The Major Causes Of The Biafran War In Nigeria

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Post-colonial politics in Nigeria are born out of civil strife, and military dictatorships. A major impetus for political schism in Nigeria was the Biafran war. Following a military coup led by an Igbo man named Chukwuma Nzeogwu in 1966, there was an anti-Igbo riot in which 30,000 Igbos were killed and up to a million Igbos fled as refugees. As a reaction to the prejudice and violence that the Hausas and the Yoruba inflicted upon the Igbos, the Igbos seceded under the leadership of General Ujokwu. They then formed a new country called Biafra in 1967. The Nigerian government immediately moved to quash the rebellion because the Biafra region was abundant in Nigeria’s most prized resource: oil.
As the war raged on, Nigeria resorted to brutal tactics to defeat Biafra. Once the president declared, “ Starvation is a legitimate weapon of war”, the government placed a blockade on Biafra. As a result, 1 million children perished of a malnutrition disease known as kwashiorkor. Eventually, Biafra surrendered and rejoined the federation. Even after the civil war, ethnic tensions persisted between the southern Christian tribes and the Northern Muslim tribes. Following …show more content…

Some major concerns regarding gender issues include: abuse, education, employment, and political representation. One of the most controversial issues regarding abuse in Nigeria is female genital mutilation. In Nigeria, up to 60% of women are subject to female genital mutilation. The Government disapproves of this practice politically but has not taken a legal stance against it. Alongside genital mutilation, general physical violence is an issue as well. One out of three women have encountered acts of violence. It has also been reported that acts of violence are more likely perpetrated against women who are unmarried. This speaks volumes of the abusive patriarchal nature of Nigerian

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