Emirs still hold power in Nigeria Print E-mail
Written by AP   
Monday, 20 October 2008

Emirs still hold power in Nigeria

By EDWARD HARRIS – AP

KANO, Nigeria (AP) — The Emir of Kano strolls regally along the red carpet with a silver-tipped staff and a jeweled turban that looks like a disco ball, as commoners bow and scrape in his wake.

He mounts a white steed behind the scarlet palace walls. Then he leads thousands of Muslim warriors mounted on horses in a charge through this massive African city, waving lances and firing loaded muskets in what is now an annual ceremony.

The event, held in honor of the emir, attests to the power and image these Islamic rulers still enjoy in northern Nigeria. The heads of the dozen or so emirates in the area hold sway over more than 70 million subjects, and are sometimes criticized for acting like kings in what is now a democracy. Yet they also play an important role in warding off religious fundamentalism, and the strident, hard-line Islam common to other countries outside West Africa does not have a foothold here.

Across Africa, there are endless numbers of tribal chiefs, clan leaders and regional headmen who enjoy popular support but little real power. Some nations, like Swaziland, retain their monarchs. In others, kings are revered figureheads, like the leader of the Ashanti people of Ghana.

In northern Nigeria, the emirs have no control over mechanisms of the state such as the police, taxation or criminal justice. But they receive five percent of all funds given to local government.

The Emir of Kano boasts the most followers, about 14 million, and is considered to be extremely wealthy, although total annual government receipts aren't released. He has four wives and dozens of concubines.

The wealth can rankle. The governor recently gave local chieftains under the emir dozens of new Toyota Land Cruisers, prompting a group of youths to stone his motorcade to protest what they called misuse of funds.

The emirs are also sometimes considered as throwbacks in a nation where officials are supposed to be elected.

"The greatest challenge we face as a democratic nation is strengthening our government structures," says Attahiru Jega, the vice chancellor of Kano's Bayero University. "I recognize (traditional rulers) as great symbols, but ... they have been a hindrance in our country."

At the same time, the emirs wield considerable power as the top Islamic figures in their regions.

The annual durbar ceremony in Kano is a reenactment of an Islamic jihad that swept the region two centuries ago, and the emirs are considered descendants of the jihadi leaders. They choose the imams of the main mosques and so control what kinds of sermons followers hear. They have publicly denounced Osama Bin Laden.

The emirs also oversee the Shariah court system, which rules based on Islamic civil law. In northern Nigeria, governors have imposed the Shariah system in a bid to harness their political fortunes to religious sensibilities. When shariah was introduced in Kano about eight years ago, many Christians left the city and dozens of people were killed in riots soon after.

Emirs step in at moments of crisis to mediate inter-religious violence or land disputes before they spiral out of control. And politicians look to them for legitimacy, asking the traditional leaders to weigh in on policy decisions. For example, an emir can help push through a road construction project by convincing angry farmers who don't respect their government to give up land for the highway.

In Kano, a city of about 4 million people, the emir hears petitioners during public audiences. But he rarely speaks directly to them or to the media, and passes down rulings through court aides instead.

The old city walls are little more than rubble, and the open sewers fester with uncollected human waste. The emirs stopped providing services to the public when the country won independence 48 years ago, and the politicians who came after haven't provided any either. Kano's streets are strewn with trash, and schools and clinics are run down.

"There must be a change in the future. Military rule has failed. Civilian rule and democracy is failing," says Abba Bashir Yola, a 43-year old personal assistant to the Emir of Kano, Ado Bayero. "We should go back to the traditional chiefs, who have discipline, good sense."

Nigeria's emirates date back to the early 1800s, when a jihadi leader called Usman Dan Fodio grew disgusted with lax enforcement of Islamic principles across the north and set out with his followers from the city of Sokoto to establish a new order.

After conquering much of the region on horseback, Dan Fodio left behind the emirs. The emirs ruled and also acted as the supreme religious authorities in the regions — a comparatively rare relationship in Africa, where monotheistic religions were usually imposed from outside.

In the mid-1800s British colonialists conquered the southern, Christian areas, forever weakening tribal structures there. But in the north, where Islam reigned, the colonialists ruled by proxy through the emirs. British Queen Elizabeth II visited the Emir of Kano in 1956 to watch the traditional display known as a "durbar," where thousands of horsemen in spangled and colorful outfits ride through the streets of Kano.

Then came independence in 1960, and Nigeria became a secular nation of 250 ethnic groups divided between Christianity and Islam.

The emirs still represent for many people in northern Nigeria a link to a more-storied past, when they were part of a great Islamic kingdom rather than just the northern half of a failing modern state. Some wish the ceremonial horsemen would ride again, for real.

"The emir is honest and good. We like him better than these politicians," says Auwal Dankaka, a 30-year old street trader. "The governor may be stronger, but I would vote for the emir over him."

 


RobotRobot is offline 
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 # 1



The emirs still represent for many people in northern Nigeria a link to a more-storied past, when they were part of a great Islamic kingdom rather than just the northern half of a failing modern state. Some wish the ceremonial horsemen would ride again, for real.
...Read the full article.

Posted by Robot| 20.10.2008 04:42

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allaccessallaccess is offline 
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 # 2

Emirs are not elected officials but freeloading remnance of colonialism and exploitation; the sooner their roles are disbanded the better for everyone.

Posted by allaccess| 20.10.2008 07:17

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AristarchyAristarchy is offline 
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 # 3

You people just continue to wallow in unnecessary inferiority, unnecessay mediocrity, unnecessary praise singing. Since the eminent monarch came to the heavenly throne. Here are a few questions to ponder ?

Do you have a world class university i Kano ?
Do you have world class Universities in Kano ?
Do you have world class transportation in Kano ?
Do you have consistent unitterupted electricy in Kano ?
Is the education system in Kano competitive in the world ?
If you go to the average market place, would you encounter absolute order, cleaniness as opposed to chaos, stench, disorder and cholera ?
Do you have a world class airport ?
Are your posts delivered to each home promptly, as opposed to ???
Is Kano well industrialised and competitive as would be expected of a 1000 year old civilization such as yours ?

Black people stop being daft and stop wallowing in mediocrity

Charles Sogbesan

Posted by Aristarchy| 20.10.2008 07:25

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ttonjottonjo is offline 
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 # 4

"The emir is honest and good. We like him better than these politicians," says Auwal Dankaka, a 30-year old street trader. "The governor may be stronger, but I would vote for the emir over him."

The above statement by an illiterate 'street trader' in Kano, has totally summarised what is wrong in northern Nigeria in particular, and the whole of Nigeria, in general. Lack of education!! If people are well informed and properly educated, they will be able to demand for their rights and demand for accountabilities from their 'representatives' instead of relying on an 'old and outdated' traditions. It is a pity!

I could recall just a few years back, when the Queen of England, (who is the ceremonial Head of State), and most of the senior Royals, just like your almighty Emirs in the north, used to have a 'tax free' lifestyles.

Then it got to a stage sometimes around 1990s, the UK citizens started questioning their politicians and put pressure on them to compel the Queen and some of the Royal families to start paying tax. Well, the rest, as the saying goes is now history. The Queen of England now pays tax like the rest of us.

It is high time for we Africans to wake up from our slumber and demand for the best instead of relying on dying traditions and unnecessary mediocrity and praise singing mentality.

Stop being a victim, stop being second class citizens to your fellow black man. Wake up Africans, use your brain and free yourself from all these praise singing syndrome which majority of us are suffering from. Wake up!!!

Posted by ttonjo| 20.10.2008 09:10

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RAYNOSARAYNOSA is offline 
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 # 5

What else do you expect from "Jobless" fellows.

Posted by RAYNOSA| 20.10.2008 09:12

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udokaamahudokaamah is offline 
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 # 6

Emirs receive five percent of the funds given to the local government? For what exactly? To maintain his palace?

I wish the monies given to the Emirs are tied to specific responsibilities. I would love a situation where the Emirs are given administrative and political functions for their emirates. It is obvious that they enjoy some clout and gravitas in their domain, those important qualities can be leveraged to include the governance of their domain.

Long live the traditional institutions. Down with big, bloated, power-drunk government

Posted by udokaamah| 20.10.2008 09:19

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ttonjottonjo is offline 
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 # 7

'Stop being a victim, stop being second class citizens to your fellow black man. Wake up Africans, use your brain and free yourself from all these praise singing syndrome which majority of us are suffering from. Wake up!!!'


For a point of correction, from my statement above. I meant to say 'stop being a second class citizen' to anyone, anywhere in the world'.

Remember, Africa is the cradle of civilization. Always remember that we are the FIRST, to walk on this planet earth.

Therefore, there is no need for the false inferiority complex being force on us by the european colonialists and the islamic jihadists, which is now being capitalized upon by our present day neo-colonialist politicians to oppressed their fellow Africans. Only time will tell!

Posted by ttonjo| 20.10.2008 09:34

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TEchiTEchi is offline 
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 # 8

The Emirs are just like any traditional rulers in any part of Nigeria. Be it in Ndigbo land or Yoruba land. And all they do all over Nigeria is to rip off and often time oppress the people through their hench men.

Northern Nigeria just like any other part of the country is fraught with these undenible cumbersome, and oppressive traditional rulers. Most of them often connive with government officials to impede progress in the local region through their corrupt practices. When any region of the country is in distress we are all distressed. We must begin to see our country as one entity.

If I remember correctly the last time I was home, I went from Enugu to Onitsha and then to Kano, Abuja, Ondo and Lagos. The Traditional rulers are all over. Although some impede progress more than others but it still the same. And we as a people live all over the country. We have Ndigbo in Hausa land, and Hausa in Ndigbo land and so on. We also intermarry the same way regardless of the obstacles.

The praise singers are all the same every where. It is not a bad thing for this writer to do this piece. One must always look back at one's tradition no matter how oppressive. It is when we remember where we are from that we learn how to change things.

Posted by TEchi| 20.10.2008 18:29

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Last Updated ( Monday, 20 October 2008 )
 

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