuvering social conflict among different ethnic groups impair the temperament of Nigerian politics. Lack of mutual trust among the political elites in the military regime has prolonged tawdry politics of ethnicity which has transmuted into trans-generational political impasse in Nigeria. Part of the legacies of military governance and ethnic chauvinism in Nigeria has led to the selective killings and assassinations of prominent political leaders and innocent citizens in Nigeria. Hence, it is very germane to sketch out the reconstruction of the state christened "Nigeria" for the sustenance of Nigerian federal polity through justice, fairness, equity and sustainable development.

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Notes
16.
Brass .P. (1991) Ethnicity and Nationalism: Theory and Comparison; Sage Publications, UK. 17 Chandra .K. (2010) Constructivist Theories of Ethnic Politics; (Ed) Oxford University Press.
19.
Gans .H. (1979): Symbolic ethnicity: The future of ethnic groups and cultures in America, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2:1, 1-20
42.
Natufe .O. (2006) Governance And Politics In Nigeria; A Lecture Delivered On November 21, 2006 At The Staff And Graduate Seminar Department Of Political Science & Public Administration University Of Benin, Benin-City, Edo State, Nigeria.
Date: 2014-01-15