Nigeria
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1 Jan 1900 - 1 Jan 1914
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![[British Nigeria Blue Ensign, 1914-1953]](ng-col.gif) -
1 Jan 1914 - 1953
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![[British Nigeria Blue Ensign, 1953-1960]](ng-col2.gif) -
1953 - 1 Oct 1960
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![[Flag of Nigeria]](ng.gif) -
Adopted 1 Oct 1960
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Map
of Nigeria
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Hear
National Anthem "Arise Oh Compatriots, Nigeria's Call Obey" Adopted 1978
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Hear
Former Anthem "Nigeria We Hail Thee" (1960-1978)
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Constitution (29 May 1999)
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Former Constitution
(1960-1979)
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Capital: Abuja (Lagos 1914-12 Dec 1991)
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Currency: Naira (NGN); Nigerian
Pound (NGP) 1959-1973
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National Holiday: 1 Oct (1960) Independence Day
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Population: 146,255,312 (2008)
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GDP: $338.1 billion (2008)
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Exports: $83.09 billion (2008) Imports: $46.36 billion (2008)
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Ethnic groups: Yoruba 17.5%, Hausa 17.2%, Igbo (Ibo) 13.3%,
Fulani 10.7%, Ibibio 4.1%, Kanuri 3.6%, Egba 2.9%, Tiv 2.6%,
Igbirra (Ebira) 1.1%, Nupe 1%, Edo 1%, Ijo 0.8%,
detribalized 0.9%, other 23.3% (2000)
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Total Active Armed Forces: 85,000 (2006) Merchant marine: 68 ships (2008)
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Religions: Muslim 50.5%, Christian 48.2% (of which
other/independent Christian 19.5%, Protestant 15%,
Roman Catholic 13.7%), other 1.3% (2003)
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International
Organizations/Treaties: ACP, AfDB, APM, AU, BTWC, C, CEN-SAD, CTBT, D-8,
ECOWAS, FAO, G-15, G-24, G-77, IAEA, IBRD, ICAO, ICC, ICCt, ICRM,
ICSID, IDA, IDB, IFAD, IFC, IFRCS, IHO, ILO, IMF, IMO, IMSO, Interpol, IOC, IOM, IPU, IRENA, ISA, ISESCO, ISO,
ITSO, ITU, ITUC, KP, MIGA, NAM, NPT, NTBT, OAS (observer), OIC, OPCW, OPEC, PCA,
UN, UNCLOS, UNCTAD, UNESCO, UNFCC, UNHCR, UNIDO, UNWTO, UPU, WCO, WFTU, WHO, WIPO,
WMO, WTO
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Nigeria Index
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Chronology
30 Jun 1849
Bight of Biafra British protectorate.
1 Feb 1852
Bight of Benin British protectorate.
6 Aug 1861
Bights of Biafra and Benin a united protectorate.
5 Jun 1885
British protectorate over Brass, Bonny, Opobo,
Aobh, and Old Calabar (excluding Lagos).
1891
Oil Rivers Protectorate
13 May 1893
Niger Coast Protectorate
1 Jan 1900
British Nigerian colonies.
1 Jan 1900
Protectorates of Northern and Southern Nigeria.
16 Feb 1906
Lagos incorporated into the Southern Nigeria
Protectorate.
1 Jan 1914
Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria
1 Oct 1954
Federation of Nigeria (autonomous).
1 Oct 1960
Independence from Britain (Federation
of Nigeria).
1 Oct 1963
Federal Republic of Nigeria
24 May 1966
Republic of Nigeria
1 Sep 1966
Federal Republic of Nigeria
30 May 1967
Secession of Biafra (not internationally
recognized).
12 Jan 1970
Reintegration of Biafra.
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Nigeria
(since 1914)
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States
(since 1967)
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Provinces
and Regions
(1914-1967)
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Traditional
States
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Northern Nigeria
(1885-1914)
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Southern Nigeria
(1849-1914)
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Niger Rivers
District
(1879-1900)
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Lagos Colony
(1861-1906)
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Biafra
(1967-1970)
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Republic of Benin
(1967)
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Niger Territories
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10
Jul 1886
Royal Niger Company rule (Niger Terriories).
1 Jan 1900 Company transfers its territories to Britain; divided between
Northern and Southern Nigeria.
Presidents of the Royal Niger Company
Jul 1886 - 25 Feb 1895 Henry Austin Bruce, Baron Aberdare (b. 1815 - d. 1895)
Mar 1895 - 1 Jan 1900 Sir George Taubman Goldie
(b. 1846 - d. 1925)
Northern
Nigeria
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2 Jun 1887 - 1 Feb 1888
Royal Niger Company
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1 Jan 1900 - 1 Jan 1914
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Capital: Lokoja
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Population: N/A
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5 Jun 1885
Niger Districts Protectorate (under United African Company).
10 Jul 1886 Niger River Delta Protectorate
(under Royal Niger Company).
1 Jan 1900
Protectorate of Northern Nigeria formed from part of
Niger Territories. 1 Jan 1914
Part of British Nigeria Colony and protectorate as
northern provinces.
Director
5 Jun 1885 - 10 Jul 1886 Sir George Taubman Goldie (b. 1846 - d. 1925)
Governors
10 Jul 1886 - 1 Jan 1900 the Presidents of Royal Niger Company
High commissioners
1 Jan 1900 - Nov 1906 Frederick John
Dealtry Lugard (b. 1858 - d. 1945)
(from 1901, Sir Frederick John Dealtry Lugard)
Nov 1906 - Apr 1907 Sir
William Wallace (acting)
Apr 1907 - 1908
Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard (b. 1867 - d. 1932)
Governors
1908 - 28 Sep 1909
Edouard Percy Cranwill Girouard (s.a.)
28 Sep 1909 - 1912
Sir Henry Hesketh Bell
(b. 1864 - d. 1952)
1912 - 1 Jan 1914
Sir Frederick John Dealtry Lugard (s.a.)
Southern
Nigeria
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![[Oil Rivers Protectorate 1885-1896]](ng_orp.gif) -
1885 - 5 Jun 1896
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![[Niger Coast Protectorate enisgn 1896-1900]](ng-ncp.gif) -
5 Jun 1896 - 1 Jan 1900
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![[Southern Nigeria Protectorate Ensign 1900-1906]](ng-snge.gif) -
1 Jan 1900 - 16 Feb 1906
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16 Feb 1906 - 1 Jan 1914
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Capital: Lagos
(Calabar 1904-1914;
Old Calabar 1885-1904;
[[Bight of Biafra- Bonny 1849-1885; Bight of Benin-
Lagos 1852-1861])
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Population: N/A
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30 Jun 1849
Bight of Biafra British protectorate.
1 Feb 1852
Bight of Benin British protectorate.
6 Aug 1861
Bights of Biafra and Benin a united British protectorate.
16 Jul 1884
British protectorate over Brass, Bonny, Opobo,
Aobh, and Old Calabar (excluding Lagos)
(confirmed 5 Jun 1885), named Oil Rivers Protectorate.
1 Aug 1891
Effective consular administration established.
13 May 1893
Niger Coast Protectorate
1 Jan 1900
United with parts of the Niger Territories to form
Protectorate of Southern Nigeria.
16 Feb 1906
Lagos incorporated.
28 Feb 1906
Colony and Protectorate of Southern Nigeria
1 Jan 1914
Part of British Nigeria Colony and Protectorate
as Southern provinces.
Consuls of the Bight of Benin
May 1852 - 21 Jul 1853 Louis Frazer (vice consul)
21 Jul 1853 - 17 Apr 1859 Benjamin Campbell
(n. 1802? - d. 1859)
Apr 1859 - Nov 1859 Lodder (acting)
Nov 1859 - Jun 1860
George Brand (d. 1860) Jun 1860 - 1 Jan 1861
Henry Hand (acting)
1 Jan 1861 - May 1861 Henry
Grant Foote (b. 1821? - d. 1861)
May 1861 - 6 Aug 1861 William McCoskry
(acting)
Consuls of the Bight of Biafra (from 6 Aug 1861, Bights of Biafra
and Benin)
30 Jun 1849 - 10 Jun 1854 John Beecroft
(b. 1790 - d. 1854)
10 Jun 1854 - 1855
James Lynslager (acting) (d. 1864)
1855 - 1861
Thomas Joseph Hutchinson (b. 1820 - d. 1885) 1861 - Dec 1864
Richard Francis Burton (b. 1821 - d. 1890)
Dec 1864 - 1873
Charles Livingstone (b. 1821 - d. 1873)
1873 - 1878
George Hartley
1878 - 13 Sep 1879
David Hopkins
13 Sep 1879 - 5 Jun 1885 Edward Hyde Hewett
Consuls-general
5 Jun 1885 - 1 Jan 1891 Edward Hyde Hewett
1 Jan 1891 - 3 Aug 1891 Synge (acting)
Commissioners
3 Aug 1891 - 1896
Claude Maxwell MacDonald
(b. 1852 - d. 1915)
(from 1892, Sir Claude Maxwell MacDonald)
1893 - 13 May 1893
Ralph Denham Rayment Moor
(b. 1860 - d. 1909)
(acting for MacDonald)
1896 - 1 Jan 1900
Ralph Denham Rayment Moor
(s.a.)
(from 1897, Sir Ralph Denham Rayment Moore)
Nov 1896 - 4 Jan 1897 Phillips (acting
for Moor)
High commissioners
1 Jan 1900 - Aug 1904 Sir Ralph Denham
Rayment Moor (s.a.)
1900
Henry Gallwey (acting for Moor)
Aug 1904 - 28 Feb 1906 Walter Egerton
(b. 1858 - d. 1947)
(from 9 Nov 1905, Sir Walter Egerton)
Governors
28 Feb 1906 - 1912
Sir Walter Egerton
(s.a.)
1907
James Thorburn (acting for Egerton)
1912 - 1 Jan 1914
Sir Frederick John Dealtry Lugard (s.a.)
Niger Rivers District
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2 Jun 1887 - 1 Feb 1888
Royal Niger Company
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1 Feb 1888 - 1 Jan 1900
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Capital: Asaba
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Population: N/A
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1879
United African Company (U.A.C.) formed by George T.
Goldie
to exploit resources in the Niger Rivers District.
1882
Renamed National African Company Limited (N.A.C.)
10 Jul 1886
Renamed Royal Niger Company Chartered & Limited (R.N.C.)
and was granted a Royal Charter by Britain allowing
it
to exploit and administer the region.
1 Jan 1900
Company transfers its territories to Britain; incorporated
into the Southern Nigeria Protectorate.
Senior Agent
1879 - 1882
David McIntosh
(b. 1844 - d. 1888)
General Agents
1882 - 1888
David McIntosh
(s.a.)
1888 - 1 Jan 1900
Joseph Flint
(b. 18.. - d. 1925)
Lagos
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![[Flag of West Africa Settlements]](gb-wab.gif) -
1870 - 1886
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![[Lagos colonial ensign 1886-1906]](ng-lagos.gif) -
1886 - 16 Feb 1906
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Capital: Lagos
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Population: N/A
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6 Aug 1861
Lagos and adjacent area annexed by Britain.
5 Mar 1862 British colony as Lagos; local dynasty continues
(see under Nigerian traditional states)
(subordinated to Sierra Leone 1866-74,
and to then Gold Coast 1874-86).
19 Feb 1866 - 24 Jul 1874 Lagos settlements a territory of
British West Africa.
24 Jul 1874
Part of Gold Coast Lagos colony.
13 Jan 1886
Lagos a separate colony.
18 Oct 1887
Lagos protectorate in hinterland.
16 Feb 1906
Incorporated into Southern Nigeria Protectorate.
Governors
6 Aug 1861 - 22 Jan 1862 William McCoskry (acting)
22 Jan 1862 - 1863
Henry Stanhope Freeman (d. 1865)
1863 - 1864
W.R. Mullinar (acting)
1864 - 19 Feb 1866
John Hawley Glover
(b. 1829 - d. 1885)
(acting to Apr 1865)
Administrators
19 Feb 1866 - Feb 1866 Charles George Edward
Patey (b. 1813 - d. 1881)
(acting)
Feb 1866 - 1870
John Halwey Glover
(s.a.)
1870
Miles Cooper (acting)
1870 - 1871
W.H. Simpson (acting)
1871 - 1872
J. Gerrard
1872
Henry Fowler
1872 - 1873
George Berkeley
(b. 1819 - d. 1905)
1873
Charles Cameron Lees (1st time)
(b. 1831 - d. 1898)
(acting)
1873 - 1874
George Cumine Strahan
(b. 1838 - d. 1889)
1874 - 27 Jul 1874
John Shaw (acting)
27 Jul 1874 - 1875
Charles Cameron Lees (2nd time) (s.a.)
1875 - 1878
John d'Arcy Dumaresq (d. 1878)
1878
F. Simpson (acting)
1878
Malcolm Brown (acting)
1878 - 1880
Cornelius Alfred Moloney
(b. 1848 - d. 1913)
1880
William Brandford Griffith
(b. 1821 - d. 1897)
1880 - 1883
C.D. Turton
Lieutenant governors
1883
Corneilus Alfred Moloney (acting) (s.a.)
1883
Fred Evans (acting)
1883 - 1884
William Brandford Griffith
(s.a.)
1884
R. Murray Rumsey
1884 - 1885
R. Knapp Burrow
1885 - 13 Jan 1886
C. Pike
Governors
13 Jan 1886 - 1891
Cornelius Alfred Moloney
(s.a.)
1889 - 1890
George Denton (acting for Moloney)
1891 - 1897
Sir Gilbert Thomas Carter
(b. 1848 - d. 1927)
1897 - 1899
Henry Edward McCallum
(b. 1852 - d. 1919)
1899 - 1902
Sir William MacGregor
(b. 1847 - d. 1919)
1902 - Aug 1904
Henry Reeve (acting to 1903)
Aug 1904 - 16 Feb 1906 Walter Egerton
(b. 1858 - d. 1947)
(from 9 Nov 1905, Sir Walter Egerton)
Nigeria
1 Jan 1914
Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria
1 Oct 1954
Federation of Nigeria
1 Oct 1960
Independence 1 Oct 1963
Federal Republic of Nigeria
24 May 1966
Republic of Nigeria
1 Sep 1966
Federal Republic of Nigeria
30 May 1967 - 12 Jan 1970 Secession of Biafra.
Governor-general
1 Jan 1914 - 8 Aug 1919 Sir Frederick John Dealtry
Lugard (s.a.)
Governors
8 Aug 1919 - 13 Nov 1925 Sir Hugh Charles Clifford
(b. 1866 - d. 1941)
13 Nov 1925 - 17 Jun 1931 Sir Graeme Thomson
(b. 1875 - d. 1933)
17 Jun 1931 - 1 Nov 1935 Sir Donald Charles Cameron
(b. 1872 - d. 1948)
1 Nov 1935 - 1 Jul 1940 Sir Bernard Henry Bourdillon
(b. 1883 - d. 1948)
1 Jul 1940 - 1942
Sir John Evelyn Shuckburgh
(b. 1877 - d. 1953)
1942 - 18 Dec 1943
Sir Alan Cuthbert Maxwell Burns (b. 1887 - d. 1980)
18 Dec 1943 - 5 Feb 1948 Sir Arthur Frederick Richards
(b. 1885 - d. 1978)
5 Feb 1948 - 1 Oct 1954 Sir John Stuart Macpherson
(b. 1898 - d. 1971)
Queen¹
1 Oct 1954 - 1 Oct 1963 the Queen of the United
Kingdom
Governors-general (representing the British monarch as head
of state from 1 Oct 1960)
1 Oct 1954 - 15 Jun 1955 Sir John Stuart Macpherson
(s.a.)
Non-party
15 Jun 1955 - 15 Nov 1960 Sir James Wilson Robertson
(b. 1899 - d. 1983) Non-party
15 Nov 1960 - 1 Oct 1963 Benjamin Nnamdi Chukwuemeka Azikiwe(b. 1904 - d. 1996) NCNC
President
1 Oct 1963 - 16 Jan 1966 Nnamdi Chukwuemeka Azikiwe
(s.a.)
NCNC
Heads of the Federal Military Government
(from 24 May to 1 Sep 1966, National Military Government)
16 Jan 1966 - 29 Jul 1966 Johnson Thomas Umunnakwe Aguiyi- (b. 1924 - d. 1966) Mil
Ironsi
1 Aug 1966 - 29 Jul 1975 Yakubu Cinwa Dan-Yumma Gowon
(b. 1934)
Mil
29 Jul 1975 - 13 Feb 1976 Murtala Ramat Muhammad
(b. 1938 - d. 1976) Mil
14 Feb 1976 - 1 Oct 1979 Olusegun Obasanjo
(b. 1937)
Mil
President
1 Oct 1979 - 31 Dec 1983 Alhaji Usman Aliyu Shagari
(b. 1925)
NPN
Chairman of the Supreme Military Council
31 Dec 1983 - 27 Aug 1985 Muhammadu Buhari
(b. 1942)
Mil
President and chairman of the Armed Forces Ruling Council
(from 4 Jan 1993, president of the National Defense and Security
Council)
27 Aug 1985 - 26 Aug 1993 Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida
(b. 1941)
Mil
Interim president
26 Aug 1993 - 17 Nov 1993 Ernest Adegunle Oladeinde Shonekan
(b. 1936)
Non-party
Chairmen of the Provisional Ruling Council
17 Nov 1993 - 8 Jun 1998 Sani Abacha
(b. 1943 - d. 1998) Mil
9 Jun 1998 - 29 May 1999 Abdulsalam Abubakar
(b. 1942)
Mil
Presidents
29 May 1999 - 29 May 2007 Olusegun Obasanjo
(s.a.)
PDP 29 May 2007 - 5 May 2010 Umaru Musa
Yar'Adua
(b. 1951 - d. 2010) PDP
(23 Nov 2009 - 23 Feb 2010, in Saudi Arabian hospital) 9 Feb 2010 - Goodluck Jonathan (b. 1957) PDP
(acting for Yar'Adua to 5 May 2010)
Chief minister
30 Aug 1952 - 1 Oct 1954 Benjamin Nnamdi Chukwuemeka Azikiwe(s.a.)
NCNC
Prime ministers
30 Aug 1957 - 15 Jan 1966 Abubakar Tafawa Balewa
(b. 1912 - d. 1966) NPC/NNA
(from 1 Jan 1960, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa)
15 Jan 1966 - 17 Jan 1966 Zanna Bukar Dipcharima (acting)
(b. 1917 - d. 1969) NPC
Chairman of the Transitional Council
4 Jan 1993 - 26 Aug 1993 Ernest Adegunle Oladeinde
Shonekan (s.a.)
Non-party
¹Full style: (a) 1 Oct 1960 - 1 Jun 1961: "By
the Grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth,
Defender of the Faith";
(b) 1 Jun 1961 - 1 Oct 1963: "By the Grace of God Queen of Nigeria and of
Her other Realms and Territories, Head of the Commonwealth."
Territorial Disputes: Joint Border Commission with Cameroon
reviewed 2002 ICJ ruling on the entire boundary and bilaterally resolved
differences, including Jun 2006 Greentree Agreement that immediately cedes
sovereignty of the Bakassi Peninsula to Cameroon with a phase-out of Nigerian
control within two years while resolving patriation issues, it was finally ceded to Cameroon on 14 Aug 2008; the ICJ ruled
on an equidistance settlement of Cameroon-Equatorial Guinea-Nigeria maritime
boundary in the Gulf of Guinea, but imprecisely defined coordinates in the
ICJ decision and a sovereignty dispute between Equatorial Guinea and Cameroon
over an island at the mouth of the Ntem River all contribute to the delay
in implementation; only Nigeria and Cameroon have heeded the Lake Chad Commission's
admonition to ratify the delimitation treaty which also includes the Chad-Niger
and Niger-Nigeria.
Party abbreviations (political parties banned 1966-1979,
1983-1989):
AD = Alliance for Democracy (progressive); APP
= All People's Party (conservative); PDP = People's Democratic Party
(centrist);
Mil = Military;
- Former parties: NNA = Nigerian National
Alliance (incl. NPC and Nigerian National Democratic Party); NPN
= National Party of Nigeria (1978-1983, coalition); NPC = Northern
People's Congress (Hausa/Fulani dominated);
NCNC = National Council
of Nigeria and the Cameroons (Igbo dominated); PDM = People's Democratic
Movement; UPN = Unity Party of Nigeria (1979-1983, seen as pro-ethnic
Yoruba)
Biafra
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![[Flag of Biafra 1967-1970]](ng-biaf.gif) -
30 May 1967 - 12 Jan 1970
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Map
of Biafra
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Hear
National Anthem "Land of the Rising Sun"
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Text
of National Anthem
Adopted 1967
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Constitution (30 May 1967)
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Capital: Enugu (Umuahia 1967-69, Owerri 1969-70)
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Currency from 1968: Biafran Pound (BIAP)
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National Holiday: 30 May (1967) Independence Day
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Population: 13,500,000 (1967)
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GDP: $N/A
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Exports: $N/A Imports: $N/A
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Ethnic groups: Igbo (Ibo) 70%, Ibibio, Ijaw, Ogoja, Ekoi, Efik, and others
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Total Armed Forces: 100,000 (1968)
Merchant marine: N/A
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Religions: Roman Catholic, Protestant, traditional
beliefs
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| International Organizations/Treaties:
None |
30 May 1967
Secession of Eastern Region as Republic of Biafra
(not internationally recognized¹).
10-26 Jul 1967
Nigerian federal troops take Ogoja, Nsukka and Bonny Island.
28 Sep 1967
Enugu captured, new capital Unuahia.
24 May 1968
Port Harcourt captured.
22 Apr 1969
Unuahia captured, last capital Owerri.
9 Jan 1970
Owerri captured.
12 Jan 1970
Reintegration into Nigeria.
15 Jan 1970
Biafran forces formally surrender.
Heads of State and Military Governors
30 May 1967 - 8 Jan 1970 Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu
(b. 1933 - d. 2011) Mil
8 Jan 1970 - 12 Jan 1970 Philip Effiong (acting)
(b. 1924 - d. 2003) Mil
¹the only nations that recognized Biafra were: Gabon (8
May 1968), Haiti (22 Mar 1969), Ivory Coast (9 May 1968), Tanzania (13 Apr 1968), and Zambia (20
May 1968).
Republic
of Benin
19 - 20 Sep 1967
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Capital: Benin City
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Population: N/A
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9 Aug 1967
Midwest Region occupied by Biafra.
19 Sep 1967
Republic of Benin declared (07:00)(not recognized).
20 Sep 1967
Re-occupied by Nigeria (13:00).
Biafran Military Administrator
17 Aug 1967 - 19 Sep 1967 Albert Nwazu Okonkwo
(d. ....)
Mil Governor
19 Sep 1967 - 20 Sep 1967 Albert Nwazu Okonkwo
(s.a.)
Mil
©2000 Ben Cahoon
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