In a move hailed by human rights advocates as “long-overdue,” President Donald Trump recently redesignated Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” for its failure to protect its Christian population, a decision accompanied by a stark threat of military action.
This is also as religious freedom advocates have called on President Trump to appoint a special monitor for Nigeria to ensure the United States follows through on the warning by President Trump.

The designation as a CPC, mandated by the International Religious Freedom Act of 1998, requires the U.S. government to take concrete actions – including potential economic sanctions – against nations that commit or tolerate severe violations of religious freedom.
“More Christians are killed in Nigeria for their faith every year than in the rest of the world combined,” said Joel Veldkamp of Christian Solidarity International (CSI), a persecution watchdog group. “Somehow Nigeria was not on this list. As the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom said, ‘This is unexplainable.’”
Trump’s decision reverses the Biden administration’s earlier removal of Nigeria from the list and has been followed by an unprecedented threat from President Trump. On his Truth Social platform, he declared that if the Nigerian government continues to allow the killings, the U.S. would “immediately stop all aid and assistance” and may go into the country “guns-a-blazing.”
“If we attack, it will be fast, vicious, and sweet, just like the terrorist thugs attack our cherished Christians!” the President’s statement read, adding that he has instructed the “Department of War” to prepare for possible action.
According to Veldkamp, the threat has already sent shockwaves through the West African nation. “I was just talking to my Nigerian colleague… he said, ‘People in Nigeria are very upset about this. The government is on its toes. They’re looking for a way out,’” Veldkamp reported. “That’s a situation in which there’s a potential for good change.”
The violence, experts note, is not solely from well-known jihadist groups like Boko Haram. Veldkamp detailed a “slow-motion ethnic cleansing campaign” by Fulani militias who systematically attack Christian villages in Nigeria’s Middle Belt, killing residents, burning homes, and displacing entire communities.
While welcoming the renewed international pressure, Veldkamp questioned whether military force is the right solution. “This isn’t a problem America and others can solve with mere bombs and weapons,” he cautioned, emphasizing the need for sustained diplomatic and economic pressure.
The focus now shifts to the follow-through. Advocates are urging the Trump administration to appoint a special monitor for Nigeria and to clearly outline consequences—such as aid cutoffs and diplomatic isolation—if the attacks on Christians continue. The world is watching to see if this drastic warning will be the catalyst for change in a nation gripped by relentless sectarian violence.






