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<title>FACTORS UNDERLYING THE TRANSFORMATION OF VIOLENT RADICALISED GROUPS IN THE SOUTH-EAST AND SOUTH-WEST NIGERIA, 2003-2014</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2293</link>
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<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2026 16:12:26 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-06T16:12:26Z</dc:date>
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<title>FACTORS UNDERLYING THE TRANSFORMATION OF VIOLENT RADICALISED GROUPS IN THE SOUTH-EAST AND SOUTH-WEST NIGERIA, 2003-2014</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2294</link>
<description>FACTORS UNDERLYING THE TRANSFORMATION OF VIOLENT RADICALISED GROUPS IN THE SOUTH-EAST AND SOUTH-WEST NIGERIA, 2003-2014
EWURUM, Evaristus Chidi
Globally, violent radicalised groups (VRGs) pose a threat to national security. Oodua Peoples‟&#13;
Congress (OPC) and the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB)&#13;
who initially emerged as groups set up to fight against perceived marginalisation and insecurity in&#13;
South-West and South-East regions later got metamorphosed into violent radicalised groups&#13;
threatening the national security. OPC on its own has a history of violence with recorded cases of&#13;
clashes and violence with Nigeria‟s security agencies (Nigeria Police and Army) at Arepo in Ogun&#13;
State over cases involving oil installations protection, among others. Existing studies on VRGs have&#13;
largely concentrated on their emergence and proliferation, with little attention paid to factors&#13;
underlying their transformation. This study, therefore, was designed towards examining the factors&#13;
that led to transformation of OPC and MASSOB to VRGs, the interface with security agents in the&#13;
process of transformation, the political economy that influenced the transformation and perceived&#13;
influence of the groups from 2003 to 2014 in the South-East and South-West, Nigeria.&#13;
Social Movement, Political Economy and Dollard‟s Frustration-Aggression theories served as the&#13;
framework, while an exploratory survey design was adopted. Primary and secondary data were&#13;
obtained. South-East and South-West Nigeria were purposively selected as the homelands of OPC&#13;
and MASSOB respectively. A sample of 452 respondents was drawn using Cochran‟s (1977)&#13;
sample size formula. A structured questionnaire was conveniently administered to community&#13;
members in Lagos, Ijebu-Ode, Osogbo, Ibadan, Awka, Aba, Onitsha, Owerri and Enugu, the&#13;
instrument covered all the research objectives and was complemented by in-depth interviews and&#13;
focused group discussions. Ten In-Depth Interviews got conducted with four community leaders,&#13;
two each zone and six youth leaders, three each from each zone. Six focus group discussions, three&#13;
each from each zone were held with youth associations. Secondary data were obtained from&#13;
journals, newspaper reports, internet sources and other relevant publications. Data gathered were&#13;
content analysed.&#13;
The OPC and MASSOB were transformed into VRGs as a result of politics of ethnicity and&#13;
agitation for regional sovereignty. MASSOB was basically formed to advance the interest of the&#13;
Igbo (53.5%), OPC was reported as ethnic movement (56.0%). It was discovered from the&#13;
qualitative data that the long term political marginalisation compounded with Nigeria law&#13;
enforcement agencies‟ reaction to their conducts accounted for transformation of the groups into&#13;
VGRs. Law enforcement crackdowns on the groups (63.0%), repressive nature of the state (51.0%)&#13;
and arrest of their leaders triggered the transformation to VRGs. Relatedly, „growing poverty‟ and&#13;
stiffening economic realities contributed to the radicalisation of the youth wings of the groups thus&#13;
posed threats to live and political stability in the country. Despite the transformation to VRGs,&#13;
45.0% opined that OPC had been very helpful in securing lives and property in the South-West,&#13;
while 67.0% indicated that MASSOB had been effective in the sensitisation for the actualization of&#13;
the Biafra state.&#13;
The perceived ethnic or tribal marginalisation with political agitation of the Yoruba and Igbo ethnic&#13;
groups were pivotal in the transformation of OPC and MASSOB to violent radicalised groups from&#13;
2003 to 2014 in the Southwestern and Southeastern regions of Nigeria. There is the need to build&#13;
reliable democratic process for inclusive representations of all geopolitical zones in Nigeria.
</description>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Oct 2021 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2021-10-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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