Trump Nigeria Genocide Claim sparks calls for Tinubu to respond with calm diplomacy, data transparency, and unified leadership to defend Nigeria’s image
Allow me to remind you that as you teach us, “Ti iku ile o ba pani, tode o le pani.” If internal forces do not destroy you, external ones cannot.
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That saying captures for me an eternal truth about leadership and survival. It also provides the perfect lens through which to view Nigeria’s latest international embarrassment the declaration by former U.S. President Donald Trump that Nigeria should be placed on the Country of Particular Concern (CPC) list, with claims of genocide and religious persecution.
When I first heard President Trump’s statement, my immediate reaction — shaped by long observation of both Nigeria and Trump — was to point out the philosophical flaw in his approach.
To speak of genocide in Nigeria is to misunderstand the country’s complexity, exaggerate its troubles, and underestimate its resilience.
However, one must also recognise that exaggerations, however unpleasant, often stem from kernels of truth.
Sad or inconvenient as it might be, it is true that people have been killed in churches. It is true that Christian leaders and worshippers have suffered brutal attacks.
It is true that some communities live in fear of terrorists and bandits. These are not propaganda; they are painful facts.
Long before Trump’s outburst, you, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, like many others, publicly acknowledged the killings of Christians and Muslims alike and the need for the government to respond decisively.
There is no need to dwell on whether this crisis began during your time in office—history has made it clearly evident that it did not.
What truly matters now are the actions your government has taken, is taking, and plans to take to protect the welfare of the Nigerian people.
Equally vital is how these efforts are viewed internationally, as they demonstrate your dedication and determination in these trying times.
We must shift from reacting to strategic planning. Mr President, do not allow anyone to sway you otherwise. This moment demands not defensiveness but strategic engagement.
Trump’s declaration, however flawed, has amplified a global narrative that Nigeria cannot afford to ignore. The only effective response is calm, evidence-based, and confident diplomacy.
Your administration can lead this effort by publishing transparent data on religiously motivated violence as well as economically related incidents, and the government’s response to them — facts are more powerful than statements.
You can also engage Christian faith leaders to speak out for peace and mutual protection. Your request to Muslim leaders should be to ask them to deliver a “not in my name” speech in which they reject the accusation of Christian genocide and condemn any individual or organisation attempting to kill others in the name of religion.
Don’t let them claim they have already said it; now is the time to be pedantic for Nigeria and for God.
I also believe you need to make a conscious effort to coordinate communication among the Ministries of Foreign Affairs, Information, and National Security to ensure a consistent message and purpose.
If there is ever a time to emphasise partnership with regional and global allies — such as the African Union, the Commonwealth, and credible international organisations — to highlight Nigeria’s interfaith resilience, it is now.
It will also help to launch a global narrative campaign that redefines Nigeria as a country fighting crime and extremism, not one divided by religion.
It is a burden of leadership to constantly manage the tension between leadership and perception. Let us be clear, every administration inherits crises it did not create; history judges leaders by how they manage them.
Your presidency will be evaluated not on who started this storm, but on how you navigate it — how you turn criticism into opportunity, and exaggeration into reform.
The world must see a Nigeria that is not at war with itself, but at work for itself — a government that protects citizens regardless of faith and communicates that commitment confidently and coherently.
It is your burden of leadership to show that Nigeria’s diversity is not a liability but an asset — that Muslims and Christians, Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Ijaw, Kanuri and others, can coexist and progress together.
If we learn to look at the mirror before looking at the window, we shall easily see that “ti iku ile o ba pani, tode o le pani.”
The real danger is not what outsiders say, but what insiders fail to fix. Nigeria’s most urgent threats are internal — corruption, connivance, collusion, sloppiness, mediocrity, inertia, lethargy, and a lack of accountability and transparency in governance.
If we address these issues, no external force, not even the loudest foreign critic, can destroy us. If we ignore them, even the kindest ally cannot save us.
Mr President, this is Nigeria’s true test — not of faith or image, but of resolve and leadership. The world does not need a perfect Nigeria; it needs a credible one. That is within your reach.
Trump’s words may have ignited anger, yet they also serve as a reflective mirror, challenging us to examine our own strengths and shortcomings with honesty.
If we dare to look deeply and sincerely into this reflection, we may discover within ourselves the resilience and resolve needed to rise above adversity.
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Nigeria’s most potent response to false narratives is simple yet profound: govern well with shared clarity of purpose, protect every citizen without exception, speak the truth with unwavering confidence, and bring to book those who thrive on our pain. It is through these principles that nations demonstrate their true character and pass their most critical tests.