Jos, Nigeria -
Sectarian violence between Christians and Muslims has led to deaths and
destroyed property for more than a decade in this city, and people here
fear another outbreak ahead of Saturday's election.
In
a closely contested election, President Goodluck Jonathan, a Christian
from Nigeria's south, goes up against the main opposition candidate,
former general Muhammadu Buhari.
Jos
was among several cities in Nigeria that experienced religion-based
post-election violence in 2011, after Buhari was defeated by the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party's (PDP) Jonathan.
More than 800 people were killed and 65,000 displaced, according to Human Rights Watch. The United States Institute of Peace described the 2011 presidential election as the best run - but also the country's most violent.
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| Fears of election violence in Nigeria’s Jos |
"People
are looking for an opportunity to explode - all they need is a
trigger," says researcher Joseph Lengman from the Center of Peace
Studies at the University of Jos.
"March 28 could be that trigger if the elections are seen as fraudulent."
Nestled
in Nigeria's Middle Belt region on the central rocky highlands, Jos
represents the country's ethnic and religious diversity.
Christian
missionaries flocked here decades ago, preaching to the indigenous
ethnic groups, including the Berom and Ngass. Hausa-Fulani communities
settled here also, building mosques and Islamic schools in their
neighbourhoods.
Over
time, conflicts over resources and power, alongside partisan politics,
have produced a combustible situation. Nigerians go to the polls on
Saturday, and while residents in Jos are hoping for peace, many are
nervous the past can become the present.
Anger and arson
Jos
resident Abba Rabiu admits involvement in some of that violence. Rabiu
marched the streets in northern Jos, a predominantly Muslim area, with a
gang of friends, anger seething because of their belief the PDP stole
the vote.
The
mood was foul - a dangerous blend of frustration and betrayal. He and
his friends pooled their money and bought several cans full of
petrol. Rabiu says he ran towards a used car lot where old tyres were
stacked up, doused them, then took out a lighter.
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It's high time for young people to know that there is no politician worth dying for. |
The
black smoke from the fire he started billowed high into the sky. Rabiu
and his friends ran around town, lighting more blazes.
"We
were on the street shouting 'we want Buhari, we want Buhari'," Rabiu
told Al Jazeera, sitting in a chair in an administrative office at the
central mosque.
He
says he had voted - illegally since he was only 15 years old at the
time - for Buhari, a fellow Muslim whom he believes is the right person
to lead Nigeria.
"The
nature of violence in Jos has always been religious in nature," says
Ishaq Lawal, a lawyer and legal advisor to the state chapter of Jama'atu
Nasril Islam, the national umbrella group for Islamic organisations.
'Our Gaza'
Across
town on the south side, children kick around a football in the heat of
the afternoon. The ball rolls over piles of rubbish and boulders. They
laugh in glee, surrounded by dilapidated buildings set on fire during an
outbreak of sectarian violence in 2008 and 2010.
The place now has a new name. "This is our Gaza," says resident Kitgak Gowan.
He
says he cherishes the city as his home and laments the destruction that
has claimed so many lives. Gowan blames politicians for the violence
that has occurred here, saying many hire young males to commit crimes
and intimidate the public.
"Politicians
come around with selfish interest and use religious sentiments," Gowon
says, pointing to burned out and abandoned shops and homes. "They use
young people. It's high time for young people to know that there is no
politician worth dying for."
Gowon
hops over sewage in the road between the crevices of another boulder.
"Why should we be killing ourselves when our roads are like this?" he
asks.
Wounded by gunfire
The
recent college graduate remains a firm advocate for peace in a city
that has seen sectarian killings and destruction every year since 2001.
This year, even suicide bombings have occurred.
Scars
running down the right side of Gowon's neck remind him of the day he
nearly died. In January 2010, he says he felt something pierce his neck
and then blood came gushing out.
He
did not have time to tend to the wound because he was carrying the body
of a young man who had just been shot. He and a friend drove to the
Plateau State Hospital and found no one there, as all the health workers
were on strike. They drove 15 minutes to a private hospital, but the
wounded young man had died in the backseat.
Gowon says the people of Jos are tired of violence. He dismisses rumours circulating that young men are collecting weapons.
"No
this time the weapon is our permanent voters card," says Gowon. A
Christian, he says he is collaborating with Muslims in his neighborhood
to keep the peace on election day.
A
prominent lawyer in Jos, Muhammad Lawal Ishaq says he would not be
surprised if weapons were being stockpiled, adding communities have to
protect themselves because they cannot rely on police.
"The
problem of weapons in civilian hands is a problem that has bedeviled
this country for long. The issue of arms in the hands of private
citizens is an open secret in Jos," Ishaq says.
"Communities
are likely amassing arms because they don't know what will happen on
March 28 and the days after. You can't rely on security officials to
help."
Police presence?
State
police spokesman Emmanuel Abuh told Al Jazeera that security forces
have been recently trained on electoral law. He says a mobile police
squad, the counterterrorism unit, anti-bomb squad, and special
protection unit will be deployed in case of any violence.
But apprehension remains.
"There is a sort of graveyard peace right now," says Lengman from the University of Jos. "Those grievances have not gone away."
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| Nigeria's election explained |
Lengman
says many young men are angry at the ruling Peoples Democratic Party,
which has governed the country since 1999, ending decades of military
rule. President Jonathan's leadership is seen by many here as a
"colossal failure", he says.
Stanley
Kavwam, leader of the main opposition All Progressive Congress (APC)
party youth league, says the ruling party has institutionalised
corruption.
"Nigeria
is a failed state but it just has not collapsed yet," says Kavwam, 30, a
former member of the ruling party before switching sides.
"Polls
show that 80 percent of this state is APC. If this election shows
anything otherwise, there is the tendency that people may resort to
self-help."
Edmund
Zungdet, the ruling party's youth-wing leader, accuses the opposition
of using extreme language, adding he is confident the PDP will remain in
power.
Free and fair?
A
new voter-card reader system in place will hinder attempts to rig the
elections, but Nigeria is infamous for high levels of voter intimidation
at the polling stations.
Last week, Jama'atu Nasril Islam (JNI) held a town hall gathering to remind the community to uphold peace.
"Some
people at the meeting actually confessed that they were planning to
attack, if they felt rigging had taken place," says Umar Farouk Musa,
secretary of JNI's youth wing.
He says he encouraged them to remain peaceful and use legal routes to express grievances.
JNI
and the Christian Association of Nigeria have pushed for measures to
ensure a free-and-fair election, but both they say many members haven't
received voters' card.
Rabiu
says he and his friends have agreed not to perpetuate violence again.
Gowon, meanwhile, say he hopes the voting-card "weapon" will have the
final say.
Source: Al Jazeera