A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, February 27, 2015
BY SIOBHÁN O'GRADY-FEBRUARY 26, 2015
Calling himself “a converted democrat,” Muhammadu Buhari, a former
Nigerian dictator accused of instigating deadly post-election violence
in 2011, preached the importance of a free, fair, and safe Nigerian
election in a London speech Thursday.
Buhari, whose current campaign for the Nigerian presidency centers on
taking a harder line against government corruption and the Boko Haram
terror group, first came to power through a coup in 1983 and was deposed
by another in 1985. Nigeria transitioned to democratic rule in 1999,
and after Buhari’s third unsuccessful bid in 2011, more than 800 people
were killed and 65,000 displaced when Buhari’s supporters rioted in 12
northern states.
But on Thursday, he said a peaceful election in Nigeria would help other
African countries develop into Western-style democracies. “It is clear
that though many African countries now hold regular elections, very few
of them have consolidated the practice of democracy,” he said.
Buhari led Nigeria for 20 months in the 1980s that were marked by
widespread political arrests and strict economic policies, a period he
has in the past euphemistically described as a “war against
indiscipline.” His reputation as a hardened military ruler has
undermined his current campaign, which was extended by six weeks after
the elections, originally scheduled for Feb. 14, were postponed for
security reasons.
The elections are now slated for Mar. 28, when Buhari will face the same
candidate he lost to in 2011, incumbent Goodluck Jonathan. Although
some analysts think Jonathan has the upper hand, polls show the
candidates are essentially neck and neck.
As he carries out his fourth attempt to democratically gain power, the
events surrounding his third presidential campaign continue to haunt the
former military ruler. Earlier this month, Dutch lawyer Goran Sluiter
submitted a complaint on behalf of a coalition of seventeen Nigerian
NGOs and two individual clients that asked the prosecutor at the
International Criminal Court to probe Buhari’s role in sparking the
deadly violence after he lost the 2011 election. Evidence submitted with
the complaint includes a video of Buhari speaking in Hausa at a
campaign rally, Sluiter said.
According to Human Rights Watch,
pro-Buhari rioters carried out a campaign of arson, rape, and
widespread killings in the aftermath of that election, targeting ethnic
groups perceived to support the ruling party. Many of Buhari’s
supporters are Muslims, so some of the victims retaliated with
counterattacks on mosques. The situation quickly escalated, displacing
an estimated 65,000 people.
Sluiter told Foreign Policy that his clients believe Buhari encouraged
his supporters to riot if he lost. Probes at the ICC pertaining to
post-election violence, including ones from Kenya and Ivory Coast, offer
hope to his clients that Buhari’s case will be taken on by the court,
Sluiter said.
“If you look at those cases, it’s a copy — almost a replica — of what happened in Nigeria,” Sluiter told FP.
After the 2011 riots, Jonathan promised to launch a full-fledged
investigation. Officials initially arrested approximately 500 accused
perpetrators, but largely dropped the issue, especially after Boko Haram
launched a wave of attacks in large parts of northern Nigeria and
emerged as a major threat to the country’s overall security.
Boko Haram’s campaign of violence and territorial gains in the north
have now forced the postponement of the elections. Given Nigeria’s
history of election-related violence, there is concern that the
country’s army would be unable to carry out its campaign against the
militant group while also providing security on election day and in
subsequent weeks. (Sluiter said his clients filed the complaint prior to
the election in hopes that it would encourage safer conditions for
Nigerians on voting day.)
Buhari’s questionable past and Jonathan’s apparent inability to defeat
Boko Haram have caused a dilemma for Nigerian voters, many of whom feel
the choice is about identifying the lesser of two evils. Joe Siegle,
director of research at the Africa Center for Strategic Studies,
told FP that to vote for Buhari and trust he won’t revert to
militaristic tendencies would “be a leap of faith.”
“So many Nigerians are really struggling to support either candidate because each come with some serious flaws,” he said.
But Buhari, who addressed his tarnished past but did not comment on the
ICC complaint during his speech at Chatham House, said he has been
disappointed by media reports labeling him a “dictator.” “Let me say
without sounding defensive that dictatorship goes with military rule,
though some might be less dictatorial than others,” he said. “I take
responsibility for whatever happened under my watch.”
A campaign spokesman has denied that
Buhari had any involvement in the 2011 violence, saying only that
accusations are “all part of the campaign to stop Buhari at all cost.”
And in Buhari’s speech on Thursday, he even said that successful
democracies have convinced him “that change can be brought about without
firing a single shot.”
But according to Sluiter, even if the violence wasn’t carried out by
Buhari himself, the ICC has in similar cases been able to trace back the
instigation to political leaders. And if the case is taken by the ICC,
it is likely, Sluiter said, that argument will be used again.
“The most responsible are often those who in the position of power…who want to win the election at all costs,” he said.
PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images