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Middle Belt

The Middle Belt (also spelt Middle-Belt) or Central Nigeria is a term used in human geography to designate a belt region stretching across central Nigeria longitudinally and forming a transition zone between Northern and Southern Nigeria. It is composed of the southern half of the defunct Northern Region of Nigeria,[3] now comprising mostly the North Central and parts of the North East and North West geopolitical zones, and is characterised by its lack of a clear majority ethnic group. It is also the location of Nigeria's Federal Capital Territory.

Middle Belt Region
Central Nigeria
Motto: Our Land, Our People, Our Heritage
Largest cityAbuja
Official languagesEnglish
Major indigenous languages
Ethnic groups
Religion
Christianity
Islam
Traditional Religion
Demonym(s)Middle-Belter

The eminence of manifold minority groups, to some degree, constitutes an ethno-linguistic barrier in the country and draws a separation between the principally Muslim North and the mainly Christian south.[4] The region is a convergence of these cultural domains and maintains a tremendous degree of ethno-linguistic diversity. Afro-Asiatic, Nilo-Saharan, and Niger–Congo languages are all spoken, which are three of the primary African language families.[5] In the 1920s, it was described by Melzian (1928:496) as the "Middle Zone".[6]

Some nations of the Middle Belt of Nigeria

Some scholars argue that rather than a simple geographic definition, the Middle Belt represents a religious and cultural amalgamation of non-Hausa Christians.[7][further explanation needed]

Overview edit

As to what the Middle-Belt entails, three top members of the Middle-Beltern struggle had this to say as presented in the pan-Middle-Beltern magazine, New Vision in December, 2000:

"The Middle-Belt true to its name, is located in central Nigeria, and interacting with both the North and the South with large population of both Northern and Southern peoples, the Middle-Belt is always in the best position to interpret the North to the South, and the South to the North... What the Middle-Belt seeks therefore, is to advance its former stand has been addressed as North Central Zone to self identification as Middle-Belt region, and widen the scope of the informal sector which to this day cements the platform of our national unity, so that our elite in the Middle-Belt behave in the spirit of national unity, as adequately and persistently demonstrated by the grassroot people over the years."[8]

The veteran journalist, Chief Bayo Joseph, Media Consultant and Chairman, Editorial Board of the New Vision, on his own part said:

"Since amalgamation of 1914, the people of the Middle-Belt have been held under dehumanizing conditions, they are treated as third rated citizen, little or no regard is accorded their culture and tradition, while their so-called masters wallowed in affluence enjoying the best of everything to the detriment of the Middle-Belter... Accordingly, these people from the Middle-Belt have the right to discontinue their association with those who enslave them and hold their destiny in their hands."[9]

On another flash, Onesimus Enesi added that:

"The people of the Middle-Belt are not in the North and cannot therefore be northerners...Since it pleases God to distinguish the people he created along geographic, racial, national, ethnic and language divide, it is equally good to identify and call them as such and this is the wisdom behind the struggle for a separate identity for the people of the Middle-Belt."[10]

The definition of the Middle Belt areas are subject to great debate due to the presence of significant number of ethnic Hausa, Fulani, Kanuri and Igbo groups .[citation needed] In addition, the Yoruba who are the predominant ethnic group in Kwara and Kogi have a strong affinity with the larger Yoruba body and frequently prefer not to be associated with the Middle Belt identity.[citation needed]

Politics edit

Territories edit

States of Nigeria which are generally referred to as belonging to the Middle Belt are: old Plateau (now Plateau and Nasarawa), old Gongola (now Adamawa and Taraba), Niger, Kwara, Kogi, Benue, the Federal Capital Territory, alongside Southern Kaduna, Southern Bauchi, Southern Kebbi, Southern Gombe, Southern Yobe State and Southern Borno, all culturally considered as part of the Middle Belt.[3][11]

Agitations for a region edit

The yearnings for the creation of the Middle Belt region in Nigeria had been a burning issue, as even groups like the United Middle-Belt Youth Congress (UMYC) demand for a separate identity from the "North" by the creation of the Middle Belt region as a federal unit within Nigeria.[12]

Demographics edit

Population edit

The population of the Middle Belt as of 1991, was about 17.3 million but now predicted to be over 45 million people living in the middle belt region, with a predominant Christian population of 65%, Muslim population of 35% and Animist population of 10% of the total population.[3]

Ethnolinguistic groups edit

The Middle Belt consists of many ethnic groups speaking over 230 languages. There is no dominant ethnic group, but among the larger groups as of 1991 are: Tiv 5.1 million, Nupe 1.8 million.[3] These ethnic groups are represented by advocacy organizations such as CONAECDA.[13][14][15]

Ethnoreligious conflicts edit

Minorities in Nigeria tend to be dominated by the three largest ethnic groups, the Hausa of the North, the Yoruba of the Southwest and the Igbo of the Southeast. Surrounded by divergent religious, economic, and cultural histories, the Middle Belt has been the melting pot where small and large ethno-religious groups in Nigeria have long coexisted, but where they have also increasingly collided over land, resources, identity and political power.[16] The result is a mixture of recurring conflicts and occasional political unity and solidarity amongst these highly differentiated peoples. An example for the latter was the United Middle Belt Congress that emerged following Nigeria's independence from Britain in 1960. In particular, Jos city in Plateau State has been a centre for ethno-religious disputes and violence since the 1990s. The Jos Forum Inter-Communal Dialogue process spanned 16 months from August 2013 - December 2014, and refers to a peace process undertaken by communities living in Jos that concluded in a “Declaration of Commitment to Peace”. In 2018 violence escalated, with battles for scarce resources leading to over 500 deaths and 50 towns being destroyed. The clashes were largely between Muslim Fulani pastoralists and Christian Berom farmers. Over 300,000 people have been displaced by the violence.[17]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Obed Minchakpu: The Middle Belt question in Nigeria's political discourse". The Sun Online. 12 March 2015. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
  2. ^ "North must apologise for atrocities committed against Middle Belt –Prof Yusuf Turaki". Daily Post. 24 April 2021. Retrieved 25 July 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d Johnson, Patrick (1978). Operation World: A day-to-day guide to praying for the world (4th ed.). OM Publishing and WEC Publications. pp. 327–328. ISBN 1-85078-007-2.
  4. ^ Johannes Harnischfeger, Democratization and Islamic Law: The Sharia Conflict in Nigeria (Frankfurt am Main 2008) p. 38. Campus Verlag. ISBN 3593382563
  5. ^ "Languages of Africa". www.fmprc.gov.cn. Retrieved 30 May 2020.
  6. ^ Melzian, H. (1928). "Review: [Untitled]". Africa: Journal of the International African Institute. 1 (4): 495–496. doi:10.2307/1155920. JSTOR 1155920. S2CID 143502810. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  7. ^ Olaitan, Toba (13 June 2020). "Why Nigeria's North central region can't be renamed "Middle Belt"". Tribune Online. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
  8. ^ Seri, Fidelis (2000). "MIDDLE-BELT: AN AGENDA FOR THE 21ST CENTURY". New Vision. 1 (2): 10–11.
  9. ^ Joseph, Bayo (2000). "THOUGHTS OF A VETERAN". New Vision. 1 (2): 7–9.
  10. ^ Enesi, Onesimus (2000). "OPC VERSUS HAUSA/FULANI". New Vision. 1 (2): 13–18.
  11. ^ "Nigeria: Rising Toll of Middle-Belt Violence". 28 June 2018. Retrieved 13 July 2020.
  12. ^ Akinferon, Dapo; Kumolu, Charles (9 December 2011). "We're not northerners- Middle-Belt youths". Vanguard.ng. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  13. ^ Blench, Roger (2020). An Atlas of Nigerian Languages (PDF). Cambridge: Kay Williamson Educational Foundation.
  14. ^ Blench, Roger. 2019. Old data and new technologies: the seamless integration of linguistics, literacy and translation for Nigerian minority languages. Jos Linguistic Circle, Jos, 13th March, 2019.
  15. ^ Blench, Roger (31 December 2020). "Research on the Plateau languages of Central Nigeria". Afrika und Übersee. Hamburg University Press. 93: 3–44. doi:10.15460/auue.2020.93.1.209. S2CID 128339090.
  16. ^ Higazi, Adam (January 2011). "The Jos Crisis: A Recurrent Nigerian Tragedy" (PDF). Working Paper. Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (2): 3–6. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  17. ^ "Nigeria's Farmers and Herders Fight a Deadly Battle for Scarce Resources". Retrieved 27 June 2018.

External links edit

  • Blench, Roger. 2021. Reconstructing society in central Nigeria prior to 1800. Presented on 12 June 2021.

middle, belt, also, spelt, middle, belt, central, nigeria, term, used, human, geography, designate, belt, region, stretching, across, central, nigeria, longitudinally, forming, transition, zone, between, northern, southern, nigeria, composed, southern, half, d. The Middle Belt also spelt Middle Belt or Central Nigeria is a term used in human geography to designate a belt region stretching across central Nigeria longitudinally and forming a transition zone between Northern and Southern Nigeria It is composed of the southern half of the defunct Northern Region of Nigeria 3 now comprising mostly the North Central and parts of the North East and North West geopolitical zones and is characterised by its lack of a clear majority ethnic group It is also the location of Nigeria s Federal Capital Territory Middle Belt RegionCentral NigeriaMotto Our Land Our People Our HeritageLargest cityAbujaOfficial languagesEnglishMajor indigenous languagesBole Tangale languagesBiu Mandara languagesEbiraGbagyiIdomoid languagesIgalaJukunoid languagesKainji languagesNgas languagesNupePlateau languagesSavannas languagesTivYorubaOther languages like Fulfulde Hausa and Kanuri being culturally northern Nigerian 1 2 Ethnic groupsAdaraAfizereAtyapBaatonumBachamaBajjuBeromBujiChambaDijimEbiraEggonGbagyi GbariHamHun SaareHubaIgedeIdomaIgalaJukunKamberiMambilaMarghiMumuyeNgasMadaNupeTangaleTarokTivYoruba Okun Zaar Guus Others Bogghom Gwong Igbo etc including northern groups like Fulani Hausa and Kanuri ReligionChristianityIslamTraditional ReligionDemonym s Middle BelterThe eminence of manifold minority groups to some degree constitutes an ethno linguistic barrier in the country and draws a separation between the principally Muslim North and the mainly Christian south 4 The region is a convergence of these cultural domains and maintains a tremendous degree of ethno linguistic diversity Afro Asiatic Nilo Saharan and Niger Congo languages are all spoken which are three of the primary African language families 5 In the 1920s it was described by Melzian 1928 496 as the Middle Zone 6 Some nations of the Middle Belt of NigeriaSome scholars argue that rather than a simple geographic definition the Middle Belt represents a religious and cultural amalgamation of non Hausa Christians 7 further explanation needed Contents 1 Overview 2 Politics 2 1 Territories 2 2 Agitations for a region 3 Demographics 3 1 Population 3 2 Ethnolinguistic groups 3 3 Ethnoreligious conflicts 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOverview editAs to what the Middle Belt entails three top members of the Middle Beltern struggle had this to say as presented in the pan Middle Beltern magazine New Vision in December 2000 The Middle Belt true to its name is located in central Nigeria and interacting with both the North and the South with large population of both Northern and Southern peoples the Middle Belt is always in the best position to interpret the North to the South and the South to the North What the Middle Belt seeks therefore is to advance its former stand has been addressed as North Central Zone to self identification as Middle Belt region and widen the scope of the informal sector which to this day cements the platform of our national unity so that our elite in the Middle Belt behave in the spirit of national unity as adequately and persistently demonstrated by the grassroot people over the years 8 The veteran journalist Chief Bayo Joseph Media Consultant and Chairman Editorial Board of the New Vision on his own part said Since amalgamation of 1914 the people of the Middle Belt have been held under dehumanizing conditions they are treated as third rated citizen little or no regard is accorded their culture and tradition while their so called masters wallowed in affluence enjoying the best of everything to the detriment of the Middle Belter Accordingly these people from the Middle Belt have the right to discontinue their association with those who enslave them and hold their destiny in their hands 9 On another flash Onesimus Enesi added that The people of the Middle Belt are not in the North and cannot therefore be northerners Since it pleases God to distinguish the people he created along geographic racial national ethnic and language divide it is equally good to identify and call them as such and this is the wisdom behind the struggle for a separate identity for the people of the Middle Belt 10 The definition of the Middle Belt areas are subject to great debate due to the presence of significant number of ethnic Hausa Fulani Kanuri and Igbo groups citation needed In addition the Yoruba who are the predominant ethnic group in Kwara and Kogi have a strong affinity with the larger Yoruba body and frequently prefer not to be associated with the Middle Belt identity citation needed Politics editTerritories edit States of Nigeria which are generally referred to as belonging to the Middle Belt are old Plateau now Plateau and Nasarawa old Gongola now Adamawa and Taraba Niger Kwara Kogi Benue the Federal Capital Territory alongside Southern Kaduna Southern Bauchi Southern Kebbi Southern Gombe Southern Yobe State and Southern Borno all culturally considered as part of the Middle Belt 3 11 Agitations for a region edit The yearnings for the creation of the Middle Belt region in Nigeria had been a burning issue as even groups like the United Middle Belt Youth Congress UMYC demand for a separate identity from the North by the creation of the Middle Belt region as a federal unit within Nigeria 12 Demographics editPopulation edit The population of the Middle Belt as of 1991 was about 17 3 million but now predicted to be over 45 million people living in the middle belt region with a predominant Christian population of 65 Muslim population of 35 and Animist population of 10 of the total population 3 Ethnolinguistic groups edit The Middle Belt consists of many ethnic groups speaking over 230 languages There is no dominant ethnic group but among the larger groups as of 1991 are Tiv 5 1 million Nupe 1 8 million 3 These ethnic groups are represented by advocacy organizations such as CONAECDA 13 14 15 Ethnoreligious conflicts edit Minorities in Nigeria tend to be dominated by the three largest ethnic groups the Hausa of the North the Yoruba of the Southwest and the Igbo of the Southeast Surrounded by divergent religious economic and cultural histories the Middle Belt has been the melting pot where small and large ethno religious groups in Nigeria have long coexisted but where they have also increasingly collided over land resources identity and political power 16 The result is a mixture of recurring conflicts and occasional political unity and solidarity amongst these highly differentiated peoples An example for the latter was the United Middle Belt Congress that emerged following Nigeria s independence from Britain in 1960 In particular Jos city in Plateau State has been a centre for ethno religious disputes and violence since the 1990s The Jos Forum Inter Communal Dialogue process spanned 16 months from August 2013 December 2014 and refers to a peace process undertaken by communities living in Jos that concluded in a Declaration of Commitment to Peace In 2018 violence escalated with battles for scarce resources leading to over 500 deaths and 50 towns being destroyed The clashes were largely between Muslim Fulani pastoralists and Christian Berom farmers Over 300 000 people have been displaced by the violence 17 See also edit1992 Zangon Kataf crises Culture of Northern Nigeria Agricultural sustainability in northern Nigeria CONAECDA an organization representing indigenous ethnic groups in the Middle BeltReferences edit Obed Minchakpu The Middle Belt question in Nigeria s political discourse The Sun Online 12 March 2015 Retrieved 25 July 2023 North must apologise for atrocities committed against Middle Belt Prof Yusuf Turaki Daily Post 24 April 2021 Retrieved 25 July 2023 a b c d Johnson Patrick 1978 Operation World A day to day guide to praying for the world 4th ed OM Publishing and WEC Publications pp 327 328 ISBN 1 85078 007 2 Johannes Harnischfeger Democratization and Islamic Law The Sharia Conflict in Nigeria Frankfurt am Main 2008 p 38 Campus Verlag ISBN 3593382563 Languages of Africa www fmprc gov cn Retrieved 30 May 2020 Melzian H 1928 Review Untitled Africa Journal of the International African Institute 1 4 495 496 doi 10 2307 1155920 JSTOR 1155920 S2CID 143502810 Retrieved 16 December 2020 Olaitan Toba 13 June 2020 Why Nigeria s North central region can t be renamed Middle Belt Tribune Online Retrieved 6 April 2023 Seri Fidelis 2000 MIDDLE BELT AN AGENDA FOR THE 21ST CENTURY New Vision 1 2 10 11 Joseph Bayo 2000 THOUGHTS OF A VETERAN New Vision 1 2 7 9 Enesi Onesimus 2000 OPC VERSUS HAUSA FULANI New Vision 1 2 13 18 Nigeria Rising Toll of Middle Belt Violence 28 June 2018 Retrieved 13 July 2020 Akinferon Dapo Kumolu Charles 9 December 2011 We re not northerners Middle Belt youths Vanguard ng Retrieved 3 August 2023 Blench Roger 2020 An Atlas of Nigerian Languages PDF Cambridge Kay Williamson Educational Foundation Blench Roger 2019 Old data and new technologies the seamless integration of linguistics literacy and translation for Nigerian minority languages Jos Linguistic Circle Jos 13th March 2019 Blench Roger 31 December 2020 Research on the Plateau languages of Central Nigeria Afrika und Ubersee Hamburg University Press 93 3 44 doi 10 15460 auue 2020 93 1 209 S2CID 128339090 Higazi Adam January 2011 The Jos Crisis A Recurrent Nigerian Tragedy PDF Working Paper Friedrich Ebert Stiftung 2 3 6 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Nigeria s Farmers and Herders Fight a Deadly Battle for Scarce Resources Retrieved 27 June 2018 External links editBlench Roger 2021 Reconstructing society in central Nigeria prior to 1800 Presented on 12 June 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middle Belt amp oldid 1184685035, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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