Saudi Arabia is often cited as a country that deals decisively with extremism. The state moves swiftly. Enforcement is centralized. Authority is rarely fragmented.
But Nigeria is not Saudi Arabia. Nigeria is a plural, federal democracy with deep ethnic, religious, and political diversity. Its structure makes the question more complex:
Can Nigeria be strict about religious, political, and tribal extremists, and should it? The answer is yes. But not in the same way as Saudi Arabia.
The Security Reality
Nigeria has already experienced violent extremism through groups such as Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province.
These were not abstract ideological movements. They exploited:
– Weak governance
– Youth unemployment
– Fragile local institutions
– Poor intelligence coordination
Security strictness is necessary. But strictness without legitimacy creates sympathy for radicals.
For Nigeria, security reform must mean:
– Intelligence-led policing
– Professionalized security agencies
– Equal prosecution of incitement
– Speedy judicial processing of extremist cases
The law must be firm but visibly neutral. Selective enforcement destroys credibility faster than weak enforcement.
The Political Dimension
Political extremism in Nigeria is rarely spontaneous.
 It is often engineered. Elite actors sometimes weaponize:
– Ethnic insecurity
– Religious identity
– Regional grievance
This creates a cycle:
1. Citizens feel marginalized.
2. Politicians amplify grievance.
3. Identity hardens.
4. Accountability weakens.
5. Governance declines.
6. Marginalization deepens.
And the loop continues.
 Unlike centralized systems such as Saudi Arabia, Nigeria operates within constitutional freedoms. Suppression cannot be the primary tool. Institutional maturity must be.
The key reform here is electoral integrity and judicial independence. When political competition becomes transparent and credible, extremist rhetoric loses electoral value.
PART TWO TO BE CONTINUED TOMORROW.Â

