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Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere - Politics - Nairaland

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Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Kemetian(op): 2:43am On Nov 05, 2025
Tinubu’s efforts to make Nigeria stand firm behind Trump’s war threat — Afenifere

The pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation, Afenifere, has stated that the recent threat by U.S. President Donald Trump to invade Nigeria under the guise of fighting terrorists is a strategic decoy aimed at expressing his displeasure with President Bola Tinubu’s positions on certain global issues.

In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Mr. Jare Ajayi, Afenifere described Trump’s claim that the Federal Government is complicit in the killing of Christians by bandits as baseless and an attempt to “give a dog a bad name in order to kill it.”

The group argued that the threat was driven primarily by economic interests rather than genuine concern for human rights.

Ajayi said: “By sounding so harsh, Mr. Trump hopes to pressure President Tinubu into negotiations that would give the U.S. greater access to Nigeria’s economy and possibly push Nigeria into buying more American goods, particularly weapons. Nigeria’s increasing engagement with China is clearly unsettling for the U.S.”

He further suggested that certain political interests in America are uncomfortable with some foreign policy positions taken by the Tinubu administration.

“For instance, Vice President Kashim Shettima openly affirmed Nigeria’s support for a two-state solution in the Israel-Palestine conflict at the last UN General Assembly. It is well-known that this position did not sit well with the United States,” he added.


Banditry Not Religious — Afenifere

Afenifere maintained that claims of a government-backed genocide against Christians are inaccurate.

“Not that people are not being killed,” Ajayi admitted, “but bandits and terrorists do not discriminate. Their primary target is the economy. Those sponsoring them are after mineral resources. Once communities are displaced, the sponsors move in to exploit these resources.”

He noted that the government is actively addressing insecurity, pointing to the recent changes in service chiefs as part of measures to strengthen national security.


Caution Against Escalation

The group warned Nigerians not to worsen the situation through reckless statements that could justify foreign aggression.

Ajayi said: “When you deride your country, the damage is not easily undone. We must be careful about what we say or write. Nigeria indeed needs help to address its security challenges, but threatening it with war is not a solution.”

He noted that America’s involvement in other countries has often led to long-term instability:

“None of the nations where America has intervened militarily has known peace. When we cry out, we must keep our eyes open to see what lies ahead.”
https://www.vanguardngr.com/2025/11/tinubus-efforts-to-make-nigeria-stand-firm-behind-trumps-war-threat-afenifere/

Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by HacheNoire:
Only a novice does not know that!

Same US 😂🤣😂🤣😂

Once that country start dishing out propaganda towards your country, YOU DEFINITELY DOING something right.

They don’t attack people who do wrong and listen to their commands.

Saudi, Qatar, Oman and Kuwait don’t need democracy, but Venezuela needs democracy.

UAE sponsoring rebels in Sudan and killing people in thousands, but they don’t deserve military intervention because UAE is a top best friend of the US. Gold reserves at stake.

Congo been burning for decades and not even a mention of them. It’s legit when they rob you of your resources, but illegitimate when you nationalize your resources.


They don’t attack you if you on the wrong path. The moment you step on a to right course, you accused of having weapon of mass destruction.

People
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by socialmediaman:
How much of those resources has impacted your life?

The US has far more oil than Nigeria, even Dangote Refinery buys Crude oil from the US. The US produces 12.9 million barrels per day against Nigeria’s meager 1.5 million barrels pd.

If the US wants rare earth minerals, the DRC has willingly offered it to them. DRC has one of the largest deposits of rare earth minerals in the world.

These people know they’re lying, but they hope that by continuously echoing the lies, unsuspecting Nigerians will believe them.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by omojeesu(m): 4:11am On Nov 05, 2025
Trump Is Not After Nigeria but China — The Hidden War for Nigeria’s Soul

By Anngu Orngu

I am following with deep interest the ongoing debates that are erupting over Donald J. Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) for religious freedom violations. Many Nigerians, including analysts I respect, are rushing to interpret that decision through the narrow lens of Western imperialism or anti-Islam bias. Others are dismissing it as another of Trump’s theatrics; a foreign leader speaking loudly to his conservative Christian base.

But as someone who is studying policy, governance, and environmental security — and as a Nigerian who lovws his country deeply, I am insisting that President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China. And Nigeria, whether we are realising it or not, is standing today as one of the hidden battlegrounds in the long-running strategic rivalry between the United States and China.

Trump’s Silence on China and His Sudden Shift to Nigeria

What is capturing my attention is how Trump is behaving immediately after his meeting with the Chinese President in Tokyo just some few days ago. He said nothing too detailed about the content of the meeting. Instead, he is stepping out and talking about Nigeria — about the mass killings of Christians, the destruction of rural communities, and the rise of religiously-motivated violence in the Middle Belt.

To a casual observer, that shift looks random. But in the language of global diplomacy, it is a signal. You don’t move from Tokyo to Nigeria in one breath unless there is a linking thread. Trump’s intelligence briefings are showing that Nigeria’s crisis is being tied to Chinese economic interests. That is what many of us are failing to see.

China’s Deep Hand in Nigeria’s Bloody Mining Economy

We are not deceiving ourselves when we say Nigeria is sitting on gold. Real gold. And not just gold — we are sitting on columbite, tantalite, lithium, and other rare earth minerals that are vital to modern technology: electric cars, smartphones, satellites, even weapons. Whoever is controlling the supply of these resources is controlling the future of global power.

China is dominating global rare-earth production and refining, but as its domestic reserves are depleting, it is expanding into Africa — and Nigeria, with a weak regulatory system and persistent insecurity, is looking like a prime target.

Across Zamfara, Niger, Nasarawa, Plateau, Benue, Taraba states, illegal mining is exploding. Beneath the surface of that chaos is a powerful network of Chinese-backed miners, local collaborators, and militia protection rackets. In some communities, entire villages are being emptied out by attacks so that the land is being “freed up” for mining.

A visit to some communities in Benue, Plateau and Nasarawa where the soil is carrying visible scars of reckless excavation. Locals are speaking of strange foreigners arriving at night and trucks loaded with ore moving under military escort. These are not fairy tales — they are the daily reality of a nation losing its wealth to foreign hands under cover of terror.

Terrorism as a Tool for Resource Control

We often view terrorism in Nigeria as purely ideological — a religious war or a clash of civilizations. But when we look closely, we are seeing that terrorism is becoming a deliberate tool for resource control.

Groups that label themselves as herders, bandits, or insurgents are aligning with illegal miners. They are attacking Christian farming communities, killing or displacing the inhabitants, and leaving behind ungoverned zones/spaces ready for exploitation. Chinese middlemen and local cartels are moving in to dig, extract, and export. The minerals are leaving Nigeria illegally, ending up in Dubai, Hong Kong or Shanghai — enriching foreign economies while Nigeria bleeds.

When Trump is talking about Christian persecution in Nigeria, many people are thinking he is pandering to faith-based voters. But he is also responding to strategic intelligence. His government is discovering that China is using Nigeria’s instability as a shield for illegal extraction — and that thousands of Christian lives are not being lost randomly, but as collateral damage in a global economic war.

The Buahri Waterways Bill — China’s Trojan Horse

We are remembering how, under President Buhari, the Water Resources Bill was being pushed. Nigerians from every corner resisted it and rightly so. On the surface, the bill seemed like administrative reform to bring all inland waterways and adjoining lands under federal control. But beneath that surface was something far more sinister.

Those waterways; rivers, streams, wetlands are not just water routes; they are mineral corridors. Many of Nigeria’s richest alluvial gold and rare earth deposits are located along these river systems. By centralising control of the lands, the bill if pass was paving the way for foreign interests especially Chinese-linked companies to gain access through federal licences, bypassing state governments and local communities.

I believe Chinese advisers and investors were quietly lobbying for that bill. They were seeing it as a legal shortcut to Nigeria’s mineral heartlands. Fortunately, Nigerians resisted it fiercely. But the attempt itself exposed how deeply Chinese mining ambitions are penetrating our policymaking corridors.

Trump’s Intelligence Briefing and the Bigger Picture

Now imagine Trump sitting in the Oval Office, reviewing a classified intelligence briefing ahead of his meeting with the Chinese President. The report might read:

“China is funding illegal mining operations in Nigeria through proxies. Minerals are being smuggled to China. Terrorist groups are clearing Christian farming zones to open mining fields. Nigeria’s government is aware but failing to act.”

If I put myself in Trump’s shoes — a man obsessed with America First, economic nationalism, and confronting Chinese influence, I see why he is doing what he is doing.

That explains why after his meeting with the Chinese President he is saying nothing about the trade war or Huawei. Instead, he is focusing on Nigeria. He is not only expressing moral outrage, he is sending a geostrategic message to Beijing and Abuja alike: “We see what you’re doing in Nigeria, and we are watching.”

The CPC designation thus becomes a diplomatic weapon; not just to defend religious freedom, but to pressure Nigeria’s leadership to confront internal terrorism, regulate its mining sector, and cut off China’s exploitation routes. It is also telling China that the U.S. will not silently allow Africa’s mineral corridors to slip into Beijing’s hands.

The Blood of the Poor, the Gold of the Powerful

As a development professional, I am telling ourselves that underdevelopment is not accidental. It is a system maintained for the benefit of those who profit from chaos. The violence ravaging Nigeria’s north and middle belt follows an economic logic. It is driving farmers away from ancestral lands, weakening resistance, and clearing the field for predatory extraction.

In many of these regions, the victims are overwhelmingly Christian farmers. Their lands sit on mineral deposits. Their displacement often labelled as “herder-farmer clashes” is enabling illegal mining. Every truckload of gold leaving Zamfara or Niger without record is carrying stolen wealth plus the blood of innocent people.

When Trump is referring to “Christian genocide,” it may sound dramatic to some. But to me it is truthful. He is naming what the rest of the world is refusing to name: a systematic campaign of dispossession combining religion, resource greed, and geopolitics.

Nigeria at the Crossroads of Global Power Politics

Nigeria is now standing at a dangerous crossroads. On one side is China — aggressive, patient, and comfortable operating in the shadows. On the other side is the United States — loud, moralistic, and determined not to lose strategic ground. Both are seeing our country as strategic: China for minerals; America for influence.

For Beijing, Nigeria is a silent goldmine. For Washington, Nigeria is a partner slipping away. And for Nigerians like us, we are caught in the middle — a proud nation being turned into a chessboard for foreign powers.

The truth is uncomfortable: our leaders allowed it. Through negligence or complicity, they permit foreign powers to profit from our insecurity. Every village burned in Benue or Plateau, every displaced farmer in Nasarawa, every illegal mining pit in Niger is part of the same global script — the conversion of African lives into raw material for foreign profit.

What Trump’s Move is Actually Signalling

Trump’s move is not hostility toward us. It is a wake-up call. He is using America’s legal and diplomatic tools like the CPC designation to jolt our leadership into action. He is highlighting the shootings in Plateau, Benue and Southern Kaduna not just out of empathy, but because those regions sit atop mineral deposits that feed China’s industrial machine.

When he says “The persecution of Christians must stop,” he is also meaning “Nigeria must stop enriching our biggest rival through the corridors of instability.” His message, though blunt, aligns with what every patriotic Nigerian should demand: a state that protects its people, its land, and its resources.

Nigeria Must Wake Up

Nigeria cannot continue to live in denial. We must stop pretending our insecurity is purely domestic. It is not. It is being sponsored, exploited, and sustained by global powers who see profit in our pain.

We must press for urgent reforms — a national mining framework that shuts down illegal foreign operators; a security architecture that protects communities; and leadership that understands that when a Nigerian village falls, the nation’s sovereignty is being stripped.

We must draw the connections from the blood on our farmlands to the gold in Chinese vaults. From Christian families fleeing in the Middle Belt to the wealth fueling Asian factories. From the failed waterways bill to the shadowy corridors of global mining diplomacy.

Conclusion

President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China and Nigeria is just one of the theatres where this global confrontation is playing out. His warnings about Christian killings and religious freedom are carrying more than moral weight; they are linked to strategic intelligence.

As a Nigerian, I accept his message not as an insult, but as a challenge — a reminder that sovereignty lies not only in our flag, but in how we protect our people, our land, and our resources.

If we fail to act, the silent war between the United States and China will keep being waged on our soil — not with tanks or missiles, but with shovels, mineral flows, and human suffering.

It is time for Nigeria to wake up.

Anngu Orngu writes from Koti-Yogh, Ute, Vandeikya Local Government Area of Benue State.
oranngu@gmail.com
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Arostar2023: 4:12am On Nov 05, 2025
HacheNoire:
Only a novice does not know that!

Same US 😂🤣😂🤣😂

Once that country start dishing out propaganda towards your country, YOU DEFINITELY DOING something right.

They don’t attack people who do wrong and listen to their commands.

Saudi, Qatar, Oman and Kuwait don’t need democracy, but Venezuela needs democracy.

UAE sponsoring rebels in Sudan and killing people in thousands, but they don’t deserve military intervention because UAE is a top best friend of the US. Gold reserves at stake.

Congo been burning for decades and not even a mention of them. It’s legit when they rob you of your resources, but illegitimate when you nationalize your resources.


They attack you if you on the wrong path. The moment you step on a to right course, you accused of having weapon of mass destruction.

People
Resources this, resources that, as if una de utilize am for the benefit of the citizens of Nigeria. Go Niger Delta and see poverty in 3-D , yet they have been producing oil for decades. Only the politicians that are in Abuja and the warlords in the Creeks are they ones enjoying the so-called oil riches.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by MaziObinnaokija: 4:15am On Nov 05, 2025
sad useless talk.
Who kpai Baba Fasoranti's daughter?
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Angelfrost(m): 4:17am On Nov 05, 2025
All this long talk and shalaye no dey necessary ra ra.

Just safeguard your country and eradicate terrorism.

If you clean up your acts and stop the mindless slaughter of Nigerians, what business would Trump have with your country or your resources?!!

You Tinubu supporters get more annoying and dumber with each silly comment about "Trump and Our Resources".
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by JimD(m): 4:18am On Nov 05, 2025
omojeesu:
Trump Is Not After Nigeria but China — The Hidden War for Nigeria’s Soul

By Anngu Orngu

I am following with deep interest the ongoing debates that are erupting over Donald J. Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) for religious freedom violations. Many Nigerians, including analysts I respect, are rushing to interpret that decision through the narrow lens of Western imperialism or anti-Islam bias. Others are dismissing it as another of Trump’s theatrics; a foreign leader speaking loudly to his conservative Christian base.

But as someone who is studying policy, governance, and environmental security — and as a Nigerian who lovws his country deeply, I am insisting that President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China. And Nigeria, whether we are realising it or not, is standing today as one of the hidden battlegrounds in the long-running strategic rivalry between the United States and China.

Trump’s Silence on China and His Sudden Shift to Nigeria

What is capturing my attention is how Trump is behaving immediately after his meeting with the Chinese President in Tokyo just some few days ago. He said nothing too detailed about the content of the meeting. Instead, he is stepping out and talking about Nigeria — about the mass killings of Christians, the destruction of rural communities, and the rise of religiously-motivated violence in the Middle Belt.

To a casual observer, that shift looks random. But in the language of global diplomacy, it is a signal. You don’t move from Tokyo to Nigeria in one breath unless there is a linking thread. Trump’s intelligence briefings are showing that Nigeria’s crisis is being tied to Chinese economic interests. That is what many of us are failing to see.

China’s Deep Hand in Nigeria’s Bloody Mining Economy

We are not deceiving ourselves when we say Nigeria is sitting on gold. Real gold. And not just gold — we are sitting on columbite, tantalite, lithium, and other rare earth minerals that are vital to modern technology: electric cars, smartphones, satellites, even weapons. Whoever is controlling the supply of these resources is controlling the future of global power.

China is dominating global rare-earth production and refining, but as its domestic reserves are depleting, it is expanding into Africa — and Nigeria, with a weak regulatory system and persistent insecurity, is looking like a prime target.

Across Zamfara, Niger, Nasarawa, Plateau, Benue, Taraba states, illegal mining is exploding. Beneath the surface of that chaos is a powerful network of Chinese-backed miners, local collaborators, and militia protection rackets. In some communities, entire villages are being emptied out by attacks so that the land is being “freed up” for mining.

A visit to some communities in Benue, Plateau and Nasarawa where the soil is carrying visible scars of reckless excavation. Locals are speaking of strange foreigners arriving at night and trucks loaded with ore moving under military escort. These are not fairy tales — they are the daily reality of a nation losing its wealth to foreign hands under cover of terror.

Terrorism as a Tool for Resource Control

We often view terrorism in Nigeria as purely ideological — a religious war or a clash of civilizations. But when we look closely, we are seeing that terrorism is becoming a deliberate tool for resource control.

Groups that label themselves as herders, bandits, or insurgents are aligning with illegal miners. They are attacking Christian farming communities, killing or displacing the inhabitants, and leaving behind ungoverned zones/spaces ready for exploitation. Chinese middlemen and local cartels are moving in to dig, extract, and export. The minerals are leaving Nigeria illegally, ending up in Dubai, Hong Kong or Shanghai — enriching foreign economies while Nigeria bleeds.

When Trump is talking about Christian persecution in Nigeria, many people are thinking he is pandering to faith-based voters. But he is also responding to strategic intelligence. His government is discovering that China is using Nigeria’s instability as a shield for illegal extraction — and that thousands of Christian lives are not being lost randomly, but as collateral damage in a global economic war.

The Buahri Waterways Bill — China’s Trojan Horse

We are remembering how, under President Buhari, the Water Resources Bill was being pushed. Nigerians from every corner resisted it and rightly so. On the surface, the bill seemed like administrative reform to bring all inland waterways and adjoining lands under federal control. But beneath that surface was something far more sinister.

Those waterways; rivers, streams, wetlands are not just water routes; they are mineral corridors. Many of Nigeria’s richest alluvial gold and rare earth deposits are located along these river systems. By centralising control of the lands, the bill if pass was paving the way for foreign interests especially Chinese-linked companies to gain access through federal licences, bypassing state governments and local communities.

I believe Chinese advisers and investors were quietly lobbying for that bill. They were seeing it as a legal shortcut to Nigeria’s mineral heartlands. Fortunately, Nigerians resisted it fiercely. But the attempt itself exposed how deeply Chinese mining ambitions are penetrating our policymaking corridors.

Trump’s Intelligence Briefing and the Bigger Picture

Now imagine Trump sitting in the Oval Office, reviewing a classified intelligence briefing ahead of his meeting with the Chinese President. The report might read:

“China is funding illegal mining operations in Nigeria through proxies. Minerals are being smuggled to China. Terrorist groups are clearing Christian farming zones to open mining fields. Nigeria’s government is aware but failing to act.”

If I put myself in Trump’s shoes — a man obsessed with America First, economic nationalism, and confronting Chinese influence, I see why he is doing what he is doing.

That explains why after his meeting with the Chinese President he is saying nothing about the trade war or Huawei. Instead, he is focusing on Nigeria. He is not only expressing moral outrage, he is sending a geostrategic message to Beijing and Abuja alike: “We see what you’re doing in Nigeria, and we are watching.”

The CPC designation thus becomes a diplomatic weapon; not just to defend religious freedom, but to pressure Nigeria’s leadership to confront internal terrorism, regulate its mining sector, and cut off China’s exploitation routes. It is also telling China that the U.S. will not silently allow Africa’s mineral corridors to slip into Beijing’s hands.

The Blood of the Poor, the Gold of the Powerful

As a development professional, I am telling ourselves that underdevelopment is not accidental. It is a system maintained for the benefit of those who profit from chaos. The violence ravaging Nigeria’s north and middle belt follows an economic logic. It is driving farmers away from ancestral lands, weakening resistance, and clearing the field for predatory extraction.

In many of these regions, the victims are overwhelmingly Christian farmers. Their lands sit on mineral deposits. Their displacement often labelled as “herder-farmer clashes” is enabling illegal mining. Every truckload of gold leaving Zamfara or Niger without record is carrying stolen wealth plus the blood of innocent people.

When Trump is referring to “Christian genocide,” it may sound dramatic to some. But to me it is truthful. He is naming what the rest of the world is refusing to name: a systematic campaign of dispossession combining religion, resource greed, and geopolitics.

Nigeria at the Crossroads of Global Power Politics

Nigeria is now standing at a dangerous crossroads. On one side is China — aggressive, patient, and comfortable operating in the shadows. On the other side is the United States — loud, moralistic, and determined not to lose strategic ground. Both are seeing our country as strategic: China for minerals; America for influence.

For Beijing, Nigeria is a silent goldmine. For Washington, Nigeria is a partner slipping away. And for Nigerians like us, we are caught in the middle — a proud nation being turned into a chessboard for foreign powers.

The truth is uncomfortable: our leaders allowed it. Through negligence or complicity, they permit foreign powers to profit from our insecurity. Every village burned in Benue or Plateau, every displaced farmer in Nasarawa, every illegal mining pit in Niger is part of the same global script — the conversion of African lives into raw material for foreign profit.

What Trump’s Move is Actually Signalling

Trump’s move is not hostility toward us. It is a wake-up call. He is using America’s legal and diplomatic tools like the CPC designation to jolt our leadership into action. He is highlighting the shootings in Plateau, Benue and Southern Kaduna not just out of empathy, but because those regions sit atop mineral deposits that feed China’s industrial machine.

When he says “The persecution of Christians must stop,” he is also meaning “Nigeria must stop enriching our biggest rival through the corridors of instability.” His message, though blunt, aligns with what every patriotic Nigerian should demand: a state that protects its people, its land, and its resources.

Nigeria Must Wake Up

Nigeria cannot continue to live in denial. We must stop pretending our insecurity is purely domestic. It is not. It is being sponsored, exploited, and sustained by global powers who see profit in our pain.

We must press for urgent reforms — a national mining framework that shuts down illegal foreign operators; a security architecture that protects communities; and leadership that understands that when a Nigerian village falls, the nation’s sovereignty is being stripped.

We must draw the connections from the blood on our farmlands to the gold in Chinese vaults. From Christian families fleeing in the Middle Belt to the wealth fueling Asian factories. From the failed waterways bill to the shadowy corridors of global mining diplomacy.

Conclusion

President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China and Nigeria is just one of the theatres where this global confrontation is playing out. His warnings about Christian killings and religious freedom are carrying more than moral weight; they are linked to strategic intelligence.

As a Nigerian, I accept his message not as an insult, but as a challenge — a reminder that sovereignty lies not only in our flag, but in how we protect our people, our land, and our resources.

If we fail to act, the silent war between the United States and China will keep being waged on our soil — not with tanks or missiles, but with shovels, mineral flows, and human suffering.

It is time for Nigeria to wake up.

Anngu Orngu writes from Koti-Yogh, Ute, Vandeikya Local Government Area of Benue State.
oranngu@gmail.com
Useless propaganda. Find something better to do with your time. Every sane person knows Nigeria cannot solve it's insecurity problem, nor any other problem for that matter.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Gerrard59(m): 4:19am On Nov 05, 2025
When has Afenifere condemned the incursion of Fulani terrorists in Kwara State?

This is my issue with this: "they want our resources" and "we are a sovereign state". When have you condemned the onslaught of Christians across Northern Nigeria? Are the lives of ordinary farmers in Benue, Plateau, Kogi and Southern Kaduna not worth it? How many of you condemned the inhumane and despicable manner in which Deborah Yakubu Samuel was murdered? Was it Trump who ordered her body to be burned to ashes? How many times has Afenifere mentioned the travails ordinary Nigerians experience when passing through Kogi to other parts of the country?
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by MichaelSokoto(m):
Hahaha hahaha
hahahaha

Too much long talk everywhere.

Even bayo ononoga don turn to DSS spokesperson dey drop update concerning terror financers!

Baba Trump, u do dis one for us oo!
🤣🤣 😂
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Originalsly: 4:21am On Nov 05, 2025
Israel has killed hundreds of thousands in Gaza ... heavily supported by the US .. but Trump does not see it as genocide...has said nothing to Netanyahu. Christians have been targeted and killed...churches bombed in Israel ...but he has not seen it as genocide. But he see in genocide wayyy over in Nigeria and ready to send troops there. I never knew Nigeria had sooo many proud fools who would support Trump's view. These are the ones amongst us we have to watch closely ... the enemies within.. Judas everywhere.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Arostar2023: 4:24am On Nov 05, 2025
omojeesu:
Trump Is Not After Nigeria but China — The Hidden War for Nigeria’s Soul

By Anngu Orngu

I am following with deep interest the ongoing debates that are erupting over Donald J. Trump’s designation of Nigeria as a Country of Particular Concern (CPC) for religious freedom violations. Many Nigerians, including analysts I respect, are rushing to interpret that decision through the narrow lens of Western imperialism or anti-Islam bias. Others are dismissing it as another of Trump’s theatrics; a foreign leader speaking loudly to his conservative Christian base.

But as someone who is studying policy, governance, and environmental security — and as a Nigerian who lovws his country deeply, I am insisting that President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China. And Nigeria, whether we are realising it or not, is standing today as one of the hidden battlegrounds in the long-running strategic rivalry between the United States and China.

Trump’s Silence on China and His Sudden Shift to Nigeria

What is capturing my attention is how Trump is behaving immediately after his meeting with the Chinese President in Tokyo just some few days ago. He said nothing too detailed about the content of the meeting. Instead, he is stepping out and talking about Nigeria — about the mass killings of Christians, the destruction of rural communities, and the rise of religiously-motivated violence in the Middle Belt.

To a casual observer, that shift looks random. But in the language of global diplomacy, it is a signal. You don’t move from Tokyo to Nigeria in one breath unless there is a linking thread. Trump’s intelligence briefings are showing that Nigeria’s crisis is being tied to Chinese economic interests. That is what many of us are failing to see.

China’s Deep Hand in Nigeria’s Bloody Mining Economy

We are not deceiving ourselves when we say Nigeria is sitting on gold. Real gold. And not just gold — we are sitting on columbite, tantalite, lithium, and other rare earth minerals that are vital to modern technology: electric cars, smartphones, satellites, even weapons. Whoever is controlling the supply of these resources is controlling the future of global power.

China is dominating global rare-earth production and refining, but as its domestic reserves are depleting, it is expanding into Africa — and Nigeria, with a weak regulatory system and persistent insecurity, is looking like a prime target.

Across Zamfara, Niger, Nasarawa, Plateau, Benue, Taraba states, illegal mining is exploding. Beneath the surface of that chaos is a powerful network of Chinese-backed miners, local collaborators, and militia protection rackets. In some communities, entire villages are being emptied out by attacks so that the land is being “freed up” for mining.

A visit to some communities in Benue, Plateau and Nasarawa where the soil is carrying visible scars of reckless excavation. Locals are speaking of strange foreigners arriving at night and trucks loaded with ore moving under military escort. These are not fairy tales — they are the daily reality of a nation losing its wealth to foreign hands under cover of terror.

Terrorism as a Tool for Resource Control

We often view terrorism in Nigeria as purely ideological — a religious war or a clash of civilizations. But when we look closely, we are seeing that terrorism is becoming a deliberate tool for resource control.

Groups that label themselves as herders, bandits, or insurgents are aligning with illegal miners. They are attacking Christian farming communities, killing or displacing the inhabitants, and leaving behind ungoverned zones/spaces ready for exploitation. Chinese middlemen and local cartels are moving in to dig, extract, and export. The minerals are leaving Nigeria illegally, ending up in Dubai, Hong Kong or Shanghai — enriching foreign economies while Nigeria bleeds.

When Trump is talking about Christian persecution in Nigeria, many people are thinking he is pandering to faith-based voters. But he is also responding to strategic intelligence. His government is discovering that China is using Nigeria’s instability as a shield for illegal extraction — and that thousands of Christian lives are not being lost randomly, but as collateral damage in a global economic war.

The Buahri Waterways Bill — China’s Trojan Horse

We are remembering how, under President Buhari, the Water Resources Bill was being pushed. Nigerians from every corner resisted it and rightly so. On the surface, the bill seemed like administrative reform to bring all inland waterways and adjoining lands under federal control. But beneath that surface was something far more sinister.

Those waterways; rivers, streams, wetlands are not just water routes; they are mineral corridors. Many of Nigeria’s richest alluvial gold and rare earth deposits are located along these river systems. By centralising control of the lands, the bill if pass was paving the way for foreign interests especially Chinese-linked companies to gain access through federal licences, bypassing state governments and local communities.

I believe Chinese advisers and investors were quietly lobbying for that bill. They were seeing it as a legal shortcut to Nigeria’s mineral heartlands. Fortunately, Nigerians resisted it fiercely. But the attempt itself exposed how deeply Chinese mining ambitions are penetrating our policymaking corridors.

Trump’s Intelligence Briefing and the Bigger Picture

Now imagine Trump sitting in the Oval Office, reviewing a classified intelligence briefing ahead of his meeting with the Chinese President. The report might read:

“China is funding illegal mining operations in Nigeria through proxies. Minerals are being smuggled to China. Terrorist groups are clearing Christian farming zones to open mining fields. Nigeria’s government is aware but failing to act.”

If I put myself in Trump’s shoes — a man obsessed with America First, economic nationalism, and confronting Chinese influence, I see why he is doing what he is doing.

That explains why after his meeting with the Chinese President he is saying nothing about the trade war or Huawei. Instead, he is focusing on Nigeria. He is not only expressing moral outrage, he is sending a geostrategic message to Beijing and Abuja alike: “We see what you’re doing in Nigeria, and we are watching.”

The CPC designation thus becomes a diplomatic weapon; not just to defend religious freedom, but to pressure Nigeria’s leadership to confront internal terrorism, regulate its mining sector, and cut off China’s exploitation routes. It is also telling China that the U.S. will not silently allow Africa’s mineral corridors to slip into Beijing’s hands.

The Blood of the Poor, the Gold of the Powerful

As a development professional, I am telling ourselves that underdevelopment is not accidental. It is a system maintained for the benefit of those who profit from chaos. The violence ravaging Nigeria’s north and middle belt follows an economic logic. It is driving farmers away from ancestral lands, weakening resistance, and clearing the field for predatory extraction.

In many of these regions, the victims are overwhelmingly Christian farmers. Their lands sit on mineral deposits. Their displacement often labelled as “herder-farmer clashes” is enabling illegal mining. Every truckload of gold leaving Zamfara or Niger without record is carrying stolen wealth plus the blood of innocent people.

When Trump is referring to “Christian genocide,” it may sound dramatic to some. But to me it is truthful. He is naming what the rest of the world is refusing to name: a systematic campaign of dispossession combining religion, resource greed, and geopolitics.

Nigeria at the Crossroads of Global Power Politics

Nigeria is now standing at a dangerous crossroads. On one side is China — aggressive, patient, and comfortable operating in the shadows. On the other side is the United States — loud, moralistic, and determined not to lose strategic ground. Both are seeing our country as strategic: China for minerals; America for influence.

For Beijing, Nigeria is a silent goldmine. For Washington, Nigeria is a partner slipping away. And for Nigerians like us, we are caught in the middle — a proud nation being turned into a chessboard for foreign powers.

The truth is uncomfortable: our leaders allowed it. Through negligence or complicity, they permit foreign powers to profit from our insecurity. Every village burned in Benue or Plateau, every displaced farmer in Nasarawa, every illegal mining pit in Niger is part of the same global script — the conversion of African lives into raw material for foreign profit.

What Trump’s Move is Actually Signalling

Trump’s move is not hostility toward us. It is a wake-up call. He is using America’s legal and diplomatic tools like the CPC designation to jolt our leadership into action. He is highlighting the shootings in Plateau, Benue and Southern Kaduna not just out of empathy, but because those regions sit atop mineral deposits that feed China’s industrial machine.

When he says “The persecution of Christians must stop,” he is also meaning “Nigeria must stop enriching our biggest rival through the corridors of instability.” His message, though blunt, aligns with what every patriotic Nigerian should demand: a state that protects its people, its land, and its resources.

Nigeria Must Wake Up

Nigeria cannot continue to live in denial. We must stop pretending our insecurity is purely domestic. It is not. It is being sponsored, exploited, and sustained by global powers who see profit in our pain.

We must press for urgent reforms — a national mining framework that shuts down illegal foreign operators; a security architecture that protects communities; and leadership that understands that when a Nigerian village falls, the nation’s sovereignty is being stripped.

We must draw the connections from the blood on our farmlands to the gold in Chinese vaults. From Christian families fleeing in the Middle Belt to the wealth fueling Asian factories. From the failed waterways bill to the shadowy corridors of global mining diplomacy.

Conclusion

President Trump is not after Nigeria. He is after China and Nigeria is just one of the theatres where this global confrontation is playing out. His warnings about Christian killings and religious freedom are carrying more than moral weight; they are linked to strategic intelligence.

As a Nigerian, I accept his message not as an insult, but as a challenge — a reminder that sovereignty lies not only in our flag, but in how we protect our people, our land, and our resources.

If we fail to act, the silent war between the United States and China will keep being waged on our soil — not with tanks or missiles, but with shovels, mineral flows, and human suffering.

It is time for Nigeria to wake up.

Anngu Orngu writes from Koti-Yogh, Ute, Vandeikya Local Government Area of Benue State.
oranngu@gmail.com
Bottomline is that people are been killed and nothing tangible is been done about it. If it never touch you, you will never know the pain.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Gerrard59(m): 4:24am On Nov 05, 2025
Angelfrost:
All this long talk and shalaye no dey necessary ra ra.

Just safeguard your country and eradicate terrorism.

If you clean up your acts and stop the mindless slaughter of Nigerians, what business would Trump have with your country or your resources?!!

You Tinubu supporters get more annoying and dumber with each silly comment about "Trump and Our Resources".
I really don't get why they find that hard to grasp.

Let's, for once, assume the US, through its numerous agencies, is behind the endless killings. Why do northern elites support the senseless butchering of Christians throughout the region? Why have other Nigerians kept mum when people were butchered in Benue and Southern Kaduna? Iyin Aboyeji even christened such killings as "little genocides".

Ensure the killings stop, and there will be a united response against US interference. But when you keep mute when ordinary Nigerians, especially ethnic minorities, are maimed daily, you make it easy for Trump and his cohorts.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by PROPHETmichael: 4:25am On Nov 05, 2025
It is far more beneficial for the United States to gain access to Nigeria’s natural resources while ensuring that the average Nigerian can live in peace, security, and dignity, than for a corrupt elite to continue enriching themselves at the expense of the people; leaving the nation trapped in poverty, violence, and the grip of Boko Haram, bandits, and other criminal forces.

Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Jicks55: 4:25am On Nov 05, 2025
It's unfortunate that Afenifere would ignore the message and go after the messenger. The message is simply: 'Stop the killings, or we'll come over to do it ourselves.'"
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by ReturnMan: 4:27am On Nov 05, 2025
He can have it
He can have it
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by chiiraq802(m): 4:27am On Nov 05, 2025
With the way Nigerians are suffering do we even have Natural resourceshuh

If it's the Natural resources that few persons are enjoying alone in Nigeria is want trump and US want to fish out those terrorists, there sympathizers and sponsors killing innocent Nigerian daily, mk dem com take am......

Infact let dem empty the natural resources....

Who natural resources epphuh thunder fire natural resources.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by MrCGPA(m): 4:27am On Nov 05, 2025
Let him Steal and Save humans life here in Nigeria. Some of you that are always making noise about this issue don't know how much the YS is spending on Nigeria. If American stop just Free HIV/AIDS drugs in Nigeria you guys will perish in huge number. We are the one benefitting from US.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by HacheNoire: 4:30am On Nov 05, 2025
Arostar2023:
Resources this, resources that, as if una de utilize am for the benefit of the citizens of Nigeria. Go Niger Delta and see poverty in 3-D , yet they have been producing oil for decades. Only the politicians that are in Abuja and the warlords in the Creeks are they ones enjoying the so-called oil riches.
Have you ever checked the FG allocation of Bayelsa state and blame time visited the state?

The idea of blaming everyone in Abuja is outdated. Have you ever castigated the governor of your state for his incompetence?

Not saying politicians are not corrupt, but it starts from your own LGA. I am sure your LGA chairman is just embezzling funds without doing nothing, and same my line is doing. But we all blame Abuja.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by kcprince: 4:31am On Nov 05, 2025
Who has the resources helped? All the benefits we get from the resources has been taken by tinubu.

If America will take the resource and give me security where I can travel by road once more, I will be happy.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by seunoyeleyep(f): 4:33am On Nov 05, 2025
socialmediaman:
How much of those resources has impacted your life?

The US has far more oil than Nigeria, even Dangote Refinery buys Crude oil from the US. The US produces 12.9 million barrels per day against Nigeria’s meager 1.5 million barrels pd.

If the US wants rare earth minerals, the DRC has willingly offered it to them. DRC has one of the largest deposits of rare earth minerals in the world.

These people know they’re lying, but they hope that by continuously echoing the lies, unsuspecting Nigerians will believe them.
God bless you. They want to spin the story. It's their usual way. End the killing but what they are saying is US wants to take their resources. Resources they themselves have been mismanaging o.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Smartcitizen: 4:37am On Nov 05, 2025
Afenifere are among the terrorist supporters we have been looking for.


Trump's statement has exposed a lot of people in Nigeria.


Waoooo!


🥱🥱🥱🥱
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by omoredia: 4:37am On Nov 05, 2025
Nigeria will not be the way it is if Nigerians are not liars and deceivers. Only the truth can set free!

Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Angelfrost(m): 4:40am On Nov 05, 2025
Gerrard59:
I really don't get why they find that hard to grasp.

Let's, for once, assume the US, through its numerous agencies, is behind the endless killings. Why do northern elites support the senseless butchering of Christians throughout the region? Why have other Nigerians kept mum when people were butchered in Benue and Southern Kaduna? Iyin Aboyeji even christened such killings as "little genocides".

Ensure the killings stop, and there will be a united response against US interference. But when you keep mute when ordinary Nigerians, especially ethnic minorities, are maimed daily, you make it easy for Trump and his cohorts.
Which shows Trump might be right after all...!

Whether Muslims or Christians or even Pagans, how can you all that have been silent for years while thousands got slaughtered, now suddenly found your voices because America issued threats?!!


Nigerian lives mean nothing to these corrupt rogues.

They are even more concerned about "resources" than human lives.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by 004gist: 4:41am On Nov 05, 2025
You will not condemn the killings going on. The genocide.

Communities are being wiped out on daily basis.
The media remained silent.
The big churches remain silent

Armed fulani militias are being funded to carry out Jihad on communitie
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Flame333: 4:41am On Nov 05, 2025
Just mere propaganda from this betrayal..


Insecurity and mass killing have now been institutionalized


What do you have that will make United States number one nation on Earth...

Despite your dirty oil, borrow na everyday routine

National Debt don overtake Mount Everest

Wetin you get wen person like US dey truly dey look for..
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Kalvan: 4:42am On Nov 05, 2025
It's not about resources, if it was about resources, Congo should have been annexed by the US as a vassal state decades ago. There's no resource Nigeria has that the US either doesn't have a surplus of or can't get from other allies or trade partners.

Oil? The US is one of the largest oil producers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_oil_extraction


Rare metals? China is the largest producer of course. But the US pulls its own weight and has made deals with its allies(Australia, Vietnam) for access.

This resource argument is so asinine and archaic. It's not the 19th century anymore boss.

Middle-belt christians are being murdered enmasse by a genocidal fulani militia, and people are butthurt they can't continue to stick their heads in the sand and pretend nothing is happening.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Memphis357(m): 4:43am On Nov 05, 2025
It's better that our natural resources are in the hands of the US than Nigeria. In what ways have Nigerians benefited from the resources. I've been saying that this propaganda is being spurned by people from the South West, Nigeria...... see the living proof. Shey America wasn't interested in Nigeria's resources in 2014 when Bola Tinubu lead the APC chieftains to meet with Senator John Kerry to remove Goodluck Jonathan as President then...

Hypocrisy, double standards and Bola Ahmed Tinubu should always be used in the same sentence.
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by Omoawoke(m): 4:46am On Nov 05, 2025
We also want him to have it

He should carry everything


Of what benefit is the resources to an average Nigerian


Politician resources don turn our resources , lol
Re: Trump Wants Nigeria's Resources - Afenifere by GenFunction: 4:46am On Nov 05, 2025
We wey dey river dey cry say soap dey our eye.
Why Trump no go reason our resources?
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