Newsweek

Why Nigeria’s Shiite Conflict Is Flaring Up Again

After deadly clashes and government bans, Nigeria’s Shiite Muslim community is pushing back.
A man pushes a cart filled with water bottles past a sign reading "Kill Boko Haram Not Shia" in Kano, Nigeria on April 8. Tensions between the IMN and Nigerian authorities in the past year threaten to further destabilize a country already fighting Boko Haram.
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On October 12, Shiite Muslims marked Ashura, the holiest day of their religious calendar, when devotees mourn the death of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson. But for Nigerian Shiites, the mourning was not just symbolic: Security forces and angry Sunni mobs disrupted processions across northern Nigeria, killing at least 11 people. The country’s biggest Shiite organization, the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), claims government-backed thugs also looted and burned Shiite homes and businesses. The central government for the violence.

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