Did Boko Haram win
Nigeria's election for Muhammadu Buhari?
New Nigerian President Muhammadu
Buhari in part owes his election victory to Boko Haram, a group that tried to
assassinate him, Channel 4 News analysis shows.
According to the
widely respected UK media house, Mr Buhari's success has largely been
down to major support in Nigeria's north eastern states - where Boko Haram has
been waging a campaign of terror including suicide bombings, kidnappings and
raiding villages, slaughtering civilians and burning homes.
President
Jonathan's national approval rating has fluctuated in line with Boko Haram
attacks:
In February 2014
around 400 people were killed in various Boko Haram attacks in the north east -
in March his approval rating in the north east fell by 11 percentage points.
The deadliest
month for Boko Haram attacks, May, in which more than 900 soldiers and
civilians died, was followed by an 18 point drop in the president's north-east
approval rating.
In November
gunman, suspected to be Boko Haram, attacked a prison in Kogi state freeing
around 144 prisoners. Two Boko Haram suicide bombers attacked the mosque of one
of Nigeria's most prominent Muslim leaders in Kano, killing around 200. The
following month Mr Jonathan's approval rating fell by 20 points in the
north-east, and by five points nationally.
Gen Buhari who
previously ruled Nigeria for 20 months after seizing power in a military coup
in 1983, has beaten presidential incumbent Goodluck Jonathan by 2.5m votes.
Mr Buhari polled
15.4m votes compared to Mr Jonathan's 12.9m. On Tuesday the incumbent president
called Mr Buhari to concede. It is the first time in Nigerian electoral history
that the incumbent president has been ousted in a democratic vote.
Security has been
the major issue of the election campaign. According to NOI Polls, security
topped the list of issues Nigerians wanted the president to address in 2015.
Below: the issues
Nigerians want the president to address in 2015, polled in January 2015.
"What are the
key areas you would like the President to focus his attention to?"
Buhari, the former
military ruler, has been seen as a strong leader who could tackle Boko Haram.
He has previously vowed to defeat Boko Haram and made security a key plank of
his election campaign.
Responding to a
question from Channel 4 News Foreign Correspondent Jonathan Miller last month
on Boko Haram, Buhari responded defiantly, saying: "What is Boko
Haram?"
By contrast
Goodluck Jonathan has been criticised for failing to deal with the Boko Haram
insurgency, which has killed around 8,000 people since the start of 2014 as
well as kidnapping hundreds.
Nigerians polled
on Mr Jonathan's approval rating were also regularly asked about how they rated
his performance in terms of a range of areas. Every month since February the
president has been rated "very poor". He also scored badly for
supplying power to Nigerian households, and on job creation.
Graph: Goodluck
Jonathan's monthly approval rating across 2014, compared with the number of
civilian and military deaths, and deaths of Boko haram insurgents.
It is the north
and north eastern states most hit by Boko Haram violence who have voted most
strongly for a change of president.
Borno is the state
where Boko Haram is most active and where the group's worst atrocities have
been carried out. The 276 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped last April by Boko
Haram were taken from a Borno village.
Up to 2,000 people
were slaughtered in the town of Baga in January - again this was in Borno.
In Borno, more
than 233,000 people voted for Buhari, compared to 14,000 voting for Jonathan.
Boko Haram has
also regularly attacked villages in the north-eastern state of Yobe, including
suicide attacks on schools and burning down villages. Almost half a million
Yobe civilians voted for Buhari compared with 25,000 for Jonathan.
And in Kano,
targeted in various suicide attacks including one at the Kano's Grand Mosque -
an attempt to assassinate Buhari that led to the deaths of 82, voters again
overwhelmingly voted for the new president - by 1.9m votes to 216,000 for Mr
Jonathan.
Nine out of
Nigeria's 37 states have suffered more than 100 deaths at the hands of Boko
Haram since the start of 2014.
Voters in these
nine states made up less than a quarter of all of Nigerians who went to the
polls, but they accounted for more than a third of Buhari's votes.
Boko Haram, which
has sworn allegiance to the Islamic State group, sought to disrupt Nigeria's
elections. In the first three months of the year the group has killed an
estimated 3,000 people in Nigeria compared to at least 4,700 across the whole
of 2014.
In response to the
escalation in violence, Nigeria's elections, originally scheduled for 14
February, were postponed until the end of March and the Nigerian military,
alongside soldiers from Chad, Cameroon and Niger, have seized dozens of towns
and villages back from the group.
Mr Buhari has said
greater cooperation between countries will be a part of his strategy to tackle
Boko Haram. However, Boko Haram has maintained its campaign of violence.
Between 14
February and 19 March the group killed a further 597 people.
Despite the
military crackdown, it has not been enough to save Goodluck Jonathan - and Boko
Haram are in part responsible for his departure. It remains to be seen if the
man who replaces him will be the one to finally defeat the jihadist movement.
BRING BACKS OUR
GIRLS MOVEMENT - BBOG
A The Cable
analysis support this conclusion: The kidnap of the Chibok girls and
Patience Jonathan’s drama led to the birth of a movement that gave Jonathan a
nightmare he would never forget: the Bring Back Our Girls (BBOG) group. The
movement parodied the name of Bring Back the Book, an initiative launched by
Jonathan to encourage a reading culture among school children.
BBOG made a global
impact, drawing international attention to the kidnap saga at a time the
government was accused of not doing anything to address the issue. The security
agencies and Jonathan’s supporters adopted a hostile attitude towards the
group. They were threatened and harassed.
However, the
campaign got more popular, and #BringBackOurGirls was trending on Twitter
across the world. International celebrities carried the placard, the most
famous being Michelle Obama, the American first lady. Jonathan got the most
negative global publicity from the activities of BBOG.
How Boko Haram Won Nigeria’s election for Muhammadu Buhari
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, April 01, 2015
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