

Leiden: African Studies Centre, French Institute for Research in Africa, (IFRA) West African Politics and Society Series, Vol. ″Body Count and Religion in Boko Haram Crisis: evidence from the Nigeria Watch Database″ in Marc-Antoine Pérouse de Montclos (Ed.) Boko Haram, Islamism, Politics, Security and the State in Nigeria. Retrieved on 15 June 2020.Ĭhouin, G., Rehinert, M. Rethinking Vulnerability and ResistanceĪvailable at: › sites › default › files › files. Lecture delivered at Universidad Complutense de Madrid, June 8, 1-2. Performance, Precarity and Sexual Politics. Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable?, London: Verso.īutler, J. Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence, London: Verso.īutler, J. ″Bomb Blast: Igbo in Kano on 3-Day Mourning″. ″Boko Haram: Christians Boycott Churches″ in PM News. ″A Social and Economic History of Sabon-Gari Kano, 1913-1989″, PhD Thesis, Bayero University, Kano. ″I Cried like a Baby When Boko Haram Attacked Kano College-Lecturer″, Vanguard, 28, December.īako, A. Journal of Marketing Management, 31:15-16, pp. ″Judith Butler on Performativity and Precarity: Exploratory Thoughts on Gender and Violence in India″. Ibadan: Spectrum Books, 2nd Edition.Īnnamma J., Russell B.and Rishi B. Albert, (Eds.), Community Conflicts in Nigeria: Management, Resolution and Transformation. “Ethnic and Religious Conflicts in Kano’’ in O. IFRA Occasional Publication, No.2.Īlbert, I. Inter-Ethnic Relations in a Nigerian City: A Historical Perspective of the Hausa-Igbo Conflicts in Kano, 1953-1991. ″Explaining the Emergence of Boko Haram″ in Africa in Focus. The paper contributes to the growing scholarship on the impact of Boko Haram insurgency on Igbos and other non-indigenous groups in Northern Nigeria.Īdibe, J. The paper used mixed data collection of oral interviews, researcher's eye-witness accounts, media reports and secondary data. It argues that the Igbo coping strategies and resilience enabled them to stay and protect their investments. The paper contends that the Igbo being the largest migrant group in Kano, suffered greatly by the Boko Haram onslaught on Sabon Gari, where many of them resided. The paper also examines the coping strategies they adopted to survive amidst waves of insurgence attacks in Kano. The orgy of killings traumatized the Igbo and other Kano residents, leading to a mass exodus of Igbos from Kano to their home states in Eastern Nigeria, as their safety and their businesses could no longer be guaranteed. This paper examines Igbos' lived experiences during the insurgency attacks in Kano by exploring the risks the Igbos were exposed to during the heightened attacks on churches and businesses. Insurgent attacks in heavily Igbo populated area in Sabon-Gari (stranger's quarters) escalated significantly with more bomb detonations in Kano. Those affected cut across ethnic and religious divides, including an unspecified number of Igbos. The Boko Haram first siege in Kano in systematic, coordinated attacks on the security personnel and government institutions on January 20 2012, leftover 250 people dead and colossal amounts of property destroyed.
