November 6, 2025

Keyamo To Trump: Christians Aren’t Targeted in Nigeria Because of Their Faith

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By Reporter

Olorogun Festus Keyamo (SAN), Nigeria’s Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, has responded to comments by United States President Donald Trump, accusing Nigerian Government overlooking the mass killings of Christians in the country.

The minister in his letter, stated that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu appointed him minister because of his Christian background and :ethical pedigree.’

Keyamo, in his letter, addressed to Trump via his X page, urged the US President to broaden his sources of information on alleged Christian genocide against Nigeria, describing Tinubu as a ‘moderate’ Muslim leader who would “be the last person to either adopt the killing of Christians as a State Policy, or condone such acts or be complicit in them.”

Keyamo referenced his years of activism in the promotion and protection of human rights, and his award of the Global Human Rights Award from the United States Global Leadership Council. He therefore submitted that there is no iota of truth in the claims that Christians are being targeted in Nigeria because of their faith.

“There is, therefore, a need for me to add my little voice to the issue that has agitated your mind lately (with the hope it would be heard, even as a whimper): the purported ‘mass killings’ of Christians in Nigeria.

“I was appointed by the present President of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, as his Minister of Aviation and Aerospace Development, along with other Christians. Because of my strong Christian background and ethical pedigree, it would have been most unconscionable for me to associate with – let alone accept to serve or continue to serve – a government if truly there is any scintilla of truth in the assertion that Christians are specifically targeted in Nigeria for persecution, killings or harassment on account of their faith. It is simply not true,” the letter partly reads.

Keyamo stressed that, like the United States and other countries of the world, Nigeria has been faced with her own fair share violence.

“Just like the U.S and many countries in the world, we have faced our own fair share of societal violence; ours has been perpetrated by deadly groups known as Boko Haram (now seriously decimated), herdsmen, and cattle rustlers.

“These decades-old problems were inherited by our President, who has made great progress in the fight against these insurgents. In fact, most of the security Chiefs appointed by him are Christians, so it would be unthinkable to imagine them being complicit in the killing of fellow Christians in Nigeria.

“President Bola Ahmed Tinubu of Nigeria, though a Muslim, is a known ‘moderate’, whose wife is a Pastor of one of the biggest Pentecostal Churches in Nigeria, and most of his children are practising Christians. When he was the Governor of Lagos State, he regularly invited Christian Pastors for prayers and worship sessions at the Government House.

“He will be the last person to either adopt the killing of Christians as a State Policy, or condone such acts or be complicit in them.

“Nigeria is a secular state and our Constitution explicitly provides for freedom of religion and prohibits the adoption of a state religion, reflecting its status as a multi-faith nation.

“This legal framework underpins the country’s diverse religious landscape, which includes significant populations of Muslims, Christians, and adherents of traditional African religions, coexisting within a nation’s space.

“In all honesty, the insecurity in some parts of the country over the years has impacted adherents of all religions, and this government has not sought to protect one set of adherents and ignore the others.

“Ordinarily, opposition politicians will oppose the government of the day. But on this matter, President Trump, you would have observed that leaders of the opposition parties in Nigeria are united on one point: there is no targeted killing of christians in Nigeria.

“President Trump, the Nigerian people ask for deep and sincere understanding from your government at this point; the Nigerian people ask for support and cooperation from your government at this point to confront this decades-old menace of terrorism; we ask for collaboration; we ask for frank and open dialogue at this time with your government; we ask that you broaden your sources of information at this time so as to get a balanced view of the happenings in Nigeria,” Keyamo letter concluded.

It will be recalled that Trump, had in a post on his Truth Social account recently, announced the redesignation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) for severe violations of religious freedom and
instructed the U.S. War Department to prepare for possible actions in Nigeria.

He went ahead to accuse Nigerian government of turning a blind eye to the killings of Christians across the country.

Trump warned that the United States would immediately halt all aid and assistance to Nigeria if government fails to stop the attacks on Christians .

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