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Nigeria swore in its new president, a Christian, this
week after months of leadership confusion while its
elected president was receiving medical treatment.
May 08, 2010:
Nigeria swore in its new president, a Christian, this
week after months of leadership confusion while its
elected president was receiving medical treatment.
Goodluck Jonathan, who has been Nigeria's acting
president since February, officially became president of
Nigeria on Thursday. His Muslim predecessor, Umaru
Yar'Adua, died on Wednesday despite extensive treatment,
including a medical stay in Saudi Arabia.
The peaceful power shift provides stability to the
oil-rich country, avoiding Nigeria's history of military
coups whenever there was a leadership vacuum.
It is unclear at the moment if Jonathan will run for the
office of president during the next election.
Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa, is about
evenly split between Muslims in the north and Christians
in the south. There is an agreement that the office of
president would be alternated between Christians and
Muslims.
While the presidency problem is, for now, settled,
Nigeria is facing the problem of increased sectarian
violence.
Just last month, Islamic extremists allegedly kidnapped
and killed Pastor Ishaku Kadah of the Church of Christ
in Nigeria and his wife.
In March, ethnic Fulani Muslims attacked predominantly
Christian villages in the central Jos area where
somewhere between 100 to 500 people were killed,
depending on reports. The attack occurred at night and
many of the victims were defenseless women and children.
Then acting president Goodluck Jonathan ordered security
forces in Plateau State and neighboring states to be on
high alert to keep the violence from spreading.
The attack had come just months after a large-scale
clash around the Jos area. Nearly 500 people were killed
in January. The Plateau state police said the violence
was sparked by an unprovoked attack on worshipers at a
local church.
Jos has a well-known history of conflict between the
Muslim and Christian communities. The central city lies
between Nigeria's mainly Muslim north and predominantly
Christian south.
Beyond religious differences, many sectarian conflicts
are also sparked by poverty and competition over access
to resources. Ethan Cole, Christian Post Reporter.
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