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Nigeria rejects US pressure to accept deported Venezuelans

Jon Shelton (with AP, Reuters)
July 11, 2025

President Donald Trump has threatened Nigeria with higher tariffs and visa changes. Nigeria has enough problems of its own, its foreign minister says.

Masked Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents guarding an immigrant detention facility in Newark, New Jersey
The US is desperate for third-countries to take immigrants that it seeks to deportImage: Stephanie Keith/Getty Images/AFP

On Friday, Foreign Affairs Minister Yusuf Tuggar said Nigeria would not bow to increased pressure to accept deported Venezuelans from US President Donald Trump.

Tuggar said Trump was attempting to strong-arm African nations.

"You have to also bear in mind that the US is mounting considerable pressure on African countries to accept Venezuelans to be deported from the US, some straight out of prison," said Tuggar in an interview on Nigerian television.

"It will be difficult for a country like Nigeria to accept Venezuelan prisoners into Nigeria. We have enough problems of our own," said the foreign minister. "The issue of accepting Venezuelan deportees, honestly, I don't think is something that Nigeria is in a position to work with."

Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar says Nigeria has enough problems of its own Image: Mauro Pimentel/AFP

Why is Trump pressuring Nigeria to accept migrants?

One reason Trump may be using rougher tactics with Nigeria is its membership in the BRICS+ political and economic bloc.

Created in 2006 by the acronym-giving countries Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC), with South Africa's 2010 addition, the BRICS club has grown to include developing nations such as Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and accounts for roughly 37% of global economic output.

Nigeria joined the 11-member BRICS+ bloc in January and President Bola Tinubu attended the group's July 6-7, 2025, summit.

As the summit wrapped up, Trump announced that the US would slap 10% punitive tariffs on imports from BRICS+ countries.

Tuggar, however, said it was unclear if recent US measures were directly related to Nigeria's participation in the summit, which Trump slammed as an "anti-American" event.

What other African countries has Trump tried to pressure?

Nigerian President Tinubu was not among those African leaders invited to the White House on Wednesday when Trump welcomed the presidents of Gabon, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mauritania and Senegal.

Liberian and US sources reported that Trump used the opportunity to ask each to take in third-country migrants deported from the US.

The Wall Street Journal this week reported that the US State Department sent a document to African leaders invited to Wednesday's White House event calling on them to agree to the "dignified, safe, and timely transfer from the United States" of third country nationals.

Trump has repeatedly sought — at times successfully — to send immigrants he is unable to deport home to third-country nations instead.

Donald Trump hosts African leaders at White House

02:52

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Trump's 'reciprocal' visa restrictions for Nigerians

Speaking of the US pressure campaign, Tuggar said: "I think it would be unfair to insist that Nigeria accepts 300 Venezuelan deportees. Maybe that might just even be the beginning."

The foreign minister did not expand on what might come next but addressed one of the other tools the Trump administration has employed as a means to leverage US advantage, brushing off US claims that its new visa policy is reciprocal.

The US Mission in Nigeria this week announced updates to non-immigrant visa policy for Nigerians.

Tuggar says the only change Nigeria has made is that 90-day visas are now issued electronically rather than upon arrival — as in the US. The change, he said, is intended to streamline the process and make it more efficient.

Tuggar added: "We are talking to the Americans. We are engaging them. We are also explaining and reminding them that we issue" visas the same way that they do.

"Our visa doesn't say that every American is only being given 90-day visas or three months or whatever. We give Americans… there are loads of Americans that have these long-term visas… it is not based on reciprocity."

Edited by: Alex Berry

Jon Shelton Writer, translator and editor with DW's online news team.
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