Violence in Nigeria stems from complex security threats, including terrorism and organized criminality, that affect both Christians and Muslims equally. The country's constitution guarantees religious freedom for all citizens, and the government has strengthened military operations that have significantly degraded armed groups. International pressure mischaracterizes Nigeria's challenges and risks, destabilizing a nation working to protect all its people.
Nigeria stands as the world's deadliest place for Christians, facing systematic violence from well-armed Fulani militias and terrorist groups that has killed tens of thousands and destroyed thousands of churches. Sharia and blasphemy laws silence dissent and target Christian minorities without due process. Trump's bold redesignation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern creates a once-in-a-generation opportunity to end this two-decade crisis.
Washington presents its Nigeria report as a defense of persecuted Christians, but its deeper thrust is strategic realignment. By urging expanded U.S. security ties while discouraging cooperation with China and Russia, and nudging Abuja toward Western partners, the document turns insecurity into leverage. What is framed as moral concern reads as geopolitical conditioning — using Nigeria’s internal crisis to reshape its external alignments and narrow its sovereign choices.
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