Notes
Prologue
1
â
Translation by Aminu Abubakar.
2
â
Another possible translation for the name is âSunni Group for Proselytisation and Jihad'. Translation provided by Professor M.A.S. Abdel Haleem of SOAS, University of London.
1 âThen You Should Wait for the Outcome'
1
â
The âmartyr' video was originally obtained by AFP northern Nigeria correspondent Aminu Abubakar, who also translated it from Hausa to English. Some details from the video were included in a story he and I worked on together in September 2011 (Aminu Abubakar and M.J. Smith, âNigerian “bomber” videos emerge as Islamist fears mount', Agence France-Presse, 18 September 2011).
2
â
The details of the delay before the bomb went off were first reported by
Time
magazine (Alex Perry, âThreat level rising: how African terrorist groups inspired by Al-Qaeda are gaining strength', 19 December 2011) and Reuters (Joe Brock, âSpecial report: Boko Haram â between rebellion and jihad', 31 January 2012). I later confirmed these details and others with a source who has seen the surveillance video from the day of the attack.
3
â
There had been vague warnings in the weeks leading up to the bombing which are discussed in
Chapter 3
.
4
â
Mervyn Hiskett,
The Sword of Truth
(Evanston, 1994), pp. 70â1, 96.
5
â
Mervyn Hiskett,
The Development of Islam in West Africa
(New York, 1984), p. 2.
6
â
S.J. Hogben,
An Introduction to the History of the Islamic States of Northern Nigeria
(Ibadan, 1967), pp. 162â5.
7
â
Hiskett,
Development
, p. 59.
8
â
Toyin Falola and Matthew M. Heaton,
A History of Nigeria
(Cambridge, 2009), p. 30.
9
â
Hiskett,
Development
, pp. 59â60.
10
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 32.
11
â
â
Hogben,
Introduction
, pp. 165â7.
12
â
â
Hiskett,
Development
, p. 67.
13
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 28; Hogben,
Introduction
, pp. 73â5. It should be emphasised that there are many different versions of the Bayajida myth.
14
â
â
Hogben,
Introduction
, pp. 73â4; Hiskett,
Development
, pp. 69â71.
15
â
â
Hogben,
Introduction
, pp. 73â4; Hiskett,
Development
, pp. 69â70.
16
â
â
Hiskett,
Development
, pp. 73â96.
17
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 15â21.
18
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 17, 40â1.
19
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 23â4, 31.
20
â
â
Murray Last,
The Sokoto Caliphate
(Bristol, 1967), p. 10.
21
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 44â5.
22
â
â
Last,
Sokoto
, pp. 7â8.
23
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 47â9.
24
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 66.
25
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, pp. 70â1.
26
â
â
Last,
Sokoto
, pp. 15â16; Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 64.
27
â
â
Last,
Sokoto
, p. 20.
28
â
â
Hiskett,
Sword
, p. 97.
29
â
â
Last,
Sokoto
, p. 39.
30
â
â
The Bornu Empire would lose some of its territory to the caliphate, but would ultimately remain independent, though far less powerful than Sokoto.
31
â
â
Murray Last, âContradictions in Creating a Jihadi Capital: Sokoto in the Nineteenth Century and Its Legacy',
African Studies Review
, 56(2) (September 2013), pp. 1â20, on pp. 2â4.
32
â
â
Muhammad S. Umar, âEducation and Islamic Trends in Northern Nigeria: 1970sâ1990s',
Africa Today
, 48(2) (Summer 2001), pp. 127â50, on p. 136.
33
â
â
Hiskett,
Development
, pp. 242â3.
34
â
â
Papers of Baron Lugard of Abinger, 1858â1945, MSS Brit. Emp. s.58, f. 6.
35
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.58, ff. 9â10.
36
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.57, f. 106.
37
â
â
Sir F.D. Lugard,
The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa
(Edinburgh and London, 1922), p. 617.
38
â
â
A.H.M. Kirk-Greene, âLugard, Frederick John Dealtry, Baron Lugard (1858â1945)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, October 2008,
http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/34628
.
39
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.57, ff. 180â1.
40
â
â
F.D. Lugard, âAn Expedition to Borgu, on the Niger',
Geographical Journal
, 6(3) (September 1895), pp. 205â25.
41
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.57, f. 182.
42
â
â
Michael Crowder,
The Story of Nigeria
(London, 1978), pp. 48â53.
43
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, p. 149.
44
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, pp. 133â5, 147â8, 151.
45
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, p. 164.
46
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.62, f. 8b.
47
â
â
Scarbrough, âGoldie, Sir George Dashwood Taubman (1846â1925)', rev. John Flint, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, September 2013,
http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/33441
.
48
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.57, f. 94.
49
â
â
Peter Cunliffe-Jones,
My Nigeria: Five Decades of Independence
(New York, 2010), p. 73.
50
â
â
Lugard,
Dual Mandate
, pp. 222â9.
51
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, pp. 173, 179.
52
â
â
D.J.M. Muffett,
Concerning Brave Captains
(London, 1964), pp. 43â51; Hogben,
Introduction
, pp. 212â14.
53
â
â
H.F. Backwell,
The Occupation of Hausaland: 1900â1904
(Lagos, 1927), pp. 13â14.
54
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.62, ff. 26â8.
55
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.62, ff. 31â8.
56
â
â
Colonial Reports â Annual, N. Nigeria: 1900â1911
(London, HMSO), p. 85.
58
â
â
Colonial Reports
, pp. 159â60.
59
â
â
Colonial Reports
, p. 38.
60
â
â
Colonial Reports
, pp. 91, 178.
61
â
â
Colonial Reports
, p. 164.
62
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.62, ff. 107â11.
63
â
â
Colonial Reports
, pp. 365â74.
64
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.65, ff. 27â8.
65
â
â
Lugard Papers, MSS Brit. Emp. s.63, ff. 156, 177.
2 âHis Preachings Were Things that People Could Identify With'
1
â
The interrogation has been posted online at
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePpUvfTXY7w
. Translation from Hausa to English was provided by Professor Abubakar Aliyu Liman of Ahmadu Bello University in Nigeria. Professor Liman felt the best translation of âboko' in this instance was âWestern education', though others may have a wider interpretation of the word, such as Western deception.
2
â
Professor Liman felt Yusuf may have misspoken here and meant to use the word âastrology', which has often been labelled un-Islamic.
3
â
Abdul Raufu Mustapha, âEthnic Structure, Inequality and Governance of the Public Sector in Nigeria', United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, Democracy, Governance and Human Rights Programme Paper No. 24, November 2006, p. 12.
4
â
Enrico Monfrini, âThe Abacha Case', in M. Pieth (ed.),
Recovering Stolen Assets
(Berne, 2008), pp. 41â2.
5
â
Mark Tran, âFormer Nigeria state governor James Ibori receives 13-year sentence',
Guardian
(UK), 17 April 2012; Estelle Shirbon, âNigerian governor gave $15 million cash bribe in bag, court hears', Reuters, 19 September 2013; âNigeria: UK conviction a blow against corruption', Human Rights Watch, 17 April 2012.
6
â
World Bank, âThe World Bank in Nigeria 1998â2007: Nigeria Country Assistance Evaluation', p. 69.
7
â
The World Bank report cited above said poverty had fallen to 54 per cent by 2004; the same report said âwide, long-standing regional disparities result in a poverty range from about 34 per cent in the southeast to about 67 per cent in the northeast'. World Bank calculations using data from 2009â10 put the poverty rate at 46 per cent based on evaluations of the cost of supplying basic needs for a household, according to information provided to me by the bank's lead economist for Nigeria. Rapid population expansion, however, means that reductions in the poverty rate do not always translate into fewer people overall living in poverty.
8
â
Population Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs of the United Nations Secretariat, âWorld Population Prospects: The 2012 Revision',
http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/index.htm
.
9
â
M.J. Smith, âLagos at centre of Africa's population boom', Agence France-Presse, 30 October 2011.
10
â
â
Chinua Achebe,
The Trouble with Nigeria
(Essex, 1984), p. 1.
11
â
â
Toyin Falola and Matthew M. Heaton,
A History of Nigeria
(Cambridge, 2009), pp. 112â13.
12
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, pp. 119â21.
13
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 150.
14
â
â
Michael Crowder,
The Story of Nigeria
(London, 1978), p. 271.
15
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, p. 277.
16
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, pp. 153â4.
17
â
â
Independent Task Force on Terrorist Financing Sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations, âUpdate on the Global Campaign against Terrorist Financing', 15 June 2004, pp. 20â2.
18
â
â
Sir Ahmadu Bello,
My Life
, p. 229.
19
â
â
Crowder,
Story
, p. 298.
20
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 166.
21
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 181.
22
â
â
Falola and Heaton,
History
, p. 180.
23
â
â
Peter Cunliffe-Jones,
My Nigeria: Five Decades of Independence
(New York, 2010), p. 101.