Electoral workers did not publicly list the winners of the elections, and rumours began that the election was won by the candidate of the People's Democratic Party (PDP), barristerTimothy Gyang Buba,[5] defeating the candidate for the All Nigerian Peoples Party. People from the largely Muslim Hausa community, began protesting even before the results were released, which results to clash that claims hundred of lives between the Muslims and Christians, who largely supported Buba.[6]
Similar riots in 2001 between Christians and Muslims in Jos also killed hundreds.[7] A 2004 riot in Yelwa, another town in Plateau State resulted in the so-called Yelwa Massacre. Fighting in the north-central Kaduna State when it tried to impose shari'a law in 2000, resulted in the partition of Kaduna. This was followed by the Kaduna riots of November 2002, resulting from Nigeria's hosting of the Miss World contest, which one of its contestants had won the previous year.[8]
Riots
The two days of rioting led to the death of at least 761 people,[3] and homes, mosques, churches and schools were damaged or burned by mobs.[9][10] The Nigerian Red Cross Society reported that 10,000 people fled their homes due to the riots,[2][11] and were living in government-provided shelters.[6]Nigerian soldiers were sent into Jos to break up the fighting and create a buffer zone between the Christians and Muslims.[12] Flights to and from Jos were cancelled and roads to the north were blocked.[13]
Effects
Jonah Jang, the governor of the Plateau State, imposed a 24-hour curfew on four districts of the city, and soldiers were permitted to "shoot on sight" to prevent more violence.[6]Human Rights Watch alleged that soldiers and police carried out more than 130 extrajudicial killings while responding to the riots.[9] Many armed youths of both sides were arrested at military roadblocks.[12] Police reported that more than 500 people were arrested as a result of the riots. But state officials said no one was successfully prosecuted.[3]
Blench, R. M., Daniel, P. & Hassan, Umaru (2003): Access rights and conflict over common pool resources in three states in Nigeria. Report to Conflict Resolution Unit, World Bank (extracted section on Jos Plateau)