THE HISTORY OF NIGERIA
Nigeria is an amalgam of ancient Kingdoms, Caliphates, Empires and
City-states with a long history of organised societies. Its boundaries
were drawn as a result of trade (from slavery to pepper or ivory) and
overseas territorial ambitions of Western European powers in the 19 th
century. The name Nigeria was adopted in 1898 to designate the British
Protectorates on the River Niger. On May
29, 1999, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo was sworn in as President and
Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. This follows his
victory at the presidential polls conducted in 1999 and 2003. Elected
civilian Governors for all the 36 states also took oaths of office on
that day. Nigeria's Fourth Republic consists of the Executive,
Legislative and Judiciary branches of government.
On May 29,
2007, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar'Adua was sworn in as President and
Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. His coming into
office after the eight-year rule of Chief Obasanjo marked the first time
Nigeria would transit successfully from one civilian administration to
the other since the country's independence in 1960. On October 1, 1960,
Nigeria gained independence from Britain. An all-Nigerian Executive
Council was headed by a Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa
Balewa. On November 16, 1960, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, a pioneer of West
African nationalism, became the first Governor-General of a Federation
of three Regions of the North, East and West, with Lagos as the Federal
Capital. Each of the Regions was headed by a Premier with a Governor as
Ceremonial Head. On October 1, 1963, Nigeria became a Federal Republic
and severed whatever ties were left with Britain. She decided, however,
to remain in the British Commonwealth of Nations. The Governor-General's
position was, therefore, re-designated as President.
Eight
military regimes succeeded, beginning in 1966, interspersed between the
fourth and fifth military regime by a return to civilian rule with the
Second Republic between October 1979 and December, 1983. The final
military regime left power on May 29, 1999, when the current Fourth
Republic was installed and the president democratically elected
president.
It was under the Second Military Regime (July, 1966
To July, 1975) that some of Nigeria's major development programmes were
established, such as the extensive expansion and exploitation of
Nigeria's mineral resources culminating in the 'Oil Boom', which in no
small measure changed the economy, the taste and living standard of many
Nigerians. It was also, unfortunately, a time of war: on August 9,
1967, Nigeria declared full-scale war on "Biafra" after its forces had
invaded and captured the Mid-West State. With Biafra's collapse in 1970,
the region was reunited with the Federal Republic of Nigeria and a
period of reconciliation and reconstruction followed.
Other
highlights of this period included the introduction of various forms of
bursaries, scholarships and Students Loan Scheme in the 1970s; a
government review programme for the improvement in salaries and wages;
the Nigerianisation Decree compelling all foreign firms operating in
Nigeria to nationalise or leave; the changing of road traffic from left
to right-hand drive; the changing of the national currency to Naira and
Kobo and the establishment of organised federal councils for the arts,
sciences, sports and agriculture. Corruption was a major cause of strife
under the military regimes and it took years for Nigeria to get its
house in order.
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