Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related

INTERVIEW: Nigeria's Security Situation - Actors and Players

INTERVIEW: Nigeria's Security Situation - Actors and Players. “Inside Sources” host, Laolu Akande discusses Nigeria’s security situation with four global analysts.



By Africa-Related, New York


 

Video Courtesy of Channels News

 

“Inside Sources” host, Laolu Akande discusses Nigeria’s security situation with four global analysts - Mallam Baba Yusuf (Strategy Analyst), Ismail Omibinoh (Deputy Editor Sun Newspaper), Emmanuel Ogebe (Human Rights Lawyer)

Key Highlights

  • Impunity: Chad has executed Boko Haram terrorists but Nigeria has not.

  • America doesn’t need Nigeria’s resources. With $460 billion networth, Elon Musk alone can buy Nigeria with $200 Billion GDP and still be the world’s richest man.

  • Tinubu appointed fugitive with case file in America for attacking congressional witnesses as ambassador who will be blocked

  • America has conducted multiple covert ops to rescue its citizens in Nigeria because the state failed to rescue them

It is not correct to say that only particular tribes are terrorists. Let us identify these people as criminals without profiling them.
— Ismail Omibinoh

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Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related

Nigeria Killings: U.S Congressional Hearing on Alleged Genocide of Christians

U.S. Congress shed light on alleged Christian genocide in Nigeria



By Africa-Related, New York


Stock Photo: Louis Velazquez @angelvela

U.S Congressional Hearing on Alleged Genocide of Christians

We are tired of counting our dead. We are tired of mass graves and burned sanctuaries. We are tired of condolence statements that cost nothing and change nothing.
— CANAN USA
 

Video Courtesy of TVC News

 

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Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related Government & Politics, Human Rights Africa-Related

Nigerian American Clergy visit the U.S. Congress

Gain insights from experts on persecution in Nigeria and the response of Nigerian Christians/Clergy in America to the CPC designation. A global coalition of religious freedom stakeholders propose pathway to National Assembly post-CPC designation as Nigerian American Clergy visit the U.S. Congress



By Africa-Related, New York

Photo: Dawn McDonald @dpreacherdawn

MEDIA ADVISORY

Please find below:

1. A letter by a global coalition of religious freedom stakeholders to the National Assembly providing a pathway post-CPC designation of Nigeria by the U.S. 

2. A Capitol hill briefing by Nigerian American clergy on the recent developments. 

 A Capitol hill briefing by Nigerian American clergy on the recent developments:

Hill Briefing on Genocide against Christians in Nigeria 

Theme: Nigerian American Pastors speak on CPC Designation of Nigeria and House Res 860

Date: November 20, 2025

Time: 1:00 PM (EST) 

House Cannon Bldg.
Room 454
US Congress
Capitol Hill

Panelists:

Dr James Fadel, Chairman, Christian Association of Nigerian Americans (CANAN USA) who worked on the 2013 Boko Haram FTO designation

Emmanuel Ogebe, ESQ, Award-winning International human rights Advocate and Lead Campaigner for the 2013 FTO designation

Ex Mayor Mike Arnold - CEO of Arise Africa, filmmaker and humanitarian who’s documented the genocide 

Key note speaker: Pastor Charles Ikutiminu CrossPassion Ministries International presenting findings of his recent trip to Nigeria 

Dr William Devlin - Volunteer CEO of Widows and Orphans working in 21 conflict countries including Nigeria 

Event partners

- Widows and Orphans 

- CANAN USA

- Save Nigeria Group 

- Justice for Jos Project 

Gain insights from experts on persecution in Nigeria and the response of Nigerian Christians/Clergy in America to the CPC designation.

The briefing follows immediately after a congressional public hearing on Thursday, November 20, 2025, at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C., chaired by Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) Chairman Africa Subcommittee 

 
 

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Nicki Minaj Speaks on Persecution of Christians in Nigeria

Nicki Minaj Speaks on Persecution of Christians in Nigeria



By Africa-Related, New York


"I would like to thank
@POTUS for prioritizing this issue and for his leadership on the global stage in calling for urgent action to defend Christians in Nigeria." - @NICKIMINAJpic.twitter.com/gi8bLtF1Qt — @USUN November 18, 2025

TOPIC:        Persecution of Christians in Nigeria

BRIEFER:   U.S. Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz

WHEN:       Tuesday, November 18; 3:00 p.m. ET 

BACKGROUND: On Tuesday, November 18, Ambassador Mike Waltz, U.S. Representative to the United Nations, hosted an event alongside grammy-winning rapper Ms. Nicki Minaj, faith leaders, and other prominent figures to address the critical issue of protecting religious freedom and the rising violence against Christians, particularly in Nigeria.

The event was live-streamed, and the link shared through USUN's X account: https://x.com/USUN?lang=en

Remarks at a U.S. Hosted Event on “Combatting Religious Violence and the Killing of Christians in Nigeria”

United States Mission to the United Nations
November 18, 2025

 

AMBASSADOR MIKE WALTZ: Oh my goodness. Thank you so much for everyone who has joined us today. And for a number of our ambassadors and delegates who have joined us, thank you for coming. To our faith leaders, survivors of some of these atrocities, and what I would call everyone here a friend of freedom, welcome to the United States Mission to the United Nations.

And today we speak of blood. We speak of the blood that still cries from Nigerian soil. This is deeply personal for me, as I know it is for Ms. Minaj and her pastor here, Peters Adonu, and others. I had the opportunity to serve in Nigeria in 2015, if you remember when then 300 little girls were kidnapped from their schools, ripped out of their homes and schools in the middle of the day, and in the middle of the night.

We sent a small team over there, and we trained – Nigeria’s equivalent of their Navy SEALs – to go get those girls back. It was righteous work. We didn’t get them all back, unfortunately, but we got some. Some will be lost forever. And if you remember the infamous save the girls campaign, that was 10 years ago. Folks, it’s still happening. It just happened yesterday. 25 little girls were ripped out of their school. I pray that we get them back. But what often happens is they’re sold into sex slavery. They’re forced to renounce their religion. They never see their homes or families again, and they literally disappear to the dark underbelly of extremism and sex slavery.

Look, 10 years later, the horror continues in the middle belt and in the north. Churches burn mothers, bury their children for the crime of singing Amazing Grace. Pastors have been beheaded. Pastors have been beheaded for preaching the Sermon on the Mountain, entire villages wake up to gunfire, because they dare to commit the crime, the crime of calling Jesus their Lord. People go to jail under blasphemy laws for simply wearing a cross. This is not random violence. This is genocide, wearing the mask of chaos.

Nigeria is Africa’s most populous nation and a vibrant mosaic of cultures and faiths, but it is under siege. And in the northern region, you have 12 Muslim majority states that are enforcing Sharia law and have enforced it since 1999. Jihadi groups like Boko Haram and the Fulani militias continue to unleash targeted violence. It is targeted. It is specific, on these Christian communities.

This year alone, the NGO, the nonprofit Open Doors, reports a very sharp rise in attacks. They’re reporting 80%, 80% of the violence against Christians worldwide is occurring in Nigeria. Thousands are displaced, are killed in faith based reprisals.

So weeks ago, a few weeks ago, the United States designated Nigeria a Country of Particular Concern for severe violations of religious freedom, spotlighting what can only be described as the government’s failure to curb these atrocities. And while Nigerian officials maintain that terrorism strikes all faiths indiscriminately, and they do. There is a body of evidence, and you are going to hear that from our experts today that paints a very grim picture of disproportionate suffering among Christians, where, again, families are torn apart. Clergy is repeatedly assassinated in entire congregations. Church congregations – you’re seeing, you see some of the images here – are driven into hiding.

Folks, we have an entire faith that is being erased, one bullet at a time, one torched Bible at a time. Yet, in the face of this evil one leader has refused to look away. President Trump has made the persecuted church his priority like no other president before him in American history. He was the first U.S. president to convene world leaders right here at the United Nations in 2019 to draw attention, draw the world’s attention to what is happening. He created the Religious Liberty Commission to fight for believers everywhere. And while Nigeria’s Christians cried out. He answered, and he has answered loudly. He has reminded the world that protecting Christians is not about politics. It is a moral duty.

So inspiration alone is not enough. We need voices that pierce the silence that we’ve heard from the international community, that humanizes the statistics that we keep hearing, and that demands accountability, and that’s why we’re here today to hear from a pastor that will dial in through our embassy in Nigeria, and we’re going to hear his first hand accounts of the suffering. We’re also going to hear from experts who have dedicated their lives to religious liberty.

I especially want to thank my friend Harris Faulkner, who, in addition to just being an amazing person, is also the daughter of a U.S. Army Colonel – so that makes her extra special in my heart – and she has spent much of her career protecting this most basic – folks this is the most basic of liberties: to worship as one sees fit.

But we are especially thrilled that we’re going to hear from an especially powerful voice, a fearless advocate whose passion for justice transcends borders, and she uses her voice to defend the voiceless. Hers are not empty words. They are a clarion call echoing the UN’s, the United Nations own Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which proclaims that, quote, everyone has the right to freedom of thought, to freedom of conscience and to freedom of religion. She steps onto this world stage, not as a celebrity, but as a witness. She uses and has used her influence to spotlight Nigeria’s persecuted church, reaching out to her 28 million followers, her Barbz, as I now have learned, and she uses this, and as she steps on this global stage to fund emergency relief and to demand action.

Nicki, I can’t tell you how much I admire you. You’re stepping up, you’re leaning into this issue. You’ve enjoyed amazing success, and you could be sitting back and just enjoying it. You could be just living the good life, but you’re willing to come here today and roll up your sleeves and let’s try to solve this. Let’s try to save these people. So everyone, please join me in welcoming a daughter of the Caribbean, a champion of the oppressed and a sister in Christ Nicki, Minaj.

###

MS. NICKI MINAJ: Hello everyone. I must say, I am very nervous, so please – Well, thank you, Ambassador Waltz for this invitation. It is an honor to stand on this stage with you and the other distinguished speakers here today to shine a spotlight on the deadly threat faced by thousands of Christians in Nigeria.

I would like to thank President Trump for prioritizing this issue and for his leadership on the global stage and calling for urgent action to defend Christians in Nigeria to combat extremism and to bring a stop to violence against those who simply want to exercise their natural right to freedom of religion or belief.

I stand here as a proud New Yorker with a deep sense of gratitude that we live in a country where we can freely and safely worship God, regardless of one’s creed, background, or politic. No group should ever be persecuted for practicing their religion, like I recently stated on social media, and we don’t have to share the same beliefs in order for us to respect each other. We’re way beyond thinking or expecting or assuming for you know, the person sitting next to you to have the exact same beliefs. We’re beyond that. That’s ridiculous, but that shouldn’t make one person feel less safe than anyone in any room.

Music has taken me around the globe. I have seen how people, no matter their language, culture, or religion, come alive when they hear a song that touches their soul. Religious Freedom means we all can sing our faith, regardless of who we are, where we live, and what we believe.

But today, faith is under attack in way too many places. In Nigeria, Christians are being targeted, driven from their homes and killed. Churches have been burned, families have been torn apart, and entire communities live in fear constantly, simply because of how they pray.

Sadly, this problem is not only a growing problem in Nigeria, but also in so many other countries across the world, and it demands urgent action. And I want to be clear, protecting Christians in Nigeria is not about taking sides or dividing people. It is about uniting humanity.

Nigeria is a beautiful nation with deep faith traditions and lots of beautiful Barbz that I can’t wait to see. When one’s church, mosque, or place of worship is destroyed. Everyone’s heart should break just a little bit, and the foundation of the United Nations, with its core mandate to ensure peace and security, should shake.

I am joined here today by peace builders, by faith leaders, by those who saw violence, saw rising intolerance, saw the threats clearly before us, and chose not to look the other way. I am inspired by their work to build interfaith ties, to see the humanity across the lines which might divide us, and to fight for security and liberty for all those who pray.

I look forward to our discussion today, and I hope it will encourage deepened solidarity for us to urgently work together to ensure every person can enjoy the right to believe, to worship, and to live in peace.

Barbz, I know you’re somewhere listening. I love you so very much. You have been the ultimate light in my life and career for so long. I appreciate you, and I want to make it very clear once again, that this isn’t about taking sides. This is about standing up in the face of injustice. It’s about what I’ve always done for my entire career, and I will continue to stand for that for the rest of my life. I will care if anyone anywhere is being persecuted for their beliefs.

Thank you.

###

 
 

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Press Conference by Nigerian-American Community Organizations on the U.S. Designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern

A coalition of leading Nigerian American organizations will hold a joint virtual press conference to address the recent U.S. government designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) by President Donald J. Trump.



By Africa-Related, New York

The Nigerian Center, Washington D.C


Written By Nigerian Center

*MEDIA ADVISORY*

JOINT VIRTUAL PRESS CONFERENCE BY NIGERIAN-AMERICAN COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS ON THE U.S. DESIGNATION OF NIGERIA AS A COUNTRY OF PARTICULAR CONCERN

WHO:

The Nigerian Center, the Nigerian American Public Affairs Committee (NAPAC), the Nigerians in Diaspora Organization, Americas (NIDOA), and the Nigerian Physicians Advocacy Group (NPAG).

WHAT:

A coalition of leading Nigerian American organizations will hold a joint virtual press conference to address the recent U.S. government designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) by President Donald J. Trump.

The leaders will discuss the implications of this designation, its potential impact on Nigeria and the Nigerian American community, and present a united call for dialogue and collaboration. Together, they will advocate for a constructive approach that reinforces the historic friendship and strategic partnership between the United States and Nigeria. Speakers will offer a live question and answer session with journalists.

SPEAKERS:

  • Gbenga Ogunjimi, Executive Director, Nigerian Center

  • Susan Edionwe MD, FACS, DipABLM, President, Nigerian Physicians Advocacy Group (NPAG)

  • Bukola Olaoye, Chairman, Nigerians in Diaspora Organization, Americas (NIDOA)

  • Prince Maduka Nkuku, President, Nigerian American Public Affairs Committee (NAPAC)

  • Dr. Malcolm Fabiyi, President,Governance Advancement Initiative for Nigeria (GAIN)

WHEN: Friday, November 14, 2025 | 11:00 AM EST

WHERE: Virtual (Zoom Login)

WHY: Following their joint statement, the organizations will outline recommendations for strengthening collaboration between U.S. and Nigerian policymakers, diaspora leaders, and civil society groups to ensure that the designation fosters a more secure, just, and prosperous Nigeria.

Please RSVP to Liz Voyles at liz@brassrc.com. This event is open to credentialed journalists only, and all remarks are on the record. An emailed RSVP is required for admission.

***

About Coalition:

Nigerian Center
The Nigerian Center is a Washington, DC–based nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing immigrant justice, financial empowerment, and cultural visibility. Through legal services, advocacy, and education, the Center amplifies Nigerian and African immigrant voices and fosters systemic inclusion in American society.

Nigerian American Public Affairs Committee USA (NAPAC USA)
The Nigerian American Public Affairs Committee (NAPAC USA) is a national nonpartisan organization that promotes civic engagement, public policy advocacy,voter registration/education, and leadership development within the Nigerian American community. 

Nigerians in Diaspora Organization, Americas (NIDOA)
The Nigerians in Diaspora Organization, Americas (NIDOA) is the umbrella body for Nigerians living in North and South America. NIDOA mobilizes the Nigerian diaspora to contribute to national development, promote unity and collaboration among Nigerians abroad, and strengthen partnerships that advance Nigeria’s progress and global image.

Nigerian Physicians Advocacy Group (NPAG)
The Nigerian Physicians Advocacy Group (NPAG) is a 501(c)(4) affiliate of the Association of Nigerian Physicians in the Americas, created to advance good governance in Nigeria, the United States, and beyond. NPAG is a coalition of Nigerian-American medical professionals committed to advancing health equity, public policy, and community well-being, promoting collaboration between U.S. and Nigerian health institutions to improve access, quality, and outcomes.

 
 

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