Nigeria
  
Facts & Figures
 

President: Umaru Yar’Adua (2007)

Land area: 351,649 sq mi (910,771 sq km); total area: 356,667 sq mi (923,768 sq km)

Population (2008 est.): 138,283,240 (growth rate: 2.3%); birth rate: 39.9/1000; infant mortality rate: 93.9/1000; life expectancy: 47.8; density per sq km: 151

Capital (2003 est.): Abuja, 590,400 (metro. area), 165,700 (city proper)

Largest cities: Lagos (2003 est.), 11,135,000 (metro. area), 5,686,000 (city proper); Kano, 3,329,900; Ibadan, 3,139,500; Kaduna, 1,510,300

Monetary unit: Naira  

  

 

          

Umaru Musa Yar'Adua

               Umaru Yar'Adua

     

President of the
 Federal Republic of Nigeria

 

     Seal of the President of Nigeria

 

    Government

Multiparty government transitioning from military to civilian rule.

         History

The first inhabitants of what is now Nigeria were thought to have been the Nok people (500 B.C. –c. A.D. 200). The Kanuri, Hausa, and Fulani peoples subsequently migrated there. Islam was introduced in the 13th century, and the empire of Kanem controlled the area from the end of the 11th century to the 14th.

The Fulani empire ruled the region from the beginning of the 19th century until the British annexed Lagos in 1851 and seized control of the rest of the region by 1886. It formally became the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria in 1914. During World War I, native troops of the West African frontier force joined with French forces to defeat the German garrison in the Cameroons.