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21,000 unregistered refugees in Nigeria – UNHCR

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At least 21,807 foreign refugees and asylum seekers fleeing violence in neighbouring countries remain unregistered in Nigeria, denying them access to food assistance, healthcare and other essential services, the United Nations has revealed.

The figures, contained in the November 2025 UNHCR dashboard obtained by The PUNCH, show that the unregistered asylum seekers, predominantly come from Cameroon’s conflict-torn Anglophone region.

The data revealed that Nigeria currently hosts a total of 127,000 refugees and asylum seekers from 41 countries, with 21,807 still awaiting registration by the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons, alongside 80,915 recognised refugees and over 25,000 asylum seekers whose cases are being processed.

Analysis of successive UNHCR dashboards reveals that the backlog of unregistered refugees has fluctuated over the past year, climbing from 21,095 in December 2024 to a peak of 32,750 in June 2025, a 55 per cent surge in six months, before declining to 21,807 by November 2025.

The March 2025 dashboard recorded 20,997 persons awaiting registration, suggesting that the new arrivals continue to outpace the Federal Government’s capacity to process them.

Unregistered refugees remain ineligible for UNHCR-provided food stipends, cash assistance, health insurance schemes, and other humanitarian aid, leaving thousands in limbo as they struggle to meet basic needs in host communities.

One official familiar with the refugee registration process told our correspondent that staffing shortages, security restrictions, and logistical challenges have slowed enrolment in Borno, Adamawa, and Cross River States, which host the bulk of new arrivals.

“Registration can take weeks or even months, depending on the state and the availability of NCFRMI personnel,” explained one field officer who spoke on condition of anonymity.

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The data shows that Cameroonians dominate Nigeria’s refugee population, accounting for 86 per cent or approximately 119,208 people fleeing the eight-year-old Anglophone crisis in Cameroon’s North-West and South-West regions.

Smaller populations originate from Niger (15,011), the Central African Republic (1,053), Syria (1,330), and the Democratic Republic of Congo (598), among others.

Women and girls account for just over half of all refugees, while children represent close to 60 per cent, according to UNHCR statistics.

Most refugees live in host communities across Cross River, Taraba, Akwa Ibom, Benue, and Adamawa States, rather than in camps.

Urban centres such as Lagos, Abuja, and Kano also shelter refugees from diverse nationalities, some of whom have been in Nigeria for over a decade.

Nigeria’s open-door policy and adherence to the 1951 Geneva Convention and the 1969 Organisation of African Unity Convention require the country to grant asylum to individuals fleeing persecution and conflict.

The NCFRMI, working with the Nigerian Immigration Service and UNHCR, is responsible for registering asylum seekers and conducting Refugee Status Determination procedures, which can take three to six months.

Successful applicants receive refugee identity cards that provide access to work permits, school enrolment, and, in principle, freedom of movement beyond designated settlements.

In 2019, Nigeria began issuing Convention Travel Documents—refugee passports—to enable international travel.

However, during mass influxes, individual asylum procedures are often suspended in favour of group recognition.

In 2024, the government granted 86,000 Cameroonian refugees Temporary Protection Status valid through June 2027, while 20,000 Nigeriens in Damasak received prima facie recognition.

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Speaking with our correspondent, a former Nigerian Ambassador to Singapore, Ogbole Amedu-Ode, warned that while Nigeria must fulfil its international obligations, border control agencies must remain vigilant against infiltrators.

“Nigeria is a signatory to the appropriate international instruments, conventions and treaties that grant favour to asylum seekers, especially those under persecution.

“We’re aware of all the people from Cameroon, where there’s some kind of civil unrest. The same goes for Sudan, Syria and parts of Lebanon. Based on those international conventions, Nigeria is obliged to admit and grant them asylum.

“However, given the security situation we face in Nigeria, the relevant agencies should have their eyes peeled to watch out for people who might be used to infiltrate the Nigerian space for any negative objectives,” Amedu-Ode told The PUNCH.

The registration backlog comes as Nigeria grapples with a broader displacement crisis.

According to the UNHCR, the country hosts 3.5 million internally displaced persons, primarily in the North-East, due to Boko Haram and Islamic State West Africa Province insurgencies.

In 2024, severe floods affected over 480,000 people in 34 of Nigeria’s 36 states, including tens of thousands in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe, further straining humanitarian resources.

Meanwhile, nearly 408,000 Nigerian refugees remain registered in neighbouring countries such as Cameroon, Niger, and Chad, having fled insurgent violence in the Lake Chad Basin.

In 2025, UNHCR facilitated the return of 26,473 Nigerian refugees through voluntary repatriation programmes, including a landmark Tripartite Agreement signed in February with Chad and Nigeria.

Nigeria’s refugee response is coordinated through a Refugee Response Plan involving government agencies, UN bodies, international NGOs, and civil society organisations.

See also  Boko Haram Has Become Part Of Nigerians’ Life – Obasanjo

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Tinubu spending millions on lobbying Congress instead of addressing ‘Christian genocide’ — US lawmaker

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Riley Moore, a member of the United States House of Representatives from West Virginia’s 2nd District, has criticised the administration of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, accusing it of focusing on lobbying Congress in Washington instead of addressing insecurity affecting Christian communities in Nigeria.

Moore made the allegation in a post shared on X on Wednesday night, where he claimed the Federal Government of Nigeria had not done enough to respond to the violence.

“The Tinubu Administration is spending millions lobbying Congress while failing to adequately address the genocide Nigerian Christians face daily.”

He further stated, “@HouseAppropsGOP just passed our annual State Department funding bill, which takes serious steps to address this crisis. 🧵

“In this bill, I worked with @MarioDB to restrict Security Assistance to Nigeria unless certain criteria are met, including: effectively responding to violence and holding perpetrators accountable, prioritising resources for internally displaced persons, and actively returning displaced persons to their ancestral homelands.”

The criticism comes as a U.S. congressional committee advances a State Department funding bill that proposes stricter conditions for security assistance to Nigeria.

The legislation seeks to tie support to measurable actions, including improved response to violence, accountability for perpetrators, and better support for internally displaced persons.

Under the proposal, Nigeria would also face increased oversight, with U.S. authorities required to monitor how allocated funds are spent.

The bill directs the Secretary of State, Marco Rubio, to assess whether Nigeria meets the conditions before further assistance is released.

The bill also includes funding targeted at addressing insecurity linked to armed groups, while encouraging improved accountability within Nigeria’s security forces and support for local response structures.

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“The Secretary is required to submit a plan for every dollar appropriated to Nigeria, and every dollar spent will have direct Congressional oversight.

“The bill also includes millions in funding for International Narcotics Control and Law Enforcement to address “violence perpetrated by Fulani Ethnic Militia” and other sources of instability in the Middle Belt.

“That provision also bolsters support for the establishment of state level police forces so Christians in Plateau and Benue aren’t sitting ducks waiting for help from Abuja.”

Moore said the move reflects growing bipartisan concern in the U.S. Congress over the security situation in Nigeria and the need for stronger conditions tied to American assistance.

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Tinubu elevates Odumegwu-Ojukwu, appoints Enikanolaiye new minister

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President Bola Tinubu has appointed Bianca Odumegwu-Ojukwu as Minister of Foreign Affairs, elevating her from the minister of state position she had occupied in the same ministry.

The elevation follows the resignation of Amb Yusuf Tuggar to pursue his governorship ambition for the 2027 elections.

This is according to a statement signed on Wednesday by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga.

Onanuga also announced the nomination of Sola Enikanolaiye, from Kogi State, as the new Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, subject to Senate confirmation.

Until his nomination, Enikanolaiye served as Senior Special Assistant to the President on Foreign Affairs and International Relations.

Odumegwu-Ojukwu, the widow of late Biafran warlord and statesman Emeka Odumegwu-Ojukwu, served as Nigeria’s Ambassador to Spain and later to Italy before her initial appointment as Minister of State for Foreign Affairs under Tinubu in 2023.

Tuggar, who had served as Foreign Affairs minister since August 2023, resigned to pursue the Bauchi State governorship seat ahead of the 2027 election.

The Presidency had, in March, issued a circular through the Secretary to the Government of the Federation requiring ministers with political ambitions to resign before March 31.

Enikanolaiye brings over three decades of diplomatic experience to his new role.

He has served as Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and held key postings in Addis Ababa, Belgrade, Ottawa, London and New Delhi.

Tinubu said the appointments were part of ongoing efforts to reposition Nigeria’s foreign policy architecture for greater efficiency, strategic engagement and stronger global partnerships, and urged both appointees to promote Nigeria’s national interest, advance economic diplomacy, foster regional stability and safeguard the welfare of Nigerians at home and abroad.

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Tinubu vows crackdown on Plateau killers, approves N2bn relief

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President Bola Tinubu has vowed to deploy the full instruments of federal power against any persons identified as instigating or sustaining the recurring violence in Plateau State.

He promised that once troublemakers and provocateurs are identified, the government will act decisively against them.

The President also approved N2bn in relief support for victims of the March 29 attack in Angwan Rukuba, Jos North Local Government Area of Plateau State.

The President made this statement on Tuesday evening during his meeting with leaders and stakeholders from the state, with visuals provided to our correspondent by the State House Media Office on Wednesday.

The gathering, which ended at about 8 pm on Tuesday, had Governor Caleb Mutfwang and all living former governors of Plateau State, including the National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress, Prof Nentawe Yilwatda.

Addressing the delegation, Tinubu said, “No protocols, no hindrances, we are here to speak our minds and find a permanent solution to a recurring conflict and chaos.

“Let us first of all accept one resolution, tolerance for every inhabitant.

“If people are being recruited to provoke anger, conflict and killings, it is you, the leaders, that should first of all examine yourselves.”

He directed the governor to identify and name agents provocateurs so they could face the full weight of the law.

He also called on Plateau’s leadership to make justice, fairness and the integration of other ethnic groups central to the state’s peace-building efforts.

“If you identify and you know the name of troublemakers, agents provocateurs who want to continue killing or instigate killing, let us know.

“We will use the instrument of office to deal with them.”

The PUNCH earlier reported that Tinubu held long, closed-door talks with a delegation from Plateau State led by the governor.

Our correspondent observed that the delegation had waited several hours at the Villa before finally gaining access to meet the President.

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Tinubu endorsed the newly assembled peace committee of former governors, charging them with reviewing existing white papers on the state’s conflict.

He also directed them to return with a consolidated set of recommendations for government action, adding that the group would be the primary interface for the peace process going forward.

The President said, “You are going to work as a committee. Thank God all the previous governors, former governors, are alive, and you are here.”

He urged the group to operate with urgency and flexibility, dissolving previously constituted government committees if necessary.

“Call one another. Ignore the governor’s committee if you have to, or incorporate them. Take that white paper, go through it among yourselves and agree to implement it.

“If the ones you have chosen before now are not working, you have to mix and amend membership.

“Forget those committees you mentioned to me; if it’s not working, it’s not working. Consider this group as the committee until we find a lasting solution,” he said.

The President renewed his push for state police, describing it as the most relevant solution to Plateau’s peculiar security challenge.

He noted, “Through the legislators who are here, we are going to work together to establish state police on a national scale.

“I believe that once we have a state police, enforcement of laws will take care of some of these problems for us.

“We must stop creating widows, widowers and orphans. There must be peace.”

Tinubu also called for structural changes in the state’s governance architecture, directing the Plateau peace committee to increase the recruitment of non-indigenes into government as a confidence-building measure.

“You have to recruit more from non-indigenous communities into your government,” he said, adding that the Federal Government was prepared to co-fund radio jingles and public campaigns against discrimination, division and conflict if resources were required.

Speaking at the meeting, the governor acknowledged the historic nature of the gathering, saying the convening of all living former governors of the state in one room had never happened before.

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He said, “The coming together of the former governors has never happened before.

“This is the first time it is happening, and I believe that is a step we can build upon.

“Since we have closed the political space, I am sure some of the issues that have been politicised have been narrowed out, and we will be able to move together as brothers.”

Mutfwang pledged the state’s commitment to supporting the peace initiative and noted the historic significance of having all former governors of the state in one room.

“Our coming here today shows that there is a renewed spirit on the Plateau that we want to be together.

“We are determined more than ever to close all our gaps, ensure that we rise above all the divides of religion and ethnicity, and build a state we can all be proud of,” Mutfwang said.

He added that the state was “determined to look aggressively at how to turn conflict into profit” by pulling its people out of poverty under Tinubu’s leadership.

Tinubu’s comments on state police followed an earlier request made directly by the Gbong Gwom, Da Jacob Gyang Buba, who told the President that security agencies deployed to the state needed larger numbers and better equipment to cope with the scale of violence.

“At a time when we thought we would overcome our challenges, these renewed attacks have alerted us to the fact that we have a lot to do,” the traditional ruler said.

He also reminded Tinubu of the promise he made during his April 2 visit to install over 5,000 AI-enabled surveillance cameras across the state, urging follow-through on the commitment.

The monarch called for federal intervention to facilitate the return of internally displaced persons to their ancestral homes ahead of the rainy season, and commended the First Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, for visiting the state twice with relief materials following the security incidents.

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The Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Dr Bernard Doro, provided data in connection with the President’s directive for the victims.

At the town hall, Tinubu had asked Doro to compile numerical data on victims and their losses as a basis for a federal compensation intervention.

In a statement signed by the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, the minister announced the President’s approval of N2bn for the victims of the attacks.

The statement read, “At the interactive session, which lasted about three hours, the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Alleviation, Dr Mohammed Doro, announced that President Tinubu had approved N2bn in relief support for victims of the March 29 attack in Angwa Rukuba.”

The approval follows a promise the President made during his emergency visit to Jos on April 2, days after gunmen attacked residents of Angwan Rukuba returning from Palm Sunday church services, killing over 27 people.

Former Deputy Speaker, Idris Wase, in his contribution, stressed the need for rule of law enforcement and identified drug abuse as a significant driver of the insecurity in the state.

The delegation included all living former governors of the state; Simon Lalong, Jonah Jang, Joshua Dariye and Sir Fidelis Tapgun, as well as the Emir of Wase, Mohammed Haruna, the Gbong Gwon Jos, Da Jacob Gyang Buba, the Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Dr Dunka Gomwalk, Rear Admiral Samuel Atukum (retd.), former Military Governor, Air Marshal JD Wuyep (retd.), former Chief of Air Staff, former Deputy Governor and minister, Pauline Tallen, Speaker of the state House of Assembly, Naanlong Gapyil Daniel, APC National Chairman, Prof Nentawe Yilwatda, and former Deputy Speaker and current House of Representatives member, Idris Wase.

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