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In Nigeria, anti-government protests unite a divided country

Since religious riots tore across the central Nigerian city of Jos two decades ago, its Muslim and Christian residents have largely stayed apart. But the cost-of-living crisis that has swept Nigeria over the past year has blurred those boundaries.

“If there is hunger in the land, the hunger that the Christian is feeling is not different from the hunger the Muslim is feeling,” observes Tony Young Godswill, a democracy activist.

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Recent anti-government protests united Nigerians across religious and ethnic lines. Now the challenge is how to maintain that solidarity.

So when nationwide anti-government protests began in early August, Jos residents from all backgrounds poured into the streets. 

“We are congregated here as Nigerians,” rather than as Christians or Muslims, explains Isa El-Buba, a popular pastor who led the protests. “That shows the spirit of a new Nigeria has come to be.” 

Although the protest movement fizzled after only a few days, observers say the solidarity it forged across religious, ethnic, and political fault lines in places like Jos has potential to outlive the demonstrations themselves. A shared distrust of the government – whether in Nigeria, Bangladesh, or Venezuela, where anti-government protests have also recently broken out among a wide range of citizens – is also a fragile form of unity.

Whether it translates into longer-lasting political and social solidarity remains to be seen.

Since religious riots tore across the central Nigerian city of Jos two decades ago, its Muslim and Christian residents have largely kept apart. They have their own neighborhoods. They vote for different political parties. 

But the cost-of-living crisis that has swept Nigeria over the past year has blurred some of those boundaries. “If there is hunger in the land, the hunger that the Christian is feeling is not different from the hunger the Muslim is feeling,” observes Tony Young Godswill, national secretary of the Initiative for a Better and Brighter Nigeria, a pro-democracy group. 

So when nationwide anti-government protests broke out in early August, hungry, angry Jos residents from all backgrounds poured into the streets. And the momentum of the demonstrations soon barreled across old fault lines. When Muslim demonstrators knelt to pray on a busy road one Friday afternoon, hundreds of Christian marchers spontaneously formed a tight, protective circle around them. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Recent anti-government protests united Nigerians across religious and ethnic lines. Now the challenge is how to maintain that solidarity.

“I saw what I never believed I could ever see in Jos,” says Isa El-Buba, a popular pastor who led the protests. “These young people spoke with one voice.” 

Although the protest movement fizzled after only a few days, observers say the solidarity it forged across religious, ethnic, and political fault lines in places like Jos has the potential to outlive the demonstrations themselves. A shared distrust of the government – whether in Nigeria, Bangladesh, or Venezuela, where anti-government protests have also recently broken out among a wide range of citizens – is also a fragile form of unity. 

The “widespread sense of injustice could be quite combustible,” says Chidi Anselm Odinkalu, a professor of practice in international human rights law at Tufts University and former chair of Nigeria’s National Human Rights Commission. 

Marvellous Durowaiye/Reuters

Yellow buses parked along the side of Idumota Market in Lagos, Nigeria, July 17, 2024.

Crisis, hashtag, protest

Nigeria’s protests began in response to the soaring costs of food and transport over the past year and a half, which have more than doubled in some cases. The situation has helped push more than 10 million additional Nigerians into poverty, according to the World Bank. Protesters blame the economic stabilization policies of President Bola Tinubu, which have included removing a heavy subsidy on petrol and devaluing the naira, Nigeria’s currency. 

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