THISDAY

SATIRU: 118 YEARS AFTER

- CHIDI ANSELM ODINKALU argues for a dispassion­ate inquiry into the Okuama violence

Some 22.5 kilometres south-west of Sokoto, there used to exist a community called Satiru. In March 1906, it was extinguish­ed from the face of the earth. Three years earlier, in July 1903, the British had massacred Muhammadu Attahiru, the 11th Sultan of Sokoto together with over 1,000 of his followers, decapitati­ng him in Burmi (near Bajoga in present day Gombe State, north-east Nigeria) and then displayed photograph­s of “the beheaded Sultan of Sokoto throughout Northern Nigeria.”

Many among the faithful in the region at the time regarded Frederick Lugard and his lot as infidels. The fate of Sultan Attahiru inspired, as Lugard would later complain in his 1906 annual report, “a series of local ebullition­s in favour of some Mahdi or reformer”, claiming a mission to rid the people of these infidels.

At the beginning of February in 1904, Satiru’s district head proclaimed himself The Mahdi and his son, as Prophet Isa (Jesus). Sultan Muhammadu Attahiru II, whom the British installed the previous year after killing his brother, arrested and detained the Mahdist pretender, who tragically died in detention. His son, Isa, succeeded him.

In January 1906, an itinerant preacher, Dan Makafo, arrived from French Niger (Niger Republic) to boost Isa’s insurgent claims. The following month, when the neighbouri­ng community of Tsomo were reluctant to accord him recognitio­n as prophet, Isa and his followers attacked the village, reportedly killing 14 and declaring a Jihadist rebellion against the British infidels.

Unlike in 1904 when they encouraged the Sultan to deal with Isa’s dad, the British chose in 1906 to handle Isa’s impertinen­ce by themselves. On Saint Valentine’s Day in 1906, the Acting Resident, Mr. Hillary; his assistant, Mr. AGM Scott, and a force of over 70 mounted infantry led by Lt. Francis Blackwood, approached Isa and his rebellious followers in Satiru. The absence of mutual intelligib­ility did not much help mutual suspicion. Communicat­ion quickly broke down between both sides and in the ensuing chaos, Isa and his followers killed Hillary, Scott, Blackwood and 29 of their troops, leaving the remainder to retreat in disarray.

On 10 March, Lugard’s forces returned to Satiru. They comprised 573 rifles, 70 armed police, a 2.95-inch gun and several Maxim guns. Confrontin­g them were Isa and over 2,000 of his followers armed with traditiona­l weapons. It was a mismatch. Lugard quotes what happened next: “someone gave an order, everyone fired, then a whistle blew, everyone stopped and there was no one left alive in the front.”

According to Jonathan Dewhirst, “in total it was estimated that Satiru lost over two thousand men killed, with over three thousand women and children captured. By half-past two in the afternoon the mission had ended, and the town burnt to the ground. The Sultan destroyed the ruins utterly, and decreed that the town should never be rebuilt.”

Isa was killed in the massacre. Dan Makafo was apprehende­d with five remaining leaders of the rebellion. Sultan Attahiru II had the six of them convicted by the Sokoto Native Court for rebellion and murder before executing them.

Lugard wrote a racy account of the exterminat­ion of Satiru in his 1906 annual report, exulting that the situation “demanded a signal and overwhelmi­ng victory for the restoratio­n of our prestige and the prevention of any such rising in future.”

Nine year earlier, in February 1897, General Harry Rawson led an expedition that massacred its way through the Benin, ransacking the city and its civilizati­on in retributio­n for an incident recalled by Queen Victoria in her diary of 12 January 1897 as follows: “a number of English officers & civilians including doctors &c who went on a friendly mission, but imprudentl­y not armed, were attacked & fired upon by the King of Benin.”

Satiru was almost assuredly the most egregious but by no means the only example of such punitive colonial expedition­s. Lugard described the policy as one entailing “a terrible retributio­n” with the stated goal being to “render any further appeal to arms unnecessar­y in the Sokoto Province for very many years.”

On the centenary of the exterminat­ion of Satiru, historian, Richard Gott, recalled that this was a vain hope, pointing out that “active Islamic resistance continued in Northern Nigeria until the 1930s, remaining a permanent concern and irritant to colonial officers.”

Some could argue with justificat­ion that this resistance continues until the present day. Not unlike the colonial period, martial retributio­n has not prevented assaults on uniformed symbols of the Nigerian state. Instead it has guaranteed it.

In the last week of October, 1990, youths in Umuechem, an oil-bearing community in Rivers State, protested against Shell Petroleum, alleging acts of pollution that had decimated their environmen­t, livelihood­s and wellbeing. Shell invited the police to quell the protests, which had been largely peaceful.

In the early hours of 31 October, a squadron of the Police Mobile Force invaded the community shooting at random “in a purported attempt to locate three of their members who had not returned the previous evening.” Over 80 members of the community were reported killed and nearly 500 houses destroyed or burnt by the police. A judicial commission of inquiry into the Umuechem Massacre later found “no evidence of a threat by the villagers and concluded that the Mobile Police had displayed ‘a reckless disregard for lives and property.’”

Umuechem did not quell restivenes­s in the Niger Delta. Instead, it appeared to inflame the region’s youths and radicalize them. The brutal murder by armed gangs of 12 police officers in Odi, Bayelsa State in November 1999, led to bloody reprisals on the orders of President Obasanjo “which may have killed hundreds of unarmed civilians.”

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