Trump said on social media that he had asked the Pentagon to map out a possible plan of attack in Africa's most populous nation because radical Islamists are "killing the Christians and killing them in very large numbers".
But Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar insisted that the country's constitution did not allow religious persecution, in the first comment by a senior Nigerian government official following Trump's weekend threats.
"It's impossible for there to be a religious persecution that can be supported in any way, shape or form by the government of Nigeria at any level," Tuggar told a press conference in Berlin.
Nigeria has a "constitutional commitment to religious freedom and rule of law", the foreign minister added.
Roughly evenly split between a mostly Christian south and Muslim-majority north, Nigeria is home to myriad conflicts, which experts say kill both Christians and Muslims, often without distinction.
But claims of Christian "persecution" in Nigeria have found traction online among the US and European right in recent months.
Flanked by his German counterpart Johann Wadephul, Tuggar warned against any attempts to divide Nigeria along religious lines, drawing parallels with civil war-ravaged Sudan.
"What we are trying to make the world understand is that we should not create another Sudan," he said.
"We've seen what has happened with Sudan with agitations for the partitioning of Sudan based on religion, based on tribal sentiments and you can see the crisis even when the partitioning was done according to religion or according to tribe," Tuggar said.
- Muslim victims too -
Trump has not suggested any division of Nigeria along religious lines, but said without evidence that "thousands of Christians are being killed (and) Radical Islamists are responsible for this mass slaughter".
Ikemesit Effiong, an analyst with the Lagos-based SBM Intelligence consultancy, suggests that Nigeria's fears of partitioning are informed by history, with several major former British colonies having experienced "violent partitions and secessions".
"Nigeria is actually sensitive to the fact that while our diversity can be a strength, it can also be a lever of division, of violence and eventually of partition," he told AFP.
Nigeria has denied that Christians have been targeted by jihadist attacks more than people from other faiths.
Before Trump's threat, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu had said that religious tolerance was "a core tenet of our collective identity".
Claims of a "Christian genocide" have been pushed in recent years by separatist groups in the southeast.
US-based firm Moran Global Strategies has been lobbying on behalf of separatists this year, advising congressional staff on what it said was Christian "persecution", according to lobbying disclosures.
The word "genocide" has also been used by some individuals in the central parts of the country who are frustrated by the escalating violence there, though typically in ethnic, not religious terms.
Nigeria also faces a long-running jihadist conflict in its northeast and "bandit" gangs in the northwest who stage kidnappings, village raids and killings.
The north's population is mostly Muslim -- meaning most of the victims are, too.
Nigeria's newly appointed chief of defence staff, Lieutenant General Olufemi Oluyede, told reporters on Monday that "there are no Christians being persecuted in Nigeria".
Other analysts suggest that Washington's amped-up rhetoric could be related to Abuja rejecting demands to accept non-Nigerian deportees expelled from the United States as part of Trump's immigration crackdown.
Christian, Muslim Nigerians push back on threatened US strikes
Abuja (AFP) Nov 3, 2025 -
Nigerians across the religious spectrum pushed back Monday on US President Donald Trump's threats of military intervention over the killing of Christians in the country.
Africa's most populous country, which is roughly evenly split between a mostly Christian south and Muslim-majority north, is home to myriad conflicts, which experts say kill both Christians and Muslims, often without distinction.
But claims of Christian "persecution" in Nigeria have found traction online among the US and European right in recent months.
"Christians are being killed, we can't deny the fact that Muslims are (also) being killed," Danjuma Dickson Auta, a Christian and community leader, told AFP.
Trump said on social media over the weekend that he had asked the Pentagon to map out a possible plan of attack.
Asked by an AFP reporter aboard Air Force One if he was considering putting US troops on the ground or using air strikes, Trump replied: "Could be, I mean, a lot of things -- I envisage a lot of things."
"They're killing the Christians and killing them in very large numbers," he said Sunday. "We're not going to allow that to happen."
Pushing back on the accusations, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu said religious tolerance was "a core tenet of our collective identity".
- Ethnic violence -
Auta, 56, hails from Plateau state, where Christians and Muslims have long lived side by side.
The state has also seen explosions of violence -- including deadly sectarian riots in the capital Jos in 2001 and 2008.
In recent years, Plateau and other states in Nigeria's "Middle Belt" have suffered deadly clashes between mostly Christian farmers and Fulani Muslim herders over dwindling land and resources.
The conflict has often resulted in massive death tolls on the side of the farmers, with entire villages razed.
Smaller-scale attacks on herders -- including retaliatory killings of random ethnic Fulanis or their cattle -- often generate fewer headlines in both the local and international press.
Though the violence appears on the surface to fall across ethnic and religious lines, experts say the root causes lie in poor land management and policing in rural areas.
Words like "genocide" have been thrown around by those in Plateau frustrated by the escalating violence, though typically in ethnic, not religious terms.
Claims of a "Christian genocide" meanwhile have been pushed in recent years by separatist groups in the southeast.
US-based firm Moran Global Strategies has been lobbying on behalf of separatists this year, advising congressional staff on what it said was Christian "persecution", according to lobbying disclosures.
- Row over deportations, visas -
Nigeria also faces a long-running jihadist conflict in its northeast and "bandit" gangs in the northwest who conduct kidnappings and village raids.
The north's population is mostly Muslim -- meaning most of the victims are, too.
"Even those who sold this narrative of Christian genocide know it is not true," said Abubakar Gamandi, a Muslim who heads a fishermen's union in Borno state, the epicentre of the Boko Haram conflict.
Oxford Economics political analyst Jervin Naidoo said that "while the terrorism threat is real", Washington's amped-up rhetoric could be related to Abuja rejecting demands to accept non-Nigerian deportees expelled from the United States as part of Trump's immigration crackdown.
"This move differs from countries like Eswatini, Uganda, Rwanda and Ghana, which have complied. In response, the US tightened visa rules for Nigerians," he noted.
Trump previously attacked South Africa over what he called a "genocide" against its Dutch-descended Afrikaner community and has offered them refugee status.
Critics of the president said the rhetoric was part of Trump's hardline diplomatic strategy, yet it has also resonated with some in Nigeria.
Reverend Joseph Hayab, chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria for the country's north, said he rejected the framing of "farmer-herder violence" and called Trump's comments a "wake-up call".
"People are twisting the story as if Trump said he is coming to fight Nigeria. No, he is coming to deal with terrorists," he told AFP.
Tinubu spokesman Daniel Bwala noted that "Donald Trump has his own style of communication", suggesting to AFP Sunday that Trump's post was a way to "force a sit-down between the two leaders so they can iron out a common front to fight their insecurity".
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