Tag: Donald Trump

  • Venezuelan President, wife captured after  U.S. airstrikes, says Trump 

    Venezuelan President, wife captured after  U.S. airstrikes, says Trump 

    United States President Donald Trump has announced that Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, have been captured following U.S. airstrikes on Venezuelan territory, making the claim in a statement posted on his Truth Social page.

    In the post, Trump said the United States had “successfully carried out a large scale strike against Venezuela and its leader,” adding that Maduro and his wife had been captured and flown out of the country. He said the operation was conducted in conjunction with U.S. law enforcement agencies and promised further details at a news conference scheduled for later in the day at his Mar a Lago residence.

    The White House did not immediately issue a formal statement beyond the social media post, while the Pentagon confirmed that U.S. forces had carried out air operations targeting what it described as strategic locations linked to the Venezuelan leadership.

    Venezuelan authorities acknowledged that airstrikes had hit a government facility near Caracas in the early hours of Saturday but disputed elements of the U.S. account. 

    In a brief broadcast, state media said the attack caused casualties and damage to infrastructure, while officials said clarification was still being sought regarding the status of senior government figures.

    Read Also: Venezuelan President says will not participate in summit of Americas

    The airstrikes followed months of heightened U.S. military activity in the Caribbean and northern South America. In recent weeks, Washington had expanded naval patrols and aerial surveillance, citing efforts to disrupt drug trafficking routes allegedly linked to Venezuelan networks. 

    U.S. Southern Command announced multiple seizures of vessels it said were transporting narcotics, with American officials accusing elements within the Venezuelan state of providing protection for organised crime.

    Sanctions targeting Venezuelan military officials and shipping interests were also tightened, while joint maritime operations with regional allies were stepped up. U.S. officials repeatedly warned that stronger action would follow if Caracas continued to pose what Washington described as a security threat.

  • When U.S. fact-finding team visited

    When U.S. fact-finding team visited

    It would appear US president, Donald Trump’s threat of unilateral military action against Nigeria for alleged Christian persecution and genocide is gradually giving way to diplomatic engagement. That much could be discerned from meetings between officials of the Nigerian government and the US, hallmarked by last week’s visit of a fact-finding team to Nigeria.

    The evidence is also perceptible in statements emanating from both sides of the discussions. The National Security Adviser, Nuhu Ribadu had taken to his X handle to announce that he hosted a delegation of US congressmen as part of ongoing consultations between both countries. The meeting, according to him, followed earlier talks in Washington DC.

    Ribadu disclosed that discussions centred around counter terrorism cooperation, regional stability and ways to “strengthen the strategic security partnership between Nigeria and the United States”. But the meeting with the Nigerian government team was not the end of the assignment of the US fact-finding team.

    Straight from Abuja, the delegation made for Benue State where discussions were held separately with the governor, Rev. Fr. Hyacinth Alia followed by another with religious and traditional leaders to get their own side of the story. It is not clear whether the visit was arranged by the Nigerian government. But it appears the US team had their itinerary even before they left their country.

     US Congressman, Riley Moore posted in his X handle after one of the meetings: “It was an honour and deeply moving to meet with His Excellency, Bishop Wilfred Anagbe, Bishop Isaac Dogu and His Royal Highness, James Ioruza, the traditional ruler of the Tiv people to discuss the ongoing genocidal campaign by the Fulani in Benue State”.

    Moore said the US will not ignore the suffering reported by local leaders. “The US has heard your cries and we are working diligently towards solution”, he said. The delegation also visited the camps of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) where they heard first-hand, gory details of the killings from victims. Moore shared some of these chilling and heart-rending killing details which he said, will remain with him all his life.

    But he admitted that US concerns were positively received even as he hinted on the establishment of a joint task force between Nigeria and the US to “tackle these critical issues”.

    So, guns-a-blazing may no longer happen in the form threatened. If it will come, that will be through mutual understanding and agreement. That appears the reading from statements by the US delegation and their Nigerian counterparts. But all will depend on how Trump receives the report of the delegation. Going by Moore’s statements during and after the visit, the report is not going to favour Nigeria.

    Beyond this, there are, arising from the visit, issues that should not be allowed to peter out. And they relate to claims and statements that suffused the social space in reaction to Trump’s threat. Of particular concern was the insinuation that self-determination campaigns by the IPOB were responsible for Trump’s action. Those who canvassed this odious view, feign ignorance of the obvious infractions that influenced US action. It served their narrow interests to shift the blame to IPOB knowing the mortal harm it will inflict on the region where their activities are most felt.

    But when the US delegation came, they neither visited the southeast nor IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu. They did not visit Governor Charles Soludo of Anambra State to show evidence of Christians killing Christians which many writers have been referencing upon. He could not have shown them the Christians that populate the Ebubeagu security outfit or its variant called Agunaechemba that has been fingered in alleged extrajudicial killings.

    In one of those incidents, construction workers including a man from Isuofia, Soludo’s community were murdered on allegations of being IPOB hitmen. Neither could he have shown the US team evidence of the sins of his kinsmen severally killed in the north during religion-induced riots.

    Yet, he found comfort to say that Christians are killing Christians in the southeast in the circumstance he did. What could be the motive other than rope in the Igbo, majority of whom he admitted are Christians, in the US allegations of Christian persecution and genocide in Nigeria. But who said Christians or adherent of other religions do not commit crimes for it to be an issue?

    The US authorities had their lead and knew precisely where to get instant corroborative evidence-the Middle Belt. So, they wasted no time to arrive Benue State where they conferred with Bishops Anagbe and Dogu among other Christian leaders. They met with the Tor Tiv, Professor James Ayatse.

    Anagbe had twice prior to the US visit, made presentations to the US Congress on the killings in Benue. So, there was no limit to the weight of evidence the delegation could garner from Benue State. That fact is evident from Moore’s posts detailing chilling accounts of the killings through his interaction with victims in the IDP camps.

    Read Also: Akinnadewo urges Christian, Nigerian leaders to deepen humanitarian efforts

    The views of Tor Tiv are also not hidden. He had openly told President Tinubu at a stakeholders’ meeting last June that the killings and displacements in Benue State were a” calculated, well planned, full-scale genocidal invasion and land grabbing campaign” by herder terrorists and bandits and not mere herder-farmer clashes or communal disputes.

    He had then also insisted the violence is a war and a systematic effort at ethnic cleansing while its characterisation as herder-farmer conflict obfuscates its true nature and deeply offends the victims’ realities. He is likely to show evidence of this claim to the US fact-finding team.

    The findings of the US team are likely to puncture claims by Governor Alia in the wake of the controversy that: “in my state Benue, we don’t have any religious, any ethnic, any racial, any national or state genocide”. He had also claimed there is no jihad going on in any part of the country.

    Alia must have been cornered by the dialectics of St. Aquinas’ allegory of two cities – the City of God and the City of Man when he said, “I’m speaking to you as a reverend father in the church. I’m speaking to you as a governor of a state”.

    It is difficult to operate from the two contrasting realms without running into serious contradictions. Ironically, his claims mock the distinction by medieval philosophers between the ecclesiastical and corporeal realms; between the purview of state and religion. It was not for nothing that his Bishops opted to meet separately with the US delegation.

    It is not clear why the US team did not visit Plateau State, another key Middle Belt state faced with the same pattern of killings as Benue. Jonathan Ishaku, a top journalist and author from Plateau State shared frustrations in his Facebook for inability to hand over three of his books to Moore.

     He named them as: The Road to Mogadishu, Janjaweed in the Middle Belt, The Butcher of Kaduna and the Rise of state-backed violence. Their titles speak for the contents and add to extant evidence available to the fact-finding team. Do we still have to worry about how Trump reached his conclusions?

  • Let us stop this blame game and get serious

    Let us stop this blame game and get serious

    By Femi Osunro

    A few days ago, I saw a video in the Social media where a man was insulting our female football players in a bus in Switzerland by calling them terrorists and shameless athletes from a terrorist Country. Some of the football players reacted furiously to the assailant who kept telling them that if they dared assault him, he would get them arrested by the police. I was nearly moved to tears by the embarrassment and humiliation these young lasses were subjected to due to no fault of theirs. However, I was very much impressed by the wonderful show of patriotism by these young Nigerians as they also continued to resist the intimidation and stood their ground.

    No doubt, such an ugly incident was apparently brought about my the recent declaration of Nigeria as a Country Under Watch by President Donald Trump of USA who claimed that Christians were being subjected to genocide and kidnapping in Nigeria. He even went further to threaten that he would order American troops to invade Nigeria to liberate Christians from the Islamic Insurgents. At first, when President Trumps made the allegation, I thought that it was a mere diversionary tactic to ease the pressure on his Administration which was facing unprecedented bashing from various fronts in USA. Indeed, to many Americans and some other watchers of the situation in that Country, America had never had it so bad. Many are even asking the question – “how did America get to this sorry pass?”

    At present, USA is facing crises in various fronts viz the immigration policy of Donald Trump which has spiraled out of hand, the incessant shootings of students in their Schools; the “unconstitutional” invasion by Federal troops into some States without their consents/invitation, thus leading to many Court cases challenging these constitutional breaches, the on-going agitations for the release of the ‘Epstein Files’ on the live and escapades of Jeffery Epstein, a convicted felon who was a bossom friend of Trump for years before he was eventually arrested, jailed and later committed suicide in prison. Despite the attempts of Trump Administration, the call for the release of the Epstein files had refused to die down and indeed it is threatening the very foundation of Trump Administration. There is also the spate of indictment of some Legal Officers of some States by the Trump Administration which are being contested in various Courts of Law across the United States. On top of all these is the case of the longest shut-down of Government in the history of United States which had caused various disruptions in the lives of Americans notable of which is the non-payment of salaries of some essential workers of the Federal Government. The list of various problems confronting Trump’s Administration is quite long. Indeed, things had gone so bad for Donald Trump that some media organisations like the MSN are now calling him unprintable names while some even question his state of mind and thence his competence to govern the ‘largest democracy’ in the world. Things have gotten so bad for Trump that his assessment rating had been on a downward spiral for quite sometime and this has even been validated by the recent losses of his party – The Republican Party – in some Mayoral elections. In essence, to say that Donald Trump is in the worst crisis of his political life will be an understatement. With all these, my initial reaction to Trump’s allegation of genocide against Christians in Nigeria was that this was a usual recourse of Trump to diversionary tactic to shy away from the multi-dimensional problems of his Administration. At the time of his claim, there was nothing to support that there was genocide against Christians in Nigeria. What we had substantially was the case of romping bands of brigands who were attacking and kidnapping people randomly for monetary gains or for sadistic and satanic reasons.

    However, and to my utter bewilderment many Nigerian especially some politicians seized the opportunity of Trump’s claim to start bashing the Federal Government of Nigeria for failing to put an end to the spate of banditry as if it just started under the Administration. In essence, some saw the “development” as failure of Government and governance. Such actions tend to validate the assertion of Trump while some were even calling on Trump to, as he threatened, come and save Christians from Islamic genocide. To me, such positions were grossly unpatriotic. While one grants  Trump the right to continue to make his weird outbursts e.g. threatening to annex Canada as the 51st State of USA etc., I expect our people to question Trump’s right to be a judge in our affairs as a sourverign country. Also, I expected people to declare to Trump that “physician, heal thyself.” But trust Nigerian politicians -they will do anything to discredit any Government in power to get themselves enthroned in the saddle. To the opposition parties, they hardly saw anything good about the Government in power. However and unfortunately, their motive had always been to seize power at all possible means and not that they have any better plan for Nigeria.

    Be that as it may, I think that it is high time that we sat down to take a deep reflection of our situation in this country about this sudden upsurge in cases of abductions solely targeted at Christian establishments and organisations. Some pertinent questions need to be asked – Is this development a deliberate act by the enemies of Nigeria, both inside and outside our shores – to get a reason to discredit and possibly push out the present Administration? Is there any possible foreign interest in all these meant to truncate the independent chatting of a new foreign policy direction by the present Administration to look beyond its traditional allies for support and collaboration? Is anybody or country being threatened by the emerging loss of pre-eminent relationship, with Nigeria? Is this a ploy to call the “dog a bad name to destroy it”. One cannot but ask such questions with the disturbing escalation of deliberate and concentrated attacks on Christians organisations in some parts of the Federation. As the Yoruba people will say – EJO LOWO NINU!!. I had always had this knack that kidnappers were being sponsored by some “businessmen” who were using them to make easy money. Or how else do you explain the fact that most of those who had been captured / arrested as kidnappers did not look like people who have seen or counted hundreds or thousands of Naira not to talk of millions that were said to have been paid to them as ransoms.

    In the face of all these, I think that we, Nigerians, should now start to think seriously about how to put an end to the escalating insurgency and save our country from an impending catastrophe, which, at the end, will not do anybody any good. That is why I am now calling on our people to start thinking of and taking concrete steps to stem this horrifying trend of kidnapping etc. This is not an attempt to defend Government’s position on this issue. The Government already has a plethora of media and advertisement gurus who can do this. All the same, it is most unfair if not unreasonable to put all the blame of the persistent insurgency on Government alone. We all have a role to play to save our country from this looming disaster which the insurgents and their backers/collaborators want to impose on us.

    Read Also: Shettima, governors, commissioners, others meet in Abuja to tackle Nigeria’s education crisis

    That is why I expect our religious leaders to start praying to God to put to shame these insurgents and their sponsors before they destroy this Country or plunge all of us into hardship and severe disruption. For example, our Christian adherents should remind our Heavenly Father of His unfailing declaration that the wiles of the devil shall never prevail against the Church. I am also amused by some religious leaders pleading with Trump to come and ‘save’ Nigeria. What about what they are teaching us in our Churches that we should not look up to man but to God who is our Refuge in times of trouble. Why not pray to God who turned the “Counsel of Ahithophel to foolishness” to intervene in our affairs and expose, punish, frustrate the efforts of the evil machinations of the insurgents and their sponsors? And what about the prayer that God should “trouble our troublers”. In essence, the trouble is not with our stars but with ourselves that we are still struggling under the oppression of these insurgents. Why don’t we pray to take back our Country from insurgents. What of the spiritualists who claim to have ‘powers’ to do and undo? They should now come out and use their ‘power’ against these enemies of our Country. After all, we all have no other Country to call our own. What about our local communities especially the vigilante groups. We all have to be much-more watchful and pro-active to expose these agents of the devil, who are residents in our area, before they destroy us.

    This is no longer of a question of us and them i.e. the citizens on one part and the Government on the other. We should never be in doubt that any Government, however well-intentioned cannot put an end to this kind of insurgency on its own as, to me, it appears to be sponsored, encouraged and sustained. No doubt, the Government has to do much more to put an end to the ugly trend but the truth must be told, Government cannot do it alone. It needs the support, prayers, cooperation and active participation of the citizens to confront these agents of the devil. After all, even if we recruit more security agents in large numbers, they cannot be at all places at the same time particularly in such a large Country as Nigeria with its many rural communities some of which are barely accessible by motorable roads.

    Personally, the most-disturbing phenomenon of the activities of the insurgents is that they are debarring those who had worked tirelessly over the years for the good of this Country to have peace of mind, move freely within the Country and enjoy their advanced years. May the Good Lord save us and confront those who are disturbing our peace and comfort. Any weapon fashioned against our dear Country Nigeria will never flourish and God will surely heal our Land.

    I see myself as a Patriot of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and I am a passionate lover of good governance. But I want to remind all us that a people get the type of Government they deserve. To salvage this Country from the present menace imposed on us by these insurgents, all hands must be on deck to take back our Country. Now is the time to stop the blame game and chart “the way forward” to save our dear Country. A word is enough for the wise.!

    •Femi Osunro, a retired Permanent Secretary, resides in Ibadan.

  • There’s more to America’s sudden interest Nigeria

    There’s more to America’s sudden interest Nigeria

    Sir: The U.S. President, Donald Trump, recently released a statement alleging that Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. He not only labelled the country as one of particular concern but also vowed to invade in order to stop the killings of Christians. He also threatened to cut off aid support to Nigeria.

    As expected, Trump’s statement has generated controversies. Some welcomed the idea of a U.S. invasion, if only to put paid to the decades of insecurity in the country; others against the idea, citing countries that America has invaded where nothing good came out of it in the end. There are also those who remain neutral and would rather make fun of it.

    There is more to America’s sudden interest in Nigeria than meets the naked eye. Every right-thinking person knows that the Christian population in Nigeria is not the only casualty in the more than one decade of insecurity in the country. We are all casualties, to borrow from the lines of John Pepper Clark’s poem The Casualties. Christians have been killed as much as Muslims and even traditional worshippers. So, when someone sits in the Oval Office in America and talks about Christian genocide, does it mean that the Muslims and adherents of other religions who have been killed are nameless and faceless?

    It would shock some of those hailing Donald Trump if, after applying for asylum in America on claims of persecution in Nigeria, they are denied. The truth is that no Nigerian Christian should be happy with the Christian genocide narrative in a country where they are not minorities.

    Perhaps comprehension has become a casualty in this debate, but I find it difficult to understand how anyone can claim that President Trump’s recent statement on faith-based violence in Nigeria aligns with the sectarian agenda advanced by certain groups. Two points stand out clearly in his comments. First, he deliberately avoided describing the situation in Nigeria as “genocide,” instead using the phrase “existential threat to Christians.” Secondly, and crucially, he identified radical Islamists, not the Nigerian state, and certainly not Nigerian Muslims—as the perpetrators of violence. These distinctions matter greatly, as they contradict the divisive rhetoric being promoted by those seeking to pit one faith community against another.

    This is not the first time President Trump has raised concerns about alleged one-sided violence against Christians. During former President Muhammadu Buhari’s visit to the White House on April 30, 2018, Trump remarked: “We’re deeply concerned by religious violence in Nigeria, including the burning of churches and the killing of Christians.” In response, President Buhari, while framing the violence as indiscriminate, acknowledged the challenge of violent herdsmen and cross-border recruits from Libya and the Sahel, stressing that his government was doing its best to stabilise the situation.

    There is a reason that moment remains instructive. Rather than amplifying a narrative of state-sponsored sectarian extermination, the U.S. side identified religious violence as one of several security concerns. The Nigerian side responded by framing the violence as part of complex socio-security dynamics, not as a conspiracy of Muslims against their Christian compatriots.

    Read Also: Akobo calls for redefinition of universities’ role in Nigeria’s emerging economy

    President Trump’s statement, while emotively focused on Christian victims, does not mirror the propaganda promoted by some far-right commentators who claim that the Nigerian government turns a blind eye to attacks on Christians or that Nigerian Muslims are complicit. On the contrary, he singled out radical extremists. This distinction aligns with the Nigerian government’s own position and reflects the sacrifices of its multi-faith armed forces in confronting terrorism across the Sahel and West Africa.

    The line between NGO activism and diplomatic engagement is clear. Activism draws its energy from outrage, while diplomacy thrives on dialogue. In this regard, the response of Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs exemplifies the restraint and statesmanship required in such a situation. It acknowledges the concerns raised, reaffirms Nigeria’s commitment to religious freedom, and emphasises partnership with the United States in tackling violent extremism, the central theme of President Trump’s statement.

    Nigeria, as Africa’s largest democracy, operates in a sub-region where democratic governance has faced severe strain in recent years. It cannot afford the luxury of an antagonistic posture toward a strategic partner like the United States, and it is reasonable to believe that the U.S. authorities are equally aware of this. There are no winners in a diplomatic standoff between Abuja and Washington, only losses for both nations. What must prevail now is reason.

    •Zayd Ibn Isah,lawcadet1@gmail.com

  • Trump’s aggression, a wake-up call for focused leadership

    Trump’s aggression, a wake-up call for focused leadership

    By Tekena Amieyeofori

    President Donald Trump’s recent designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern and his subsequent threat of military action against the country on account of alleged persecution of Christians have since sparked off global outrage. Many have condemned the American leader’s meddlesomeness as an affront to Nigeria’s sovereignty, while a few others insist that an external response to the alleged religious pogrom in Nigeria is most welcome in a country where leaders have shirked their constitutional responsibility to protect lives and property for too long.

    Unlike many others that emerge and die naturally in just a matter of weeks, this debate deserves the kind of introspection that should provide an answer to a pertinent question. How did Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa endowed with immense natural and human resources, descend so helplessly in the comity of nations such that it now takes an outsider to volunteer himself like a knight in shining armour to defend a people he barely knows nor cares about?

    There are no flies on Nigerians. President Trump cannot be more catholic than the pope. He could be an American nationalist, but certainly not the global statesman he claims to be. His rather belligerent foreign policy leaves no one in doubt that self-interest lies at the heart of his politics. Today, Nigeria and her neighbours in the global south are at the receiving end of climate crises largely fueled by the environmentally unsustainable methods of fossil fuel production by transnational companies owned by the west. For instance, a 2024 study published by the New Hampshire-based Dartmouth College identifies the US as the world’s largest historical emitter of greenhouse gases. The study reveals that hydrocarbon emissions from the US alone cost the world more than $1.9tn in climate change damages between 1990 and 2014.

    Unfortunately, Trump has reversed President Joe Biden’s policies on climate change by ordering increased local fossil fuel production. Under Trump’s presidency, the US has pulled out of the Paris Agreement aimed at reducing greenhouse gas concentrations to prevent “dangerous anthropogenic (human-induced) interface with the climate system”. Furthermore, the US, despite being a major perpetrator of global climate injustice, has decided to significantly reduce its contributions to international climate initiatives under the Trump administration. Meanwhile in the Niger Delta region where US-owned oil majors like ExxtonMobil and Chevron have operated for decades, local communities have been victims of ecological genocide and untold economic exploitation. In Nigeria’s oil belt, ecological warfare continues to dislocate people from their sources of livelihood and has sent many to their early graves, yet Trump fails to acknowledge a gross violation of our common humanity in that region.

    In the history of America’s presidency, Trump remains the most undemocratic leader and the most poorly equipped diplomat-in-chief. In the aftermath of the 2020 presidential election, precisely on June 6, 2021, America witnessed a wanton desecration of her democratic values when a band of Trump’s supporters invaded the Capitol Hill, leaving four persons dead, roughly 140 police officers assaulted, and many others severely injured. On his return to the White House, we saw a remorseless Trump whose first course of action was to pardon 1,500 of his supporters who perpetrated the June 6, 2021 assault on the Capitol Hill- the very symbol and bulwark of America’s democracy. 

    Back to the question of how Nigeria now finds herself in such a quandary that allows a meddlesome interloper to pry into her internal affairs, there’s an African saying that if your family does not sell you, a stranger will not buy you. Trump is bullying Nigeria today because the country that once wielded considerable influence in global politics has become a shadow of itself on account of poor leadership.

    In the 1970s President Olusegun Obasanjo, as military Head of State, stood up to the British government when he nationalised British Petroleum, renaming it African Petroleum. In the same vein, the British-owned Barclays Bank was nationalised and renamed Union Bank, with a directive barring it from buying South African bonds in rejection of apartheid rule in the country. The heavens did not fall!

    The thrust of Nigeria’s Afrocentric foreign policy in the 1970s was non-alignment at the height of the Cold War. At the time, Nigeria played a leading role in the formation of the Organisation of African Unity (later renamed African Union) and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), declaring support for liberation movements and countries struggling for emancipation from western political hegemony. In the Angolan independence struggle, Nigeria supported the Marxist Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) upon discovering that the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola had the support of the United States. At the end of the Angolan independence war, the Nigerian-backed MPLA emerged victorious. Apparently, the US which provided covert financial and material support to groups like the FNLA and UNITA had been outwitted by Nigeria.

    In those good old days, Nigeria wielded enormous influence on the global stage from a position of economic strength. The country witnessed an oil boom in the 1970s, following a raging war in the Middle East. A sizeable portion of the economic windfall was committed to providing financial aid and technical support for neighbouring African states. Beneficiaries of Nigeria’s financial assistance between 1973 and 1975 were Guinea Bissau, Cape Verde, Mozambique, and Sao Tome and Principe. In 1985, military president, Ibrahim Babangida introduced the Technical Aid Corps (TAC) to consolidate on Nigeria’s economic support programme for fellow African countries. The TAC policy went beyond providing financial support to include manpower assistance for smaller African countries.

    Owing to Nigeria’s leading role, she was soon identified as the giant of Africa. In 1966, Nigeria was elected a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council and has held that position five times, topping the list of African countries that have been so nominated. Today, the country is struggling unsuccessfully for a permanent seat, due to its declining fortunes.

    Read Also: Nigeria making steady progress in fight against insecurity, says Speaker Abbas

    Over the years, Nigeria’s economic woes have been compounded by resource misapplication. After the discovery of crude oil in 1956, Nigeria joined the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1971 and has been exporting crude oil for more than five decades. A recent report published by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) shows that Nigeria generated a whopping $764.52 bn from crude oil and gas exports between 1991 and 2021. Ironically, the vast majority of Nigerians live in miserable poverty.

    Since 2014, Nigeria has been struggling with a huge economic burden, leaving the ordinary citizens in dire straits. In April 2024, headline inflation rose to 33.69%, the highest witnessed in the country since 1996. According to a 2024 report released by Statistica, the number of people living in extreme poverty in Nigeria rose from about 70 million in 2016 to over 90 million in 2023. In the report, Nigeria tops the list of African countries with the highest share of the world’s population living below extreme poverty in 2024, overtaking countries like Niger and Ethiopia in the global poverty index.

    Poverty and insecurity are mutually reinforcing. Poverty leads to hunger, starvation, malnutrition, and disease, killing millions globally and creating room for chaos and instability. This is the scenario in Nigeria where poverty-induced insecurity knows no religion. It goes without saying, therefore, that Christians, Muslims, and adherents of indigenous traditional religions have all been victims of poverty and insecurity in the country.

    Trump’s veiled mission in Nigeria is, therefore, easy to unravel. His failure to engage the Nigerian authorities before embarking on his recent ballyhoo about a country he once called a “shit hole” gives him away as a hypocritical bully. He’s apparently taking unfair advantage of the awry state of affairs in Nigeria to humiliate the country. Fortunately, we are in an era of multi-polar world politics where other equally powerful actors, using the instrument of balance of power, would not hesitate to call him to order.

    In conclusion, Trump’s shenanigans should serve as a wake-up call for Nigerian leaders. When you allow your house to deteriorate to the point that the roof begins to leak, the rains will not only beat you severely, the dilapidated doors will also grant automatic access to unfriendly neighbours like Trump to come in and poke their fingers into your eye. This is the sad reality about Nigeria, and it calls for decisive action to be taken as a matter of urgency to fix the nation. What is required to give Nigeria a sense of direction is focused leadership, not the kind of hostile partisan politics that our leaders often embrace at every election cycle. Even as followers, we must not lose sight of the need to continue to be patriotic to our dear country; for Nigeria is a gift to the world.

    •Dr. Amieyeofori writes from Abuja.

  • An open letter to Nigerians on Donald Trump’s love for Nigerian Christians

    An open letter to Nigerians on Donald Trump’s love for Nigerian Christians

    “I think Nigeria is a disgrace. The whole thing is a disgrace. They are killing people by the thousands. It is a genocide and I am really angry about it. And we pay, you know, we give a lot of subsidy to Nigeria. We are going to end up stopping. The government has done nothing. They are very ineffective. They are killing Christians at will. You know, until I got involved in it two weeks ago, nobody even talked about it”- President Donald Trump, 21st November 2025.

    Dear Fellow Nigerians,

    Is it not strange to you that each time this blonde-haired, blue-eyed white supremacist and war-monger opens its mouth, more attacks, killings and abductions take place in Nigeria?

    Has it not occurred to you that he is actually fuelling the insurgency with his words and constant denigrating of our people, Armed Forces and Government?

    Is this not an attempt to create a clear justification for that they really wish to do to us: namely invade and bomb us to kingdom come and then divide our country.

    This is the same way they demonised the Government of Sudan before unleashing the Janjaweed militia known as the RSF on them and creating carnage in Darfur.

    This is what they did to Congo DRC too before the butchery started.

    Is it not strange to you that the man that says he wants to deliver and protect Christians in Nigeria welcomed with open arms the greatest butcher of Christians on the planet by the name of Ahmed Al Sharaa, the President of Syria, only the other day and even gave him and his wife a bottle of “sweet” perfume in the full glare of the media?

    Apparently he loves the Christians of Nigeria but hates the Christians of Syria. He also hates the Christians of Gaza! What an interesting paradox and contradiction this is and only a dim-witted village idiot will be fooled by it.

    Claiming that the King of Mara Lago cares about Nigerian Christians is like claiming that the proverbial wolf cares about Little Red Riding Hood or that Count Dracula cares about beautiful women. Believe such nonsense at your own peril.The Orange Man’s motivation for expressing concern about the plight of Christians at the hands of the terrorists in Nigeria is gain and not love, and as for the plight of the Muslims, he couldn’t care less.

    The script is clear: stoke, provoke and fund chaos, discredit and weaken the sitting Government, incite the people, engender regime change and spark off a civil war which will enable you to pick up the spoils and plunder the nation dry.

    Their evil eye is now on Nigeria. They say we have done nothing to stop the killing but they won’t tell you what they have done to support, enhance and encourage it for the last fifteen years?
    They won’t tell you why they do not sell us the arms we need to fight the war or share the necessary intelligence with us.

    They won’t tell you why they refused to designate Boko Haram as a terrorist organisation until 2015.
    They won’t tell you why they imposed an arms embargo on Nigeria.

    They won’t tell you why they have refused to offer even the smallest assistance to our Armed Forces in this war over the last few years and up till now.

    They won’t tell you that they created Al Qaeda, ISIS, Boko Haram, the Taliban, Al Shabab, Al Nusra, Ansaru and Lakurawa right from the outset whilst pretending to fight them.

    They won’t tell you the carnage they unleashed on Libya, Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Congo, Sudan, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Somalia, Gaza, Yemen, Palestine, Ukraine, Central African Republic, Venezuela, Mali, Chad, Niger, Burkina Faso and elsewhere through their sponsored militias and opposition fighters.

    They won’t tell you why they have now focused on Nigeria and why they are attempting to do same to South Africa.

    Nigeria’s case is even more pitiful and we are clearly being set up for the kill.
    Every time we make progress economically those that do not wish us well from outside our shores undermine the efforts of our Government and they do so in collaboration with members of the opposition.

    It happened with OBJ, UMYA, GEJ and now it is happening with BAT.

    For the last 60 years Nigeria has been the victim and target of a vicious, well- planned and well-orchestrated international conspiracy and the ugly events of the last ten years and particularly the last one week prove that.

    Every time we take ten steps forward they band together with their local co-conspirators and treacherous assets and take us twenty steps back because their greatest nightmare is a strong, independent, united, flourishing Nigeria that brings pride and dignity to Africa and the black race.

    Any Nigerian that takes pleasure in what is unfolding in our country today and the security challenges we are facing is either a sadist, a masochist or simply naive and unpatriotic.

    This is not about Tinubu but about our country. The terrorists are being funded and supported by a dark, sinister and relentless foreign force that seeks to tear us apart, destroy us, humiliate us, rob us, occupy our land, steal our resources, pillage our rare earth minerals, erase our identity, distort our heritage, re-define our history and control the entire globe.

    They are doing the same thing in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, South America, Asia, South East Asia and much of the world.

    Those that applaud that evil force and encourage it to enter our shores and bomb us in the name of trying to help us fight the terrorists that they themselves are funding do not understand world politics and have no knowledge of history.

    There is not one country that the Americans have entered with bombs and violence and left better than the way they found it.
    Outside of that once we lose our sovereignty we will never get it back.

    Once we rely on another country to fight our battles for us we are no longer a nation but a vassal state of cowardly field hands and slaves.

    The solution to the problem is to support and encourage our Government and Armed Forces to face the challenge squarely and win this war.

    Whatever it takes it is their obligation and duty to do this and with our support and understanding they surely will.

    There is room for criticism and even anger but there is no room for disloyalty to the national cause, betrayal and collaboration with those that want to bring our country to her knees.

    Things are tough and the enemy appears to be gaining ground but we must keep faith with God and have confidence that our President can and will turn things around.

    This is a time to pray for Nigeria and to pray for our leaders and Armed Forces and not to gloat or cheer on those who mock, despise, undermine and insult us and that subvert our efforts. This is a time to show those that have described us as being “a disgrace” that we are more than able to handle our own affairs and solve our problems despite their obvious malice and acts of sabotage.

    This is a time to have faith in our country and our people and remember God’s promise and word that Nigeria shall be great again.
    This is a time to line up behind our President and let him know that despite all that is happening we still have confidence in him and that he is not alone.

    (Chief Femi Fani-Kayode is the Sadaukin Shinkafi, the Wakilin Doka Potiskum, the Otunba Joga Orile, the Aare Ajagunle Otun Ekiti, a former Minister of Culture and Tourism, a former Minister of Aviation, a former Special Advisor to President Olusegun Obasanjo and a lawyer)

  • Addressing violence and reclaiming our place in Africa

    Addressing violence and reclaiming our place in Africa

    Sir: The concerns recently raised by President Donald Trump, Senator Ted Cruz, and several members of the U.S. Congress regarding the killing of Christians in Nigeria some of which they have described as genocide reflect a legitimate and longstanding global alarm. These killings did not begin today; they span decades of unresolved tensions, unaddressed grievances, and political divisions that have allowed violence to fester across many parts of our country.

    While it is true that both Christians and Muslims have been affected by various forms of communal, ethnic, and resource-driven violence, the core issue is clear: no Nigerian deserves to die, and no community deserves abandonment by the state. The persistence of these killings signals a deeper crisis of governance and accountability. At this stage of our democratic development, Nigeria should not still be battling pockets of conflict that could have been resolved through early intervention, strong leadership, and institutional competence.

    Instead, we should be scaling up innovation, expanding infrastructure, modernising agriculture, improving education, and steering holistic development across every sector. It is both painful and embarrassing that a nation with Nigeria’s human capital, natural resources, and global influence continues to be defined internationally by violence, instability, and internal fragmentation.

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    The Nigerian government must unequivocally demonstrate that it is willing and able to confront this challenge. This requires more than public statements it requires the intelligent deployment of security resources, strengthened intelligence gathering, and the political will to prosecute those responsible, regardless of ethnicity, religion, or political affiliation. Only through impartial justice can Nigeria begin to restore local and international confidence in its capacity to protect its citizens.

    At the diplomatic level, Nigeria must also strengthen relationships with key global partners like the United States, the United Kingdom, and other strategic allies. These relationships can provide technical support, conflict-resolution expertise, and enhanced cooperation on security and governance reforms. True partnership, however, depends on Nigeria showing seriousness, transparency, and a clear commitment to peace and accountability.

    If Nigeria addresses violence decisively, we will unlock enormous potential. Food security will improve, poverty will decline, investor confidence will rise, and national unity will deepen. Most importantly, Nigeria can reclaim its rightful position as the Giant of Africa not by title alone, but through competence, justice, and visionary leadership.

    The path forward is clear. Nigeria has everything it needs to succeed. What remains is the courage to act, the discipline to govern, and the determination to protect every Nigerian life. Only then can we rebuild our global image and steer the nation toward stable, inclusive, and sustainable development.

    •Olufemi Adenitan Esq, adenitanolufemi@gmail.com

  • The Trump threat to liberate Christians

    The Trump threat to liberate Christians

    President Donald Trump of the United States has threatened to intervene in Nigeria’s 15-year old incendiary attacks on Christian communities in northern parts of our country. He puts this to our country’s unwillingness or inability to stop this dangerous incendiary movement allegedly of Fulani ethnic group, or broadly speaking, allegedly of Muslim groups to ethnically cleansed large portions of land of indigenous Nigerians and to occupy the lands and change their names so that the remnants of their victims would have difficulty of recognizing or claiming their ancestral land.

    In the language of international order, this amounts to genocide which is punishable under international law and should be punishable under national law. Theoretically, we may be able to argue that those cleansing indigenous groups of the area are extraneous to the area and are therefore criminal but there is evidence that the Fulani herders also have claims of access to the area but the way they are asserting their claim is absolutely wrong.

    There is also the allegation of the foreign origin of those Fulani who are causing these troubles as distinct from the Fulani who, for more than a century, maintained pacific relations with their compatriots in the Benue valley. Historically, there is evidence that the attempt by some Fulani ethnic group to extend some form of control over the non-Muslim indigenous peoples of the  entire Northern Nigeria  and in particular the Benue valley failed  during the Fulani-led jihads of the 19th century and that this was what the British conquistadors met when they put down the Union Jack in the area and established rule Britannia in the entire Northern Nigeria.

    Looking at the whole are from the prism of history, it seems to me as if the Fulani are living in the past of regular migration of African peoples as epitomised by the movement of the Fulani from the area of the Futa Djallon across West Africa up to the Cameroons over centuries or the  Bantu expansion from east of the southern part of the Cameroons and the Uganda area down to Southern Africa over centuries and the Nguni migrations in the opposite direction from Zulu land up to the Ndebele area in present day Zimbabwe. This illustrates that migration has always been a feature of African history. The case against the Fulani in the plateau, Benue and in Adamawa hills are compelling about a people bent on dominating the indigenous peoples under the guise of spreading Islam. Here, the religion of the prophet has been appropriated to support local imperialism.

    The problem is therefore very complex and would be difficult to solve by foreign intervention. It would require land management and education and strong federal government military presence. It must be added the herder/farmer conflict may not always be seen in terms of ethnic conflict or religious conflict but economic opportunity that the recent kidnapping in Nigeria seems to have been hijacked by opportunistic criminals to whom ethnic or religious background of victims is totally irrelevant.

    I say this because the killings, though predominantly in the Benue valley, has metastasized to all parts of Nigeria and not just the North.

    The question to ask is whether Trump’s decision to force a solution on us is based on genuine concern for the suffering Christian  people of Nigeria. There is no doubt about the religious motive behind Boko Haram, ISWAP, or their variants and off-shoots. What has not been firmly established is their local and foreign sponsorship and financing. What is clear is that the insurgents could not have remained in their struggle for almost 15 years without some local and foreign support providing sophisticated weapons and munitions and financing.

    Some sources point to North Africa particularly Libyan sources and Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the same countries that have been fingered in the case of the Sudan civil war which has lasted as long as the  disequilibrium and insurgency in northern Nigeria. This means any genuine effort to help in the pacification of Northern Nigeria must involve persuading the source of external support and vigorous efforts of the Nigeria military and mobilization of the people of the affected states to support their extirpation wherever in Nigeria they raise their ugly heads.

    The federal government must approach the Trump government with request for appropriate weapons including theatre use of drones and aerial surveillance equipment. This may not be the time for the Nigeria government to be too sensitive and sentimental about their sovereignty. No country can be totally sovereign in these days when peace maintenance demands joint efforts. It is not important whether President Trump is driven by ulterior motive of fishing in our troubled waters or not. We have always been exposed to situations for external meddling because of inherent weakness of our country arising from ethnic differences and differences in our religious beliefs despite the non-nativity of these religions to our country. The corruption of our people, not just our leaders, but everyone makes it difficult to develop our economy to the point where the issue of ethnic and religious differences would not matter. Until such a time when economic development takes precedence over the emotional pull of religion and ethnicity, we will always have divisions that are exploitable by local or external forces. Now that the prestige of America is on line for intervention in Nigeria, we must engage the United States diplomatically using all the tools of the game to blunt all arguments that can be marshalled for American intervention.

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    There is a need for the president to call  in the Sultan of Sokoto, the leaders of the Christian community, the governors of Borno, Bauchi, Plateau, Adamawa, Taraba, Benue,  Nasarawa, Kaduna, Zamfara and possibly Kano, Katsina and Kebbi and Sokoto, to a close meeting about how to solve the problem and to assign responsibility to each and every one of them.

    This should be in two meetings of the first named eight states and then with the others. In these meetings, the top hierarchy of the military should be present along with the ministers of the economy, defence and the governor of the Central Bank. This must be a frank discussion in which the collapse of the country and its consequences must be made plain for all who may have some hidden plans about inheriting power. It must be stated that Nigeria  rests on the shoulders of all the states of the federation and particularly the economic strength of a few viable states and that Nigeria remains strong on the strength of all of us and this strength must be maintained on the mutual safety of lives and property of all of us irrespective of our ethnic and religious differences and that in the Nigerian republic, there are no first class and second class citizens. The president must fast forward the setting up of local government police that must be well trained to protect their areas from rampaging criminals in whatever form they come. The president should declare a state of emergency in all the states affected by this insurgency for six months so that the military can show its teeth to all those who want to challenge it. Appropriate financial measures should be put in place to palliate the social and economic problems facing several communities in all the areas of the emergency.

  • Before you cut your nose to spite your face (2)

    Before you cut your nose to spite your face (2)

    Donald Trump’s threat to invade Nigeria to protect Christians from genocide asserts the dire logic of colonial rescue: the white knight arriving to save the native land from itself, and in so doing, carve out fresh domains of control.

    By responding with cheers and urging foreign invasion under the pretext of faith, Nigerians enact a tragedy of identity: we become supplicants rather than sovereign agents.

    It is entirely proper to mourn the deaths of Nigerians, to demand justice for victims of terrorism, banditry, herder-farmer clashes, and kidnappings. But to elevate that mourning into a narrative of “Christian genocide” is analytically flawed and cynical.

    The celebrated scholar Bulama Bukarti (PhD, SOAS, University of London) anchors us in clarity. His analysis — in his PhD thesis — of the major civilian attacks by Boko Haram from May 2011 to December 2020, based on the Nigerian Security Tracker (NST) of the Council on Foreign Relations in the U.S., reveals that Boko Haram struck 83 churches, resulting in 1,521 deaths, and 72 mosques, yielding 2,017 deaths.

    Bukarti’s work asserts that killings are not exclusively or even primarily Christian-targeted; they are indiscriminate acts by violent extremists whose mission is carnage. In contrast, the voices declaring Christian genocide are rooted in fog, not scholarship. Their claims are built on hyperbole, not data. They sprout from a divisive grievance-economy, not evidence.

    When a Nigerian pastor, political hanger-on, disgruntled election loser, or sectarian demagogue applauds Trump’s threat, they expose a willing slave-mind. To cheer that a foreign soldier might walk through Abuja, Kaduna, or Borno on a flawed claim that “Christians are being deliberately massacred” is to pawn our sovereignty for the shackles of an occupying force.

    No doubt, we have our problems. Bandits and terrorists prowl the northeast, northwest, and northcentral regions, preying on lives and homes; the southeast sees local actors murdering co-Christian neighbours under the guise of separatism.

    Chukwuma Soludo, Governor of Anambra State, recently affirmed that many perpetrators in the southeast bear Christian names. “People are killing themselves; Christians killing Christians. The people in the bushes are Emmanuel, Peter, and John, all Christian names, and they have maimed and killed thousands of our youths. It has nothing to do with religion,” he said.

    By ignoring such conflict dynamics and urging a foreign invasion meant to “save Christians,” we misdiagnose our sickness and submit our necks to the leash of American colonists hawking gall as goodwill.

    If we peel back the rhetoric, we’d see through the multiplex of interest. Nigeria occupies a resource-rich terrain, key to the supply chains of U.S. high-tech and defence industries: oil, natural gas, rare earths, uranium, lithium, cobalt, heavy mineral sands. The country is ranked fifth globally in rare earth deposits, behind China, the U.S., Myanmar and Australia.

    Trump’s performative compassion for Nigerian Christians stems from Washington’s panic over America’s rare earth-dependency on China. Recently, Trump’s threat to slap the latter with a 140 per cent tariff over rare earths failed, thus, he reversed course to secure yearly access to mineral flows on China’s terms. Then, Washington’s focus shifted to Nigeria, which occupies a corridor, extending through Niger and Chad to Sudan, of vast critical minerals.

    Trump’s threat of a “vicious military response” was provoked by Nigeria’s growing defiance of Western economic orthodoxy and its audacious steps toward self-determination. First is Nigeria’s deepening partnership with China, not in token trade but in revolutionary infrastructure: railways, ports, refineries, and telecommunications networks. Projects Western lenders had dangled for decades with sovereignty-eroding conditions.

    When Beijing arrived with a less paternalistic model, Nigeria reimagined its alliances and economic interests. Whatever one thinks of China’s motives, the difference is tangible. China builds, where the West exploits.

    Then came Nigeria’s stance in the global energy market. As Europe scrambled to replace Russian gas, Nigeria, blessed with immense reserves, found itself courted by Western buyers desperate for supply. The country, As pundits rightly note, negotiated smartly, seeking partnerships that would help transition its economy.

    Adding to Washington’s irritation is Nigeria’s quiet revolution in the oil sector. For the first time in history, Nigeria can refine its own crude at scale, thanks to the Dangote Refinery.

    Next, Nigeria’s growing independence became evident at the United Nations. When the conference voted on resolutions condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Nigeria abstained, out of moral clarity, not solidarity with aggression. How could the same nations that invaded Iraq on a lie, destroyed Libya under false pretence, and yet enable Israel’s genocidal siege on Palestine, even as you read, claim moral high ground? Nigeria thus declared that it would no longer be anyone’s automatic vote.

    The final straw came when Nigeria announced it would begin accepting payments for its oil exports in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. To Washington, this was heresy. Dollar dominance, especially in global energy trade, is the cornerstone of American power. When countries start trading in yuan, rupees, or their own currencies, it chips away at that hegemony. Nigeria’s decision, coordinated with other oil producing nations, symbolised a seismic shift. Trump’s reaction was predictable. He declared that nations who “betrayed the dollar” might face “vicious consequences.”

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    His threat of military action over fabrications of genocide, intones American menace of resource grab, a base installation, and a fresh chapter of dependency. Nigeria must never invite that.

    If America is allowed to invade under any pretext, the losses will be immense: the surrender of territorial integrity, the erosion of the principle of self-determination, the setting of a precedent for any foreign power to define our “crisis” and dispatch its troops accordingly.

    Such an invasion would corrode the social contract between Nigerian citizens and their government: that we govern ourselves, make our own mistakes, and chart our own course. It would endanger our right to choose alliances, currencies, economic structures. And once the foreign boot is in the door, it will not depart simply because we protest.

    Nigerians must, therefore, rally to defend our territorial integrity and national pride. We must resist disgruntled election losers and pastors who have lost the trust of their flocks, following their failed prophecies of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s defeat at the 2023 elections. Their claims of Christian genocide are borne of cynical intent; and their calls for America’s invasion betray a desire for destabilisation, not reform.

    Nigerians must seek the country’s unity, not its unraveling. President Tinubu and his service chiefs must equally intensify the fight against terrorists, bandits, and kidnappers; especially in the southern corridors where the danger is less acknowledged.

    Besieged families will find it hard to commit to the Renewed Hope Agenda if their loved ones are not safe. Thus, Tinubu’s leadership must entrench more credible, transparent, and localised security measures that protect lives and property, across faiths and ethnicity.

    There must be a data-driven accountability of killings, so no group is compelled to believe only one faith is under siege; a national narrative that honours victims but refuses divisive victim-capital of artificial genocide claims.

    No matter how turbulent the United States is—with soaring gun violence and racial strife—Americans do not call in Russia or China to invade their cities. They defend America, flawed though their democracy may be.

    Likewise, Nigerians, for all our faults, must refuse the abdication of agency. We must distinguish legitimate calls for justice from neocolonial invitations to subjugation. We must recognise the credibility of scholarship, such as Bukarti’s, in preference to sectarian shouts, exaggerated statistics and grandstanding demagogues.

  • Trump’s saga: Northern groups reject Western ‘Christian genocide’ narrative

    Trump’s saga: Northern groups reject Western ‘Christian genocide’ narrative

    …says “Christian Genocide” claim is dangerous, false

    The Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG), on Monday, condemned what it described as “reckless and deeply provocative” remarks by the U.S. President, Donald Trump, who recently threatened military action against Nigeria over alleged “genocide against Christians.”

    The group dismissed what it called the “false and divisive” Western portrayal of Nigeria’s violence as religiously one-sided, arguing that available data disproves such claims.

    The National Coordinator of the group, Comrade Jamilu Charanchi, who disclosed this in Abuja, while briefing reporters, said Trump’s comments were misleading and capable of fueling sectarian tensions at a time when Nigerians are striving to overcome insecurity and division.

    He noted that in 2024 alone, 9,662 people were killed in violent incidents nationwide, with 86 percent of the deaths occurring in the northern region, 41 percent in the North-West, 25.9 percent in the North-East, and 19.3 percent in the North-Central.

    He said, “Trump’s outburst followed a manipulated petition engineered by Amnesty International, using the voice of its Nigeria Country Director, Isa Sunusi, cynically deployed to give credibility to a toxic Western narrative.

    “This petition, dressed up as ‘human rights advocacy,’ is part of a broader campaign to vilify Nigeria and justify foreign interference under humanitarian pretences. Let us be clear: there is no genocide against Christians in Nigeria. There is a national security crisis affecting all Nigerians, Muslims, Christians, and others alike”.

    Citing verified data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), Charanchi said between January 2020 and September 2025, more than 20,400 civilians were killed in violent attacks across Nigeria.

    Of the incidents where religion could be verified, 317 Christian deaths and 417 Muslim deaths were recorded, a clear indication, he said, that both communities suffer the consequences of insecurity.

    He added, “Foreign Manipulation and Hidden Motives. The claim of a ‘Christian genocide’ is not a misunderstanding; it is a strategic deception. It serves geopolitical interests aimed at destabilizing Nigeria and justifying future interventions.

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    “For decades, the United States and its allies have used ‘human rights’ as camouflage for resource control and political dominance from Iraq to Libya. They create a moral crisis, weaponized global outrage, and then move in under the guise of “liberation.” Nigeria will not be the next experiment.

    “Trump’s sudden concern for ‘persecuted Christians’ is a smokescreen. His record shows indifference to African lives. What truly offends him is Nigeria’s growing diplomatic independence, our increasing ties with China, Russia, and the Global South, and our resistance to neo-colonial pressure”.

    Charanchi referenced security analyst Bulama Bukarti, who warned in October 2025 that changing service chiefs without institutional reform would not solve Nigeria’s insecurity, stressing that the crisis was not a religious war but one of weak governance and institutional decay.

    CNG also recalled the Zaria massacre of December 2015, where over 340 members of the Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), mostly Shiite Muslims, were killed.

    The group condemned the U.S. and Western silence on the incident, despite evidence presented by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

    The coalition accused Western governments of ignoring the violent activities of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), which it said had killed over 600 Northerners since 2021 through targeted attacks, road ambushes, and the enforcement of illegal sit-at-home orders in the South-East.

    CNG warned that if Nigeria fails to control its narrative and security situation, the resulting instability could engulf the entire Sahel region.

    “While foreign actors romanticize IPOB as victims, they ignore the group’s atrocities against Northerners. Trump and his enablers choose silence because it doesn’t fit their pre-packaged narrative.

    “The coalition of Northern Groups will continue to stand for truth, justice, and national sovereignty. We will not remain silent while foreign powers insult our dignity, distort our reality, and play politics with our blood. May Almighty God console all vertigo, Muslim and Christian alike, and grant our leaders the wisdom to steer this nation toward peace and justice,” he said.