Abstract
This article is an insider's account of the vicious political struggles that shaped the April 2007 general elections in Nigeria which were adjudged to be fraudulent. It argues that the form of political struggles that gave rise that election derive from the enthronement of a particularly vicious and violent form of personal rule which is itself a product of Nigeria's colonial rule and long history of military dictatorship which saw to the concentration of power and resources in the state in the context of the existence of a weak bourgeois class and generalized poverty for the generality of the population. The intrigues and power struggles in Nigeria during its 4th Republic 1999–2007, particularly the power struggle between the country's President and his deputy are discussed to illustrate the character of Nigerian (and perhaps African) politics. Some suggestions are offered for a more just and stable Nigerian polity.
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