|
Muammar Gaddafi
blamed the British for Nigeria's
problems
Nigeria should be divided into two
nations to avoid further bloodshed
between Muslims and Christians, Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi has said.
In
a speech to students, he praised the
example of India and Pakistan, where he
said partition saved many lives.
Splitting Nigeria "would stop the
bloodshed and burning of places of
worship," state news agency Jana quoted
him as saying.
A
senior Nigerian diplomat said he was not
taking the suggestion seriously.
Hundreds of people have died in communal
violence in villages around the central
Nigerian city of Jos this year.
The
BBC's Rana Jawad in Tripoli says Col
Gaddafi's suggestion is unsurprising
given his past form.
Last year, he called for Switzerland to
be abolished and for its land to be
divided between Italy, Germany and
France.
'Historic, radical solution'
Although the violence in Nigeria
generally takes place between Muslim and
Christian communities, the underlying
causes are a complex mix of political,
social and economic grievances.
Nigeria is roughly split between its
largely Muslim north, and a
Christian-dominated south.
Col
Gaddafi, until recently head of the
African Union, characterised the Jos
violence as a "deep conflict of
religious nature" caused by the federal
state, "which was made and imposed by
the British in spite of the people's
resistance to it".
He
described the partition of India as a
"historic, radical solution" which saved
the lives of "millions of Hindus and
Muslims".
Splitting India in 1947 caused a
breakdown of law and order in which at
least 200,000 people died. Some
estimates say one million people were
killed.
About 12 million people were left
homeless and thousands were raped.
An
attempt by the Igbo people of
south-eastern Nigeria to secede in 1967
sparked a war which left more than one
million people dead.
|