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 NigeriaWest African SuperpowerAs leader of the multination peacekeeping force
ECOMOG, Nigeria established itself as West Africa's superpower,
intervening militarily in the civil wars of Liberia and Sierra Leone. But
Nigeria's costly war efforts were unpopular with its own people, who felt
Nigeria's limited economic resources were being unnecessarily drained.
Abacha died of a heart attack in 1998 and was
succeeded by another military ruler, Gen. Abdulsalam Abubakar, who pledged
to step aside for an elected leader by May 1999. The suspicious death of
opposition leader Mashood Abiola, who had been imprisoned by the military
ever since he legally won the 1993 presidential election, was a crushing
blow to democratic proponents. In Feb. 1999, free presidential elections
led to an overwhelming victory for Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, a former member
of the military elite who was imprisoned for three years for criticizing
the military rule. Obasanjo's commitment to democracy, his anticorruption
drives, and his desire to recover billions allegedly stolen by the family
and cronies of Abacha initially gained him high praise from the populace
as well as the international community. But within two years, the hope of
reform seemed doomed as economic mismanagement and rampant corruption
persisted. Obasanjo's priorities in 2001 were epitomized by his plans to
build a $330 million national soccer stadium, an extravagance that
exceeded the combined budget for both health and education. In April 2003,
he was reelected.
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