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Vol. 1(1), February 2012
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GLOBAL ADVANCED RESEARCH JOURNAL OF HISTORY, POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
February 2012 Vol.
1(1), pp 006-017
Copyright © 2012 Global Advanced
Research Journals
www.garj.com/GARJHPSIR
Review
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Leadership Crisis and Political Instability in
Nigeria, 1964-1966: The
Personalities, the Parties and the Policies
Emmanuel Oladipo Ojo
Department of History and International Studies,
Faculty of Arts, Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti,
Ekiti State, Nigeria.
Email:
eoojo2011@yahoo.com
Received 03 February, 2012; Accepted 10 February,
2012
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Abstract |
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1964-1966 would go down the annals of Nigerian
history as turbulent and politically explosive
years. The federal elections of 1964, which, for all
intents and purposes, was an electoral battle
between the Nigerian National Alliance and the
United Progressive Grand Alliance, subjected the
Nigerian democratic process to unprecedented stress.
The electoral battle between the alliances produced
a political stalemate which, for the first time
since the 1914 amalgamation, left the country
without a legally constituted central government for
about two days. Although, the deadlock was
eventually resolved through a wretched compromise
which did not address the fundamental causes of the
crisis; the relief was transient. Thus, in 1965, pre
and post election violence in the defunct Western
Region created unprecedented political instability
in Nigeria. Unfortunately, the ethnic and other
interests of some of the leaders of the Structural
Frame made a quick resolution of the crisis
impossible and on 15 January 1966, the military
intervened in the Nigeria democratic process to
restore law and order. However, the military
intervention did not immediately produce the magic
wand needed for an immediate resolution of the large
scale political crisis. Indeed, the composition of
the coup planners on the one hand and the victims of
the coup on the other subjected Nigeria to further
political instability and turmoil. Furthermore, the
Hausa-Fulani felt that some of the policies of
Nigeria’s first military regime were designed to
‘rob’ them of whatever benefits they still derived
from the Nigerian Federation. The result was further
instability and violence. This paper examines the
personalities, the political parties as well as the
policies that created unprecedented political
instability and crisis in Nigeria between 1964 and
1966. The method of data analysis employed in this
study is the historical approach - simple
descriptive collation and analysis of historical
data. This method involves subjecting data to
rigorous criticism with a view to determining their
accuracy and authenticity.
Keywords:
Leadership, crisis, political instability and
Nigeria
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