A/HRC/28/64/Add.2
9.
Modern Nigeria has been greatly influenced by its colonial history under the British
in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. During the nineteenth century, the British gained
influence over a vast territory in West Africa that included several kingdoms and domains.
At the end of that century, the British Empire established in the Delta region the Niger
Coast Protectorate while it expanded its influence over the region. In 1903, the Protectorate
of Northern Nigeria was established and the colonial rule over the territory known as
Nigeria began.
10.
During the British colonial period (1900-1960), the territory was subjected to
frequent regional reorganizations for administrative purposes. The Niger Coast Protectorate
became Southern Nigeria, while in the northern part strategic alliances were made with
local leaders to control the different territories; local governments were left in the hands of
the traditional rulers, but were ultimately supervised and controlled by British officers, a
policy known as “indirect ruling”. In 1914, the South and North regions were merged into
the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria. In 1954, a federal constitution further divided the
territory into three regions (North, East and West), where the major ethnic groups (HausaFulani, Igbo and Yoruba) held dominant positions over the others. As the London
conferences in 1957 and 1958 for the independence of Nigeria were ongoing, minority
groups, fearing a future domination by the three major groups after independence, started to
advocate for the creation of separate states.
11.
In 1957, the British Government appointed the Commission on Minority Groups in
Nigeria (known after its Chairman as the “Willink Commission”) with the mandate “(1) To
ascertain the facts about the fears of minorities in any part of Nigeria and to propose means
of allaying those fears, whether well- or ill-founded; (2) To advise what safeguards should
be included for this purpose in the Constitution of Nigeria; and (3) If, but only if, no other
solution seems to the Commission to meet the case, then, as a last resort to make detailed
recommendations for the creation of one or more new States”. The 1958 report of the
Commission did not recommend the creation of new States, on the grounds that they would
soon lead to new minority groups with similar claims, and instead encouraged a balance of
power between the different groups under a united Nigerian State. The Commission
suggested broad measures, including the establishment of councils in each “minority area”
that would “foster the well-being, cultural advancement and economic and social
development of the minority area and to bring to the notice of the regional government any
discrimination against the area”.
12.
In 1960, Nigeria attained independence and, in the following years, significant
territorial changes took place aimed at providing ethnic minority groups with more
autonomy. In 1963, a fourth region (Mid-Western region) was created; in 1967, the four
regions were broken up into 12 states and, by 1976, the number of states within the
Federation had reached nineteen. At present, , the country comprises 36 states, in addition
to the Federal Capital Territory, where the capital city Abuja is located, and six geopolitical
zones.8 Several civil society organizations highlighted that, despite the number of territorial
reorganizations, the issue of minority groups has not been solved and, in many States,
tension between dominant and non-dominant groups persist.
8
6
The National Conference that took place in 2014 recommended the creation of 18 additional states;
see Final Draft of Conference Report, p. 280, available from
https://media.premiumtimesng.com/national-conference/wp-content/uploads/National-Conference2014-Report-August-2014-Table-of-Contents-Chapters-1-7.pdf.