The constitution and other laws and policies protect religious
freedom. The Federal Government did not
prevent detentions and
restrictions affecting religious groups reportedly carried out by some
state and local governments. The Federal Government was also ineffective
in preventing or quelling religious-based violence, only occasionally
investigated, prosecuted, or punished those responsible for abusing
religious freedom, and sometimes responded to violence with heavy-handed
tactics.
There were reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on
religious affiliation, belief, or practice. Some Muslim and Christian
religious leaders stated the terrorist organization known as Boko Haram
sought to incite hostilities between Muslims and Christians in the
northern and central states, where local laws, discriminatory employment
practices, and fierce competition for land exacerbated ethnic and
religious tensions. In areas where it was active, Boko Haram attempted
to force non-Muslims to convert and targeted Muslims who did not follow
its version of Islam or support its activities. Both Muslims and
Christians experienced societal pressure if they changed their religious
affiliation.
The U.S. embassy and consulate discussed and advocated for religious
freedom and tolerance with government, religious, civil society, and
traditional leaders. U.S. government officials discussed Boko Haram in
high-level bilateral meetings. Visiting U.S. delegations, including the
Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs and Assistant Secretary
of State for African Affairs, raised religious freedom with state and
federal government officials. The embassy met with persons displaced by
violence, and the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID) expanded a project aimed at promoting tolerance in six northern
states.
Religious demography
The U.S. government estimates the total population at 174.5 million
(July 2013 estimate). Most observers estimate 50 percent is Muslim, 40
percent is Christian, and 10 percent adheres to indigenous religious
beliefs. The predominant Islamic group is Sunni, divided between Sufi
groups including Tijaniyah and Qadiriyyah. Growing Shia and Izala
(Salafist) minorities exist. Christian groups include Roman Catholics,
Anglicans, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, evangelicals and
Pentecostals, and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
(Mormons). Groups that together comprise less than 5 percent of the
population include Jews, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Bahais, and individuals
who do not follow any religion.
The Hausa-Fulani and Kanuri ethnic groups dominate the predominantly
Muslim northern states. Significant numbers of Christians also reside in
the north, and Christians and Muslims reside in about equal numbers in
central Nigeria, the Federal Capital Territory, and the southwestern
states, where the Yoruba ethnic group predominates. While most Yorubas
are either Christian or Muslim, some adhere to traditional Yoruba
religious beliefs. In the southeastern states, where the Igbo ethnic
group is dominant, Catholics, Anglicans, and Methodists constitute the
majority, although many Igbos combine traditional practices with
Christianity. In the Niger Delta region, where the Ogoni and Ijaw ethnic
groups predominate, Christians form the majority, while an estimated 1
percent of the population is Muslim. Pentecostal groups are growing
rapidly in the central and southern regions. Ahmadi Muslims maintain a
small presence in the cities of Lagos and Abuja.
Government Inaction
The Federal Government did not act swiftly or effectively to prevent
or quell communal or religious-based violence and only occasionally
investigated and prosecuted perpetrators of that violence. The
government also failed to protect victims of violent attacks targeted
because of their religious beliefs or for other reasons. The government
did not adequately equip and train security forces to contain violent
extremist groups in the north who attacked religious freedom.
Legal proceedings against five police officers charged in 2011 with
the extrajudicial killing of Boko Haram leader Mohammed Yusuf did not
resume during the year. The court was not in session on continuation
dates set in February, March, May, and June after the presiding judge
transferred to a different jurisdiction in 2012. There were no
indictments or prosecutions following three fatal attacks on
high-profile Muslim leaders in late 2012.
Christian groups continued to assert local and state authorities did
not deliver adequate protection or post-attack relief to rural
communities in the northeast, where Boko Haram killed villagers and
burned churches throughout the year.
Some Christian groups reported discrimination and a systematic lack
of protection by state governments, especially in central Nigeria, where
communal violence rooted in decades-long competition for land pitted
majority-Christian farmers against majority-Muslim cattle herders.
Federal, state, and local authorities did not effectively address
underlying political, ethnic, and religious grievances leading to this
violence.
Recommendations from numerous government-sponsored panels for
resolving ongoing ethno-religious disputes in the Middle Belt included
establishing truth and reconciliation committees, redistricting cities,
engaging in community sensitization, and ending the dichotomy between
indigenes and settlers. Nationwide practice distinguished between
indigenes, whose ethnic group was native to a location, and settlers,
who had ethnic roots in another part of the country. Indigenes and
settlers often belonged to different religious groups. Local authorities
granted indigenes certain privileges, including preferential access to
political positions, government employment, and lower school fees, based
on a certificate attesting to indigene status. The federal government
did not implement any recommendations despite ongoing calls by political
and religious leaders to do so.
Abuses by terrorist organisations
The Jama’atu Ahlis Sunna Lidda’awati Wal-Jihad, or People Committed
to the Propagation of the Prophet’s Teachings and Jihad (commonly
referred to as Boko Haram, Hausa for “Western education is forbidden”),
continued to commit violent acts in its quest to overthrow the
government and impose its own religious and political beliefs throughout
the country, especially in the north. On November 13, the U.S.
government designated Boko Haram as a foreign terrorist organization.
Boko Haram killed more than 1,000 persons during the year. The group
targeted a wide array of civilians and sites, including Christian and
Muslim religious leaders, churches, and mosques, using assault rifles,
bombs, improvised explosive devices, suicide car bombs, and suicide
vests. An attack on the Emir of Kano in January was widely believed to
be an attempt by Boko Haram to silence the anti-extremist Muslim leader,
although the group did not officially claim responsibility. On
September 28, Boko Haram killed at least 50 mostly Muslim students at a
technical college in rural Yobe State. After this and other incidents,
security forces faced public criticism for arriving at the scene hours
after the assailants had fled.
Boko Haram claimed responsibility for many of the scores of fatal
attacks on churches and mosques, which often killed worshipers during
religious services or immediately afterward. There were reports Boko
Haram had burned down dozens of churches, often at night or during
clashes with security forces. Christian groups stated the media
underreported the razing of churches. Several Christian leaders reported
church attendance rates in the north remained low after decreasing by
30 to 70 percent during 2012, attributing the decline to fear of Boko
Haram.
There were multiple confirmed reports Boko Haram had targeted
individuals and communities because of their religious beliefs,
including Christians in remote areas of Borno and Yobe states. Survivors
and relatives of victims said armed men had attempted to force them to
renounce Christianity, killing those who did not convert on the spot.
One Christian group reported suspected Boko Haram fighters had attacked a
majority Christian town near Gwoza, Borno State on 11 separate
occasions, attempting to force residents to convert or flee. There were
also reports Boko Haram had targeted persons engaging in activities they
perceived as un-Islamic. On January 18, gunmen reportedly killed 18
hunters selling non-halal meat at a market in Damboa, near the Borno
State capital of Maiduguri. Also in January gunmen reportedly killed
five men gambling by the side of the road in Kano State.
Civil society groups, media outlets, and politicians stated Boko
Haram killed more Muslims than Christians because its primary bases of
operation were in the predominately Muslim north and it frequently
targeted schools, security forces, and government installations. In one
such August incident, Boko Haram killed more than 20 soldiers and
policemen in an attack on the Borno village of Mallam Fatori. Boko Haram
also targeted Muslim civilians who aided the security forces; this was
widely accepted as the motive of an attack on a mosque in Konduga, Borno
State, which killed 44 worshippers on August 11.
Government attempts to stop Boko Haram were largely ineffective.
Actions taken by security forces under the state of emergency, declared
in May in the three northeastern states of Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa,
often increased the death toll, as bystanders were caught in crossfire
during urban gunfights, security forces committed extrajudicial killings
of suspected terrorists, and detainees died in custody. Religious
leaders, civil society, and international human rights organizations
condemned the government’s heavy-handed military response. Some of the
more than 10,000 refugees who fled to neighboring countries reported
fear of both Boko Haram and the military had prevented their return.
Although most residents reported improved security for part of the year
in Maiduguri, where large clashes between Boko Haram and security
personnel had occurred frequently, Boko Haram continued to operate
freely in rural areas in the northeast and a large Boko Haram force
mounted an attack on Maiduguri in December.
Societal Respect for Religious Freedom
There were reports of societal abuses or discrimination based on
religious affiliation, belief, or practice. Because ethnicity, religion,
and socio-economic status were often inextricably linked, it was
difficult to categorise social abuses or discrimination cases as either
ethnic or religious intolerance.
Some Muslims or Christians who converted to another religion
reportedly faced threats and ostracism by adherents of their former
religion. In some northern states, those wishing to convert to Islam
were strongly encouraged to apply to the sharia council for a letter of
conversion to be sent to their families, which served to dissolve
marriages to Christians and to request Hisbah protection from reprisals
by relatives. Similar procedures did not exist for those converting to
Christianity. In July a woman living in northern Niger State who had
converted to Islam requested local authorities protect her from her
father, a Christian pastor who rejected her conversion and insisted she
had been coerced, despite her public statements otherwise.
There was no progress in the investigation of the murder by unknown
gunmen of family members of a woman who converted from Islam to
Christianity in 2012.
In April a Christian leader in a northern state temporarily left the
country after receiving threatening messages in response to his public
support of religious tolerance and interfaith efforts. He suspected
Christians in his area had made the threats and said other Christians
and Muslims dedicated to strengthening interfaith ties often received
hostile complaints from some members of their own religious communities.
Muslims and Christians continued to fear reprisal attacks based on
their religious affiliation. Shortly after a suspected Boko Haram
suicide bomber killed 22 people at a bus station in a Christian
community in Kano city on March 18, there were unconfirmed reports of
threats against the Hausa residents living in Abia State. Several
Christian religious leaders publically called for calm, and no known
violence occurred.
There were reports some Christians, along with many other residents,
moved away from the conflict-ridden northeastern states of Borno and
Yobe throughout the year. Several interviewees among approximately 100
internally displaced people who had moved to Jos in Plateau State said
they left their homes out of fear of Boko Haram and such incidents as
house-to-house killings, attacks on churches, and sustained violence
between extremists and government security forces.
While the law prohibits religious discrimination in employment and
other activities, religious groups continued to say some sectors
discriminated in the work place because of religion. Muslim women in the
south reportedly continued to face job discrimination in the private
sector, especially in customer service jobs. Advocacy by Muslim groups
resulted in three major banks in the south accepting the hijab (a veil
covering the hair) in their corporate dress code for the first time.
The Nigerian Inter-Religious Council (NIREC), an independent
organization comprised of 25 Christian and 25 Muslim leaders, advised
the government on ways to mitigate violence between religious
communities. The federal government publicly supported NIREC efforts,
but the council met only once during the year. Several Christian and
Muslim religious leaders expressed growing frustration with and distrust
of NIREC leadership. Although many religious leaders publicly supported
tolerance and interfaith methods of conflict resolution, some said
growing distrust between Christian and Muslim leaders (and discord among
denominations within the same faith tradition) threatened interfaith
efforts.
Communities sometimes stigmatized those who did not accept the
existence of God. For example, two Christians and one Muslim reported
privately they no longer believed in God but continued to attend
religious services out of fear their families would ostracize them and
they would face extra scrutiny from their neighbors.
U.S. Government Policy
U.S. embassy staff promoted religious freedom and tolerance in
discussions with government, religious, civil society, and traditional
leaders. The Ambassador arranged and attended meetings with government
officials for visiting delegations, including the State Department’s
Under Secretary for Political Affairs and Assistant Secretary for
African Affairs. These officials encouraged officials at agencies such
as the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Office of the National
Security Advisor to address sectarian violence and called for timely
legal action against perpetrators of violence. Over 10 other visiting
U.S. government officials met with civil society groups and religious
leaders, including the Christian Association of Nigeria and the National
Supreme Council for Islamic Affairs, to listen to and show public
support for their concerns. In a meeting with President Jonathan,
President Obama expressed U.S. support for Nigeria’s efforts to defeat
Boko Haram and emphasized the importance of a comprehensive approach
that respects human rights to the success of those efforts, as did
Secretary of State Kerry with Nigeria’s foreign minister. Government
officials responded with support for religious freedom and requests the
United States assist Nigeria in combating Boko Haram.
In August the U.S. Consulate General in Lagos hosted an interfaith
iftar to promote religious pluralism. Guest speakers focused on the
fundamentally tolerant and peaceful nature of Islam and denounced
religious violence. The principal officer at the U.S. Consulate General
in Lagos discussed religious tolerance and interfaith relationship
building on multiple occasions throughout the year with leaders of the
growing Pentecostal Christian movement, other Christian leaders, and
influential Muslim clerics. An embassy official noted a common
commitment to religious tolerance and strong bonds between Nigerians of
different faiths at an event in August, when 25 embassy volunteers
served meals to needy youth and Muslims at an iftar.
USAID continued working with the Interfaith Mediation Center in
Kaduna State on a program to help interfaith organizations deepen and
strengthen community engagement capacities and support interfaith
dialogue in six northern and central states.
U.S. embassy representatives supported interfaith dialogue by meeting
with persons displaced by Boko Haram violence, speaking at a conference
on communal violence hosted by the Plateau State government, and
discussing religious tension mitigation efforts with religious,
traditional, and academic leaders at several conferences and research
presentations in Abuja.
The embassy and consulate general regularly distributed information
on religious freedom to journalists, academics, entrepreneurs, civic
organizations, teachers, students, government officials, the armed
forces, clergy, and traditional rulers.
7/31/2014
united states.: Nigeria ineffective in quelling violence
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