November 3, 2025 — Nigeria is abuzz with controversy following U.S. President Donald Trump’s threat to militarily intervene in the country over alleged “genocidal killings” of Christians. The backlash was immediate, with Nigerian leaders rejecting the accusations as baseless and warning against sovereignty violations.
Outrage over plan to attack Nigeria Public fury erupts as Trump’s administration considers raids to curb insecurity.
Resident doctors vs. FG: N48bn arrears spark nationwide hospital strike.”
12 northern governors, judges face U.S. sanctions over ‘Christian genocide’.”
Gov. Soludo gains traction in Ekwusigo and Nnewi South ahead of the governorship poll.
INEC barred from recognizing PDP’s national convention outcome by a Federal High Court.
Soldiers rescue two Kogi kidnapping victims, recover ₦3.8m ransom.
Trump accused Nigeria of “turning a blind eye” to attacks on Christians, threatening to halt aid and deploy troops. Nigerian officials, including President Tinubu’s adviser Daniel Bwala, dismissed this as “misleading” and stressed We welcome U.S. help, but respect our sovereignty.Analysts note the violence affects both Muslims and Christians driven by banditry, land disputes, and extremism—not just religion.
Muslim Rights Concern (MURIC) Warns against retaliation, advocates “dialogue, not violence.”
Call for unity, refuting the “genocide” label. Former Army Chief Tukur Buratai warns of a “dangerous crisis” if tensions escalate.
trump’s move aligns with pressure from U.S. conservatives, but experts argue it oversimplifies complex crises. discrimination in fighting insecurity. Security experts caution U.S. strikes would target scattered groups, requiring Nigerian cooperation.







