Monday, November 3, 2025 - The Governor of Anambra State, Chukwuma Charles Soludo, has reacted to U.S. President Donald Trump’s recent threat of military intervention in Nigeria over alleged persecution and killing of Christians.
Speaking during a media chat on Sunday, November 2, Soludo
said that Nigeria’s security challenges are not a simple conflict between
Muslims and Christians, but a complex issue that requires deeper understanding
and constructive engagement.
He criticized Trump’s comments, describing them as a
distortion of the realities on the ground, and urged the Nigerian government to
respond through diplomatic dialogue rather than confrontation.
“The security challenges in Nigeria go beyond a conflict
between Muslims and Christians. Trump’s threat to ‘protect Christians in
Nigeria’ distorts the actual issues on the ground,” Soludo said.
He added that if Nigeria were to seek foreign assistance, it
should be through formal cooperation such as requests for military technology
or equipment, not through external threats.
Drawing a comparison, the governor said it would be equally
absurd for African nations to threaten to invade the United States over police
brutality or racial injustice:
“I am not quite sure if you have policemen killing some
blacks. I remember the #BlackLivesMatter protest, and somebody would say maybe
Africa should go and invade America because blacks are being killed? I’m not
quite sure,” he said.
Soludo emphasized the need for national dialogue as the most
effective path toward lasting peace, calling for unity, mutual understanding,
and accurate presentation of facts in international discussions.
“It must end in conversation, and I am sure the government
of Nigeria will respond robustly. Nigeria is such a big country, and the
government is doing a whole lot to safeguard it,” he added.
The governor further noted that while the United States has
the right to express opinions on global matters, any action must respect
Nigeria’s sovereignty and comply with international law:
“As a country, America has its own rights to have its own
views about what is going on elsewhere. But when it comes to what it does, I am
sure it must also act within the realm of international law.”
Trump’s statement, posted on Truth Social over the weekend,
threatened to “go into Nigeria guns-a-blazing” if the Nigerian government
“continues to allow the killing of Christians,” while ordering the U.S.
Department of War to “prepare for possible action.”
The remarks sparked global outrage and diplomatic concerns,
with Nigerian officials and political leaders condemning them as inflammatory
and unhelpful.

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