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ID124490
Title ProperNo war, no peace
Other Title InformationThe example of peacebuilding in the post-amnesty Niger Delta region of Nigeria
LanguageENG
AuthorOsumah, Oarhe
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The armed conflict over crude petroleum oil in the Niger Delta has raged for several decades. A host of peace initiatives have been adopted by the Nigerian state to address it, but with minimal impact. The amnesty offer to repentant militias in 2009 by President Umaru Yar'Adua's administration is one of the most recent and broadest peace initiatives by the Nigerian government intended to end the general tendency to warfare and the absence of peace in the Niger Delta. This article, based on secondary sources of data, examines the components of the amnesty, its critical problems and their implications for peacebuilding in the Niger Delta. It finds that though the programme has engendered relative peace, the issues and grievances that occasioned the general tendency to warfare and absence of peace in the region - such as inequitable distribution of oil revenue, environmental degradation, and underdevelopment - are not properly articulated in the disarmament, demobilisation, and reintegration components of the programme. Thus, it holds that the prevailing situation in the region largely approximates a swinging pendulum of no war, no peace.
`In' analytical NoteAfrican Security Review Vol.22, No.4; Nov 2013: p.244-263
Journal SourceAfrican Security Review Vol.22, No.4; Nov 2013: p.244-263
Key WordsWar ;  Peace ;  Amnesty ;  Disarmament ;  Demobilisation ;  Reintegration ;  Nigeria ;  Niger Delta ;  Peacebuiding ;  Nigerian Government


 
 
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