TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of the Study
1.2 Significance of the Study
1.3 Statement of the Problem
1.4 Purpose of Study
1.5 Scope of Study
1.6 Research Methodologies
1.7 Explications of Terms
CHAPTER TWO: ANCIENT PHILOSOPHERS ON VIOLENCE
2.1 Heraclitus (540-480BC)
2.2 Plato (428-347 BC) and Aristotle (384-322)
2.2 Nicholas of Cusa
2.3 Avicenna on Violence (980-1037)
2.4 Alfarabi
2.5 Thomas Hobbes
2.6 Jean Jacques Rousseau
2.7 John Locke
2.8 Niccolo Machiavelli on Violence
2.9 Hegel and Marx on Violence
CHAPTER THREE: THE EXPOSITION OF HANNAH ADRENT’S CONCEPTION OF VIOLENCE IN RELATION TO POLITICS
3.1 The Human Condition
3.2 The Vita Activa
3.4 Violence; Homo Faber’s Code of Conduct
3.5 The Relationship between Power and Violence
CHAPTER FOUR: A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF THE EMERGENCY OF POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE HISTORY OF NIGERIA
4.1 Pre –Independence
4.2 The First Republic
4.3 The Second Republic
4.4 Third Republic
CHAPTER FIVE: A CONCLUDING REFLECTION ON HUMAN ARENDT’S
CONCEPTION ON VIOLENCE VIS-AVIS THE QUEST FOR POLITICAL POWER IN NIGERIA
5.1 General Overview
5.2 Conclusion
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Man is a being driven by an insatiable quest for dynamism. He has
since the evolution of societies been preoccupied with how to effect
changes in the society to maximize his well-being, man therefore, has
never at any point abdicated the pressing responsibility of searching
for, or evolving models of governance that would make for a better
understanding and organization of the society, and one of the reasons
for this conviction is to foster a blissful life for humanity devoid of
rancor, violence, crisis and conflict. Thomas Hobbes insists that men
decided to live under a civil society for their self-preservation and
contented life such that the unfortunate and miserable situation of
anarchy and conflicts would be ameliorated if not completely eliminated.
The philosopher also points out that the fear of uncertainty and
insecurity of lives and property prompted the formation of civil
society. Jean-Jacques Rousseau also talks of preservation whereby the
human race must necessarily change its nature of existence if it must
continue to live and avoid violence. It is against this backdrop of
social progress that Hannah Arendt points out that the glorification of
violence is not restricted to small minority and eternity.
1.1 BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
In Nigeria basically violence has taken the central field in the
democracy which involves the untimely death of wanton of her citizens in
the pursuit of political power. We imbibe the ideas of Georges
Sorel in his Reflections on Violence, he believed that power had to be
shifted from the deteriorated middle class to the working class, and
that power must be acquired through only a general strike that, to be
effective, must be violence[1].
Political conflict is an endemic feature of most of the world’s
political systems. This is particularly true of the developing
countries, including Nigeria, where political conflict, crises and even
violence, became essential characteristics of the political process,
especially after independence. It was perhaps Nigeria’s pride that she
achieved her independence with a minimum of social disturbance and
violence. Nigeria stumbled from crisis to crisis and near
disintegration, as the country witnessed a marked increase in the
bitterness of party, ethnic and region.
Consequently, Violence or the threat of violence is a universal
phenomenon. Writing in the same vein, Charles Tilly remarks that
Collective violence has flowed regularly from the political process… Men
seeking to size, hold, or realign power the lever of power have
continually engaged in collective violence as part of their struggle.
Nigeria affords a good case for both the theoretical and empirical study
of political violence. We believe that the sources and dynamics of
violence in Nigeria are fundamentally comparable to those of civil
violence in the other parts of the world. Nigeria rioters share with
their counterparts throughout the world certain psychological
characteristics; most of them feel frustrated in their pursuit of their
political and economic goals and in seeking redress for grievances. In
Nigeria, those who had power had no respect for the establish channels
of political action, that is, the rules of the game, and political power
in this country through violence leads to economic prowess and
marginalization of citizens. As Arendt posited that: Power and violence
are opposites, where the one rules absolutely, the order is absent.
Violence appears where the power is in jeopardy, but left to its cause
it ends in power’s disappearance[2].
Political violence has become a central part of political competition
across much of Nigeria and it takes forms from assassination to armed
clashes between gangs employed by rival politicians. This violence is
most often carried out by gangs whose members are openly recruited and
paid by politicians and party leaders to attack their sponsors’ rivals,
intimidate members of the public, rig elections, and protect their
patrons from similar attacks[3].
The 2011 general election marked another ugly milestone of political
violence in the political history and culture in Nigeria. Comparatively,
it is rather difficult to determine which the most violence afflicted
general elections were since the return to civil rule in mid-1999.The
1999 general election was violent prone; so also was the 2003 and 2007
general elections and what was also apparent was that each general
election took place under different dimension and circumstances with
progression of record of casualties. The continually deteriorating
economic conditions also continue to throw up new dynamics and nuances
alter the pattern of political violence.
Hannah Arendt as a child experienced war and violence during her life
as she wrote: these reflections were provoked by the events and debates
of the last few century, which has become indeed, as Lenin predicted, a
century of wars and resolutions, hence a century of that violence...[4] This
currently believed to be their common denominator. There is, however,
another factor in the present situation which, though predicted by
nobody, is of at least equal importance. The technical development of
implements of violence has now reached the point where no political goal
should conceivably correspond to their destructive potential or justify
their annual use in armed conflict. Hence, warfare since times
immemorial the final merciless arbiter in international disputes has
lost much of its effectiveness and nearly all of its glamour. The
apocalyptic chess game between the superpower that is between those that
move on the highest plane of civilization is being played according to
the rule; if neither wins; it is the end of both.[5]
1.2 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
This trend in Nigeria politics poses some interesting questions for
political inquiry. Nigeria affords a good case for both the theoretical
and empirical study of political violence. We believe that the sources
and dynamics of violence in Nigeria are fundamentally comparable to
those of civil violence in other parts of the world. Though the ability
to compromise by different actors in the Nigerian political system was
very remarkable, especially after independence ,it was during this
period that violence or its potential use moved to the center of
political action a weapon in the hands of the both the state and
individual.
Therefore, the relevance of this study is seen as avenue to the
political situation of Nigeria which has anchored on violence rising
from shedding of bloods of her citizens and thereby by advocating for
non-violence as a means in a achieving a positive political quest with
the shedding of blood or rioting which is paramount in the Nigeria
political arena. Non-violence is without not a new idea in the existence
of man, however, Nigerian political elites should be schooled on the
use of non-violence as a track to contest for any political office of
their choice rather than using violence to deduce the game of
politicking thereby defranchaising some due to fear of injuries at the
various electoral centers Hence, with the death of violence and by
applying peaceful methods in the Nigeria electoral system and
synthesizing the political ideologies of Nigeria, I think
Nigeria democracy shall be sustained and she will become a model looked
upon and emulated by others.
1.3 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
Political class continue to arm the youths, employ them to commit
heinous crimes, shed blood at every critical pint of life especially
during election period; water the streets with blood of the youths
themselves, innocent by-stands passersby. Politicians themselves are
assassinated in broad day and in cold; bodies, souls and destines are
wantonly destroyed in the Manichean quest for political power even the
conferences held to pontificate on the negative of political violence
wee unfruitful due to lack of tangible deliberations and implementation
to harness the menace. The political systems of Nigeria are caught in a
spider web of violence and death.
Also, in definition of Marx Weber’s idea of a state C.W Mills
succinctly defined politics as a struggle for power and the ultimate
form of power is violence.[6] This
closeness between power and violence seems to be in consonance the
earlier ideology and postulations of the Chinese dictator Mao Tse-tung
who believed that power grows from the emanation of barrel of gun.[7] The
necessary consideration given to the relationship, these differences
between power ad violence was thrown into light when the existential
philosopher J. P Sartre whilst writing the preface to Fanon’s Wretched
of the Earth glorified violence, believing that it is only violence that
pays.[8] The
name which Nigeria accrued due to her growth in different diverges of
economy is a paradox. The catalogues of mismanagement, which led to this
paradox, constitute as it were, the afflictions under which Nigeria is
going through. Since her independence in 1960, Nigeria is menaced with
much problems ranging from political, economic, cultural, social and
otherwise. The superstructure is in fact in dilemma .This sometimes
makes wonder the authenticity and the real autonomy of the country some
even led to the conclusion that we are not independent.[9] The
incessant wars against our fellow country men and women in the quest
for political appointments through violence can only undermine our
collective development as a people. With the ideologies of different
philosophers aforementioned earlier and some individuals whose interest
and specialty on political violence would be of valued help in analyzing
the notion of violence and its relationship to political power will
generate an enormous questions; what is the necessity of violence in the
existence and maintenance of political power or can there be any
political power without violence?.
The aforementioned questions are very prevalent in this our modern
world with the contemporary penchant of world wars and revolutions in
which violence is ultimately is the rising common denominator[10].With
the advancement in technology man’s inhumanity to fellow man through
violence by production of weapons of mass destruction has persistently
been in outstanding pedigree has rendered man powerless and
technological modernization which should serve as a helper to man has
become his own instrument of destruction. However, violence has gathered
an outstanding impetus when it comes to politics and politicking.
Therefore, the quest for political power in this contemporary age is now
full of violent actions thereby sending down morality to oblivion and
enchanting the glories of violence to its apex level through the
acceptance of Machiavellian principle of the end justifies the means.
Taken cognizance of Nigeria situation with facts born out of
experience and genuinely vindicated by history that the quest for
political power through violence is very much prevalent in Nigeria.
Violence has persistently being attuned into the Nigeria system of
politics in the garb of thuggery, riots, ethnic crisis, assassination,
kidnapping, defranchizing people their electioneering rights which will
eventually leads to untimely death of innocent people. It is our view
that when political violence is used in conditions in which no other
form of protest is permissible, and then it would wrong be to call it
terrorism. Miller argues that violence may be permissible in
dictatorships and other repressive regimes when it used to defend human
rights, provoke liberal reforms, and achieve other desirable objective[11].A
journey down to Nigeria’s political activities indicates that politics
which is supposed the natural activities of man taking cognizance of
Aristotelian definition as a political animal. Nigeria idea of politics
is a game of do or die affair and what can be known as survival of the
fittest. I should think that the aim of political power in every
government as Arendt asserts is to enable men to live together, to
promote happiness or to realize a classless society[12].
This meaning is no longer obtainable nowadays instead people have
understood political power as the best avenue to make money hence
resorting to all forms of violence in order to acquire it.
In this write-up, I am going to philosophically expose this quest for
political power through violence especially in our country Nigeria
toeing the foot step of Hannah Arendt to prove that power and violence
are incompatible and that violence can destroy power but not create it[13].
Most Nigerian politicians see violence both as an offensive weapon and
as a component of personal security as a necessary part of political
campaign; they believed that they must maintain some capacity to unleash
violence as a measure of self-defense.
1.4 PURPOSE OF STUDY
Nigeria is a country where no particular system of politics can be
said to be consistently practiced. It is a country where they might sets
the pace for politicking[14] .As
hitherto mentioned above; man is by nature a political animal. Hence
politics is not restricted to special type of people neither is it a
dirty game. Instead, it is those who indulge in it that are could be
seen as dirty. Politics in Nigeria is what the leaders call it. Nigeria
can therefore, not be said to have a system of politics other than
inconsistence which culminates into a pyramid of corruption.[15] What
we have in Nigeria as politics is a facilitation of imbroglios and
camps of civilian armies; we have politicians a panoply of hotchpotch of
individuals with contradicting interest ready to satisfy their
individual characters through destructive manners[16].Therefore,
the purpose of studying this topic titled the quest for political power
through violence is to redress the above mentioned status quo in which
politics is seen as a game of do or die. To achieve this, the youths
who are veritable tools of violence have to be re-orientated for they
are gradually imbibing this method as the best option for survival.
Again, I wish to use this write-up to appeal to the consciences of
those whose hands are not yet soiled in politics to keep it up. This
destructive malady had been extenuated that there must be venomous
activities as feature of Nigeria politics. Hence, for to be a
successful” in Nigeria, one must be abysmally violent[17].
The fact that violence is seen as the order of the day in Nigerian
politics should not make them to join them when they cannot beat them
for violence has always been part and parcel of Nigeria political
process which has lead credence to the people’s loss of lives and
property.
1.5 SCOPE OF STUDY
In this long easy, I want to pay much attention mainly on the
ideas of Hannah Arendt’s violence to Nigerian situation even though they
were not propounded for that. Of all the political works of Hannah
Arendt, I am going to concentrate mainly on her major work on violence
and other text/materials written by her and other scholars relevant to
the purpose of this work.
1.6 RESEARCH METHODOLOGIES
The use of scientific method in any philosophical inquiry is so
indispensible. Method is so crucial that it helps to validate our
philosophical conviction. Of the different methods habitually used in
scientific works, a combination of an expository-critical procedure was
found most suitable as it enables us to faithfully explore the relevant
themes in Hannah Arendt's thoughts and by basing on different emerging
opinions of other authors as a way of deepening, supporting or even
positive questioning. It allows us to arrive implicitly and explicitly
at personal judgment about the author’s view. It will be a work of
library and internet researches. The system I shall follow in quoting
and more especially in deriving the detailed entries in every written
source is mainly that of footnoting. Arendt’s ideas on violence are
compared with the Nigerian situation, to sieve out what can serve as a
better political worldview for Nigeria.
1.7 EXPLICATIONS OF TERMS.
Definition of violence
Violence has become so strife in the world today that little or no
attention is attracted wherever it transpires. Every aspect of human
life in this world is affected by this canker worm such that, for some
people, it has become an impasse. It becomes an ulcerous cancer to the
society in both cultural, religious, economical, social, psychological,
and more especially, political spheres that peaceful and harmonious
co-existence among men seems to be an illusion for some people. Violence
just like time is not easy concept to define. For Arendt, “violence is
by nature instrumental; like all means, it always stands in need of
guidance and justification through the end it pursues”[18].From the Latin word violentiameaning
“impetuosity” is the term violence derived. It denotes excessive force
or constraint. According to Oxford Advance Learner’s Dictionary,
violence is……a behavior intended to hurt or kill; strong feeling that is
uncontrolled.[19]Arendt
advocated that violence can be justifiable, but it never will be
legitimate. Its justification loses in plausibility the farther it
intended and recedes into the future.[20]In other words, violence makes a beast of the perpetrator and a thing of the persecuted.
Various Forms of Violence
Generally speaking, violence can be classified into two broad forms: internal (covert) and external (overt) violence.
Internal violence refers to the disharmony or peacelessness which one
suffers in his interior self. It is this type of violence that St. Paul
succinctly alluded to in his turmoil and thus cried thus: the good
things I want to do, I never do; the evil thing which I do not want-that
is what I do.[21] This
kind of violence is most observed in confused individuals and showcased
externally in their relationship with their fellow man in the society.
In the same vein, external violence refers to every kind of conflict or
disharmony which apart from happening within the individual goes beyond
the internal realm to have an external manifestation in man’s dealings
with one another. Analogically, it could be regarded as a kind of
volcanic eruption which after burning beneath the earth under a very
high temperature explodes in the form of molten magma forming a mountain
as a lasting impression, mangling whatever it comes in contact with. It
is this kind of violence that is regarded as external violence.[22]
In reference to these forms of violence, Dom Helder Camara[23],
in his book Spiral of violence, talks on three forms of violence which
converge to form what he called the spiral of violence that gave his
book its title. According to him, the first in this spiral of violence
is institutional violence[24].
It refers to violent rules and policies institutions societies impose
on their citizens which subjugate them to subhuman slavery condition.
Hence, they are unjustly treated, humiliated and restricted such that
all hope seems to be lost. It is this institutional violence, according
to him, that prompts counter-violence[25],
another form of violence. It manifests itself in the form of riots,
terrorism, revolutions etc, to the subservience that institutional
violence inflicts. Any attempt to respond to the heavy wind of this
counter-violence gives rise to the third form of violence which he
called repressive violence. It is usually a reaction against
counter-violence by the perpetrators of institutional violence as a
solution to counter violence through their agents such as thugs, police,
’EFCC’, or even another institutional violence such that the spiral
continues. This third type of violence is the most awful because in bid
to repress whatever constitutes a threat to their power, the powerful
use any repressive means at the reach to achieve their aim. In this
vicious progression of violence from covert (injustice) to overt
(revolt) and then to tyrannical (repression), one sees the vicious
rotation of violence to be endless, hence, rendering shattered a
harmonious and peaceful co-existence[26].
Causes of Violence
Several factors can be said to be the causes of violence. Speaking about the causes of violence, Arendt opines:
To speak about the causes of violence in these terms must appear
presumptuous at a moment when floods of foundation money are channeled
into the various research projects of social scientists, when deluge of
books on the subject has already appeared, when eminent natural
scientists-biologists, psychologists, ethologists, and zoologists have
joined in an all-out effort to solve the riddle of “aggressiveness” in
human behavior, and even a brand new science, called “polemology”, has
emerged. [27]
Despite the above, certain factors are still considered as being the
primordial causes of violence. They include: egoism, injustice,
aggression, racism, terrorism etc. we shall examine some of them in this
write-up.
EGOISM
Egoism is seen as an exhibition of selfishness. This is the attitude
of one considering his self interest as more important than the others.
Indeed it is an undeniable fact that most violence we experience around
the globe are caused by egoism. This is because as W.A Wallace says,
“egoism creates in man a wall of exclusiveness to others. By this
exclusiveness he becomes full of himself such that at times he looks at
the other as an enemy who should even be eliminated. This phenomenon
underscores the social conflicts and intolerance among people, hence
violence is the result.”