尼日利亚宗教极端主义和暴民暴力的抬头

I. H. Mshelia
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摘要

在本世纪初博科哈拉姆恐怖组织出现之前,尼日利亚的宗教极端主义曾在卡杜纳和高原等州引发大规模危机。自尼日利亚第四共和国成立以来,此类危机一直在破坏公共安全,进而影响国家对民族融合和可持续发展的追求。鉴于一起暴徒暴力事件导致一名据称发表亵渎神明言论的大学生惨遭杀害,本文对尼日利亚宗教极端主义的兴起进行了研究。除了关注贫困和文盲等人类安全威胁之外,本文还利用对已出版文件的案头审查,确定了在该国播下宗教极端主义种子的历史和政治因素。论文发现,现在构成尼日利亚国家的前殖民帝国的性质,加上殖民时期和殖民后的因素,包括伊斯兰司法制度知识的消散、政治权力的争夺以及分而治之的政治,这些因素汇聚在一起,使宗教在该国成为一种不稳定的现象。因此,本文得出结论认为,除非通过缓解和预防努力来解决这些多层面因素,如强有力的宗教教育、宗教管理、宗教间对话和经济赋权,否则尼日利亚对 "和平、正义和强有力的机构 "以及其他可持续发展目标(SDGs)的追求仍将是海市蜃楼。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Rising Religious Extremism and Mob violence in Nigeria
Before the emergence of Boko haram terrorist group in the early 2000s, religious extremism in Nigeria had sparked large scale crises in Kaduna and Plateau among other states in the country. Since the inception of the Nigerian fourth republic, such crises have been undermining public safety and by implication, the country’s quest for national integration and sustainable development. In the light of a mob violence that resulted in the gruesome murder of a college student who allegedly uttered blasphemous comment, this paper examined the rise of religious extremism in Nigeria. Looking beyond human security threats like poverty and illiteracy, the paper utilised desk review of published documents to establish the historical and political factors that sowed in the country, the seeds of religious extremism now germinating. The paper found that the nature of the pre-colonial empires that now make up the Nigerian state coupled with colonial and post-colonial factors including the dissipation of knowledge on Islamic justice system, competition over political powers and the politics of divide and rule have converged to make religion a volatile phenomenon in the country. Therefore, the paper concludes that until the multidimensional factors are addressed through mitigating and preventive efforts—such as robust religious education, religious regulation, interreligious dialogue and economic empowerment—the country’s quest for ‘peace, justice and strong institutions’ among other Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will remain a mirage.
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