Nigeria Law
Protests & Uprisings

Obasanjo II2002· 200+ deaths· Chapter IV · Record

Miss World riots

20–22 November 2002 (Kaduna). Over 200 deaths. Pageant moved to London.

Following a ThisDay newspaper article deemed offensive by Muslim clerics in Kaduna, three days of inter-communal rioting killed an estimated 215 people and displaced thousands. The Miss World pageant, scheduled for Abuja, was relocated to London.

Sources

  • · Kaduna State Judicial Commission of Inquiry (2003)
  • · Human Rights Watch (2003)

What it cost — political & economic reality

The political and economic reality

Nigeria in 2002: who was in charge, the cabinet of the day, the GDP, and the crises that defined the period.

President · Fourth Republic

Chief Olusegun Obasanjo

1999–2007· PDP

National reality

Return to civilian rule, 29 May 1999. Telecoms deregulation (2001) — GSM revolution. Paris Club exit, October 2005 ($30 bn debt relief, Okonjo-Iweala). Pension Reform 2004. EFCC established 2003.

Crises of the period

  • Third Term agenda defeated 2006
  • Niger Delta militancy intensifies
  • ASUU strikes; Sharia introduction in 12 northern states

GDP (World Bank)

$59 bn (1999) → $166 bn (2007)

Cabinet (selected portfolios)

  • Finance

    Adamu Ciroma (1999–2003); Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (2003–06)

  • Education

    Tunde Adeniran; Babalola Borishade; Fabian Osuji; Chinwe Obaji; Oby Ezekwesili

  • Health

    Prof. ABC Nwosu

Source: Federal Gazette 1999–2007; CBN; World Bank WDI

Methodology

Tier 1 · primary

Courts. Gazettes. National archives.

Tier 2 · corroborating

OCCRP. HRW. BudgIT. TheCable.

Redline

Wikipedia is never a source.