Name: Search
for Common Ground, Nigeria
Created On: 13/10/2015 15:47:21
Created By: Y
Modified On: 11/02/2017 15:38:17
Modified By: LA
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Intervention presented at the 5th UN Forum on Minority Issues, Geneva, and 27-28th Nov 2012
Agenda Item 5: Challenges and Problems encountered in practical implementation of the
declaration.
Thank you Madam Chair.
My name is Josephine Adaza Ako from Nigeria , working with Search for Common Grounds (SFCG), an
organization working with Religious minorities in northern Nigeria.
Madam Chair,
Plateau, Bauchi and Kaduna states are currently the main site of religious violence in northern Nigeria.
The violence has mainly been along religious lines, between Muslims and Christians. The past decade
has seen recurrent violent clashes across the states, in urban and rural areas, where thousands of lives
have been lost in these conflicts. There has also been
extensive damage to property, with the result that the developmental prospects of the states have been
set back.
Madam Chair,
This sectarian violence has allowed religious hostilities and social discrimination against religious
minorities to go unchecked. Over time, violence between the conflicting parties has intensified through
attacks on their sources of livelihood, as well as places of worship. This has led to the U.S.
Commission on International Religious Freedoms, declaring Nigeria as a "tragic" example of one of
the world's worst violators of religious freedoms, in its 2010 annual report.
Madam Chair,
The Nigeria government has done little in addressing the real issues which form the core of this
conflict. The government has not endeavoured to research the situation or consult the affected peoples
in looking for a suitable situation. Instead the government employs the use of the military to intervene
during the conflict and bring it to a halt. However, this only provides a temporary, short term solution,
not long lasting peace in the region; because once the military leaves the area, the conflict resumes.