Skip to main content
Part of complete coverage on

Opinion: Nigerians still waiting for their 'African Spring'

By Omoyele Sowore, Special to CNN
January 14, 2013 -- Updated 1255 GMT (2055 HKT)
On January 3, 2012, union and civil rights activists marched in Lagos, Nigeria, to protest the removal of petrol subsidies by the government. On January 3, 2012, union and civil rights activists marched in Lagos, Nigeria, to protest the removal of petrol subsidies by the government.
HIDE CAPTION
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
Fuel-price protests in Nigeria: One year on
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • In January 2012, Nigerians protested the removal of fuel subsidies
  • Protests united Nigerians, often divided along ethnic and religious lines, says Omoyele Sowore
  • But "Occupy Nigeria" failed to become a genuine, sustained mass movement, he argues
  • Sowore says Nigerians still hanker for their "African Spring"

Editor's note: Nigerian Omoyele Sowore is the publisher of groundbreaking New York-based African news website SaharaReporters.com. Follow him at @YeleSowore and @SaharaReporters.

(CNN) -- Twelve months ago, Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan gave his people a bizarre New Year present: he announced the immediate removal of fuel subsidies. The controversial measure meant that, quite suddenly, citizens were to pay as much as three times the usual price for gasoline.

Nigerians were outraged. They filled the nation's streets in protest. The coalition was broad: young and old, female and male, poor and (some) rich. Their action, often spontaneous but orchestrated by labor leaders, amounted to a fierce rebuke to Jonathan's administration.

The government's unilateral decision was a recipe for new levels of extreme hardship for the poor, taxed already by low wages, ballooning unemployment, a high cost of living, shambling infrastructure -- and the Olympian greed of the elite class.

Omoyele Sowore
Omoyele Sowore

The protesters quickly adopted the banner of "Occupy Nigeria." They were animated by a global movement of activists standing up against what they saw as economic exploitation and corruption perpetrated by Western governments, often with the tacit encouragement of powerful corporations.

However, "Occupy Nigeria" was different from other "Occupy" movements. There was a good reason for this. Nigeria's activist voice had gone silent for too long. The country's streets had not felt the pounding of mass protests since the mid-90s, when a coalition of student activists, labor leaders, political activists, lawyers, doctors, academics, artisans and other civil society groups meshed into a powerful pro-democracy movement to drive the military from power.

In fact, last January's "Occupy Nigeria" protests were largely heralded and led by young people who were born in the early and mid-90s -- a generation that has come to view and use social media as its primary means of activism, social mores and political empowerment.

In January 2012, that mass movement put the bloated Nigerian government in the crosshairs. It's believed to be Nigeria's biggest ever national mass protest. Apart from its sheer size, the movement managed to endure for days and weeks. And, in some ways, it set some impressive, unthinkable marks.

For instance, some considered it unimaginable that Nigerians (often portrayed as too "happy," too timid and cowardly, too polarized along ethno-religious lines) would unite behind a common cause. Also, it was unthinkable that a mass uprising would start from the nation's capital of Abuja, considered a fortress of the ruling interests. Yet, an intrepid former legislator, Dino Melaye, sparked the protests with a petition drive that ignited a nationwide uprising.

See also: Why Nigerians are no longer content with 'suffering and smiling'

In a country factionalized along ethnic and religious lines, the movement defied all odds.
Omoyele Sowore

In a country factionalized along ethnic and religious lines, the movement defied all odds. In Lagos, for example, a radical fiery Christian preacher, Tunde Bakare of the Save Nigeria Group, anchored the protests. In Kaduna, the protests were led by Shehu Sani, a veteran activist and Muslim of the Civil Rights Congress. His religious faith didn't faze young Christian protesters determined to fight for their rights.

In some parts of the country, the protests seemed far less organized. It was difficult to determine who was in charge in of them.

There was also another novel aspect of the movement. Nigerians across the world also joined the protests to a degree never-before seen. In rally after rally, in the United States, the United Kingdom, Europe and Asia, they made their voices heard.

In New York City, Nigerians staged four different actions. The most dramatic was a showdown with a Nigerian minister sent by the Jonathan administration to calm the tempers of Nigerians who felt justifiably insulted by the ill-advised removal of oil subsidies. Her so-called "Town Hall" meeting at a five-star hotel in Manhattan was effectively shut down, and the minister disgraced.

Understanding Nigeria's fuel protest
Nigerian protestor: 'I'm ready to die'
Nigeria unions urge strike over fuel

Nigerians in Australia, Toronto, South Africa, London, Sweden and Accra, Ghana, were soon protesting at the country's embassies demanding change.

But the biggest surprise was the protest movement's peaceful nature, especially at a time when the nation was gripped by violent militant groups and armed criminal gangs.

Despite provocation by the security agencies and police, the protests were mostly civil and peaceful. The only deaths and injuries recorded in Ilorin, Lagos, Kano, Abuja and Kaduna were reportedly inflicted by the police and soldiers unleashed on hapless citizens.

See also: Opinion: Nigeria is a sinking ship - don't desert it

But a year later, it's difficult to argue that the movement achieved its goal. For its size, its failure to compel any serious measures to curb the culture of impunity and corruption in Nigeria is significant.

So, what went wrong? Why did the movement crumble in its cradle?

These questions perplexed several traditional activist groups and NGOs who were busy attending meetings with the government to seek an amicable resolution to the crisis.

One major reason for the quick collapse was the movement's lack of a central command structure. To some extent, it was a leaderless, but not rudderless affair.

As the publisher of SaharaReporters, I witnessed the crystallization of a citizen journalist movement. Many citizens wrote and posted reports of the mass protests. They didn't wait around for their stories to be told in distorting sound bites by the foreign media or twisted by a mostly compromised local media. These citizen reporters sent photos, videos and texts. They tweeted, texted and analyzed every minute of the struggle from all over the country and the world, bringing the integrity of their witness to bear. SaharaReporters kept up its side of the bargain; we published the "field" reports in a timely manner.

See also: Open Story: Unrest in Nigeria

It is clear that "Occupy Nigeria" failed to metamorphose into a genuine, sustained mass movement.
Omoyele Sowore

For a moment, many Nigerians hoped that the "Occupy" movement would transition into the first sub-Saharan African Spring (or Harmattan).

A year later, the conclusion is sobering. It is clear that "Occupy Nigeria" failed to metamorphose into a genuine, sustained mass movement.

The central labor unions that were initially trusted to lead the movement capitulated quickly under the weight of accusations that they were conniving to overthrow the government. The Nigerian army, notorious for its legacy of intervening to protect the country's corrupt status quo, was deployed to quell the protests.

On the bright side, the Nigerian people, especially the younger generation, got a taste of people power. I have no doubt that they can -- and will -- exercise that power again.

Few as they were, some immediate gains testified to the power of the mass uprising. After two national addresses, a brow-beaten President Goodluck Jonathan rolled back fuel prices and reinstated some fuel subsidy. And he made a commitment -- far from realized -- to identify and punish profiteers from fuel subsidy scams.

For Nigerians, one lesson is that they possess a latent power capable of bringing change -- if only the people will it.

There are also important lessons about opportunists and saboteurs. It wasn't hard to see their trails during and after the mass protests. The protests had hardly died down when some of the labor leaders found their way into plush government committees. Others formed themselves into "stakeholders" and began earnestly to jostle for government patronage even as the issues that sparked the protests had not been addressed.

Even so, I believe the awareness created about the pervasive corruption in the oil sector made a difference. But it was not the issue. After all, Nigerians already knew government officials and their corporate accomplices were stealing. "Occupy Nigeria" simply washed the carcass of the whale of corruption ashore.

The eventual revelation by a parliamentary committee that a grand sum of $6.8 billion had been stolen through subsidy scams is a yet unresolved scandal. Nigerians suspect, with good reason, that their top government officials are in no hurry to unmask the gluttonous embezzlers of fuel subsidies. In fact, the impression is that the culprits, law enforcement officials, and the judges have all retired to their usual zone of criminal complicity and comfort. No one will be punished.

As the people of Nigeria still hanker for their African "Spring," the "Occupy" movement can re-emerge at any time to take Nigeria by storm.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Omoyele Sowore.

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
African Voices
April 24, 2013 -- Updated 1423 GMT (2223 HKT)
Ashish Thakkar is the founder of the Pan-African business conglomerate Mara Group.
Aged 31, with a vast business empire, Ugandan Ashish Thakkar is heading into space with Virgin Galactic program.
April 19, 2013 -- Updated 1626 GMT (0026 HKT)
Seeing people have their limbs cut off in Sierra Leone's civil war inspired David Sengeh to create incredible bionic limbs to help amputees the world over.
April 10, 2013 -- Updated 1400 GMT (2200 HKT)
Albie Sachs the ICC Appeals Commissioner announcing his decision during a press conference at the Holiday Inn prior to the 2003 Cricket World Cup, in Cape Town, South Africa on February 7, 2003.
Judge Albie Sachs was an once an anti-apartheid activist who lost an arm to a car bomb. He helped build the new South Africa.
March 29, 2013 -- Updated 1030 GMT (1830 HKT)
Mbong Amata and Jeta Amata attends the 'Black November' New York City Premiere at United Nations on September 26, 2012 in New York City.
Jeta Amata is one of Nollywood's most popular directors, hailing from a family of movie stars that have shaped Nigeria's film industry.
March 21, 2013 -- Updated 1047 GMT (1847 HKT)
Lawyer and human rights activist Seodi White has long been an outspoken campaigner for gender justice in Malawi.
March 13, 2013 -- Updated 1323 GMT (2123 HKT)
 Singer Akon performs on stage at the Acer Arena on October 27, 2009 in Sydney, Australia.
Akon is a Senegalese-American singer, well-known for his successful solo work and his impressive roster of collaborations.
March 15, 2013 -- Updated 1638 GMT (0038 HKT)
As chief executive of Keroche Breweries, Tabitha Karanja has paved the way for many other female entrepreneurs in Kenya.
February 27, 2013 -- Updated 1328 GMT (2128 HKT)
When it comes to long-distance running there's one tiny place that's setting the pace.
February 20, 2013 -- Updated 1442 GMT (2242 HKT)
Leader of a six-man team on expedition to Sahara Desert, 70-year-old Newton Jibunoh lies on hanger for relaxation fitted on car being used for the trip on February 11, 2008 in Lagos.
After witnessing famine on his expeditions across the Sahara, explorer Newton Jibunoh now works to curb poverty caused by desertification.
February 13, 2013 -- Updated 1130 GMT (1930 HKT)
Born in Soweto, a South African township, Trevor Noah recently became the first African to appear on U.S. talk show "The Tonight Show".
February 1, 2013 -- Updated 0959 GMT (1759 HKT)
A phone call in the middle of the night took Peggielene Bartels, an administrative assistant in the United States, back to her royalty roots.
January 23, 2013 -- Updated 1738 GMT (0138 HKT)
Benoit Assou-Ekotto of Spurs looks on during the Barclays Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Stoke City at White Hart Lane on March 21, 2012 in London, England.
Tottenham Hotspur left back Benoit Assou-Ekotto is far from your ordinary top-level footballer.
January 16, 2013 -- Updated 1212 GMT (2012 HKT)
Lebo M is a South African singer and composer best known for his work on movie and stage hit "The Lion King."
January 9, 2013 -- Updated 1126 GMT (1926 HKT)
Top selling African artist Oliver Mtukudzi & Black Spirits performs during the Music Midtown 2002 in Atlanta, Georgia. 5/5/02
He might have 60 albums and numerous awards to his name but iconic Zimbabwean musician Oliver Mtukudzi has no plans to slow down.
Each week African Voices brings you inspiring and compelling profiles of Africans across the continent and around the world.
ADVERTISEMENT