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Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsEmeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria (40973 Views)

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Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by dre11(op): 5:50pm On Jan 18
In a market in southeastern Nigeria, a short man wearing one earbud recently made his way to the tool section, dodging wheelbarrows of sugar cane and porters carrying stacks of hard hats.

The man, Emeka Umeagbalasi, owns a tiny shop selling screwdrivers and wrenches in this market in Onitsha, the commercial hub of southeast Nigeria.

But this screwdriver salesman is also an unlikely source of research that U.S. Republican lawmakers have used to promote the misleading idea that Christians are being singled out for slaughter in Africa’s most populous nation. Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, Representative Riley Moore of Virginia and Representative Chris Smith of New Jersey have all cited his work.

Armed with his ideas, President Trump launched airstrikes on the other side of Mr. Umeagbalasi’s country on Christmas Day.

To Mr. Umeagbalasi, that the American president had taken up a cause he had promoted, was “miraculous.”

“If nothing is done,” he said in an interview from his home, “Nigeria will explode.”


Mr. Umeagbalasi says he has documented 125,000 Christian deaths in Nigeria since 2009, but told The New York Times that he often does not verify his data. He acknowledged that his research was mainly based on “secondary sources,” including Christian interest groups, Nigerian news reports and Google searches.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/18/world/africa/nigeria-christmas-bombing-republicans.html?unlocked_article_code=1.FVA.wYHQ.hnU6oF1NSmeC&smid=nytcore-android-share

How Unverified Claims From Onitsha Screwdriver Seller Influenced Trump’s Claims On Christian Genocide, US Airstrikes In Nigeria

In a bustling market in Onitsha, the commercial hub of southeastern Nigeria, a short man with a single earbud weaves his way through wheelbarrows piled high with sugar cane and porters balancing stacks of hard hats. His destination is the tool section, where he runs a modest shop selling screwdrivers and wrenches.

That man, Emeka Umeagbalasi, is far more than a local salesman. Despite his humble trade, he has become an unexpected source of research cited by U.S. Republican lawmakers to support the misleading claim that Christians are being systematically targeted for slaughter in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation.

Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, Representative Riley Moore of Virginia, and Representative Chris Smith of New Jersey have all referenced his work, according to reporting by Ruth Maclean, West Africa bureau chief for The Times. Maclean’s coverage spans 25 countries, including Nigeria, Congo, the Sahel, and Central Africa.

From Onitsha in Anambra State, Maclean observed how Umeagbalasi’s ideas reached the highest levels of power. On Christmas Day, President Trump ordered airstrikes in another part of Nigeria, inspired in part by the narratives Umeagbalasi had been promoting. For the screwdriver merchant, seeing the American president embrace his cause was nothing short of “miraculous.”

“If nothing is done,” Umeagbalasi warned in an interview from his home, “Nigeria will explode.”

He claims to have documented 125,000 Christian deaths in Nigeria since 2009. Yet, as he admitted to The New York Times, his figures are often unverified, drawn largely from “secondary sources” such as Christian advocacy groups, Nigerian media reports, and even Google searches.

According to The New York Times, Senator Cruz, Representative Riley Moore, and Representative Chris Smith did not respond to requests for comment. A White House spokeswoman declined to address questions about Emeka Umeagbalasi’s data and methods, but issued a statement declaring that “the massacre of Christians by radical, terrorist scum will not be tolerated.”

Collecting reliable data on Nigeria’s violence has long been fraught with difficulty. The government does not publish comprehensive figures on killings, kidnappings, or attacks, nor does it record the religious identities of victims. Many incidents occur in remote areas and are reported only much later, if at all.

Research indicates that Christians have been killed in significant numbers, but scholars emphasize that insecurity and impunity in the hardest-hit regions threaten both Christians and Muslims alike.

Umeagbalasi, a Catholic, founded the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law (Intersociety) in 2008, which he operates from his home.

His wife, Blessing, an evangelical Christian, serves as a board member. He claims academic credentials in security studies and peace and conflict resolution from the National Open University of Nigeria, and describes himself as a “powerful” and “knowledgeable” investigator, likening his work to that of veteran CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour.

Yet when pressed on the accuracy of his findings, Umeagbalasi admitted that he seldom travels to the regions where attacks occur. Instead, he often assumes the religion of victims based on location.

He has asserted that more than 7,000 Christians were killed in Nigeria during the first seven months of 2025. However, independent monitors at the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project estimate roughly 6,700 deaths in that period, including Islamist insurgents and military personnel. Of those, about 3,000 were civilians, but the data does not specify religious affiliation.

Umeagbalasi explained his methodology: if a mass killing or abduction takes place in an area he believes to be predominantly Christian, he classifies the victims as Christians.

“For instance, if killings take place in Borno today, when I look at it, I will just look at the zone where the killings take place,” he said.

“Once they take place in southern Borno, there is likelihood of the victims being Christians or many of them or most of them being Christians.”

The New York Times emphasized that many of Boko Haram’s victims are, in fact, Muslim. One recent case illustrates the discrepancy: 25 schoolgirls were abducted in Kebbi State. Local officials and the school principal confirmed that all of the girls were Muslim. Yet Emeka Umeagbalasi insisted they were mostly Christian.

“The girls — a majority of them are Christians, but you know what Nigerian government did?” he said. “They went and Islamized them. Gave them Islamic names just to confuse people.”

Alkasim Abdulkadir, spokesperson for Nigeria’s foreign minister, rejected claims that the government misrepresented the girls’ religion.

“There’s a lot of fallacy to his research, a lot of confirmation bias,” he said of Mr. Umeagbalasi. “He’s very performative.”

Mr. Umeagbalasi rarely travels to Nigeria’s Middle Belt, the area most affected by violence against Christians.

Instead, he relies largely on secondary sources such as news reports and data from Open Doors, a Christian advocacy organization that has also been referenced by U.S. President Donald Trump. Another key source for him is Truth Nigeria, a project run by Judd Saul, a filmmaker and evangelist based in Iowa.

Like several other Christian advocacy groups in Nigeria and the United States, Truth Nigeria and Intersociety often attribute attacks on Christians to Fulani ethnic militias.

The Fulani are a large, predominantly Muslim ethnic group spread across West Africa, many of whom have historically been nomadic herders.

Umeagbalasi has made highly inflammatory remarks about the Fulani, describing them in dehumanizing terms and suggesting they should be confined to a single Nigerian state, a proposal critics say would amount to ethnic cleansing.

His claims and statistics have been challenged by researchers, journalists, and even senior Christian figures in Nigeria. Nnamdi Obasi of the International Crisis Group criticized Intersociety’s methodology as unreliable and said its reported figures contain basic mathematical errors.

Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah of Sokoto has argued that focusing narrowly on casualty figures among Christians misses the broader problem of a weak Nigerian state that fails to protect all its citizens, regardless of religion.

Despite the criticism, Umeagbalasi continues his work undeterred. At the time of reporting, he was nearing completion of a new report on what he describes as the deteriorating security situation for Christians in Nigeria.

“This is our heavenly marathon,” he said.

In his living room, its walls painted green and black, a crowded bookshelf sagged under the weight of old papers and plaques. One plaque bore the inscription: “For excellent service to humanity.”

From this setting, he claimed that nearly 20,000 churches had been destroyed in Nigeria over the past 16 years. He further asserted that the country had 100,000 churches in total.

But with no official government data on the number of churches, how did he arrive at that figure?

His answer was simple: “Googled it
https://saharareporters.com/2026/01/18/how-unverified-claims-onitsha-screwdriver-seller-influenced-trumps-claims-christian#google_vignette

Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by luvinhubby(m): 6:02pm On Jan 18
So blaming a screwdriver seller in Onitsha is the result of the $9 million spent on lobbyists by our federal government despite the fact that Nigeria's government acknowledging they knew about the strike and provided intelligence for the US airstrike.


People are silly
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by jmoore(m): 6:28pm On Jan 18
Screwdriver seller wey be CIA agent.

He convinced Riley Moore to visit Benue state to see for himself the largest IDP camp in Nigeria.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by OneCandleAway(f): 6:33pm On Jan 18
My observation is,the Muslims who claim not to be terrorists do t challenge their leaders to put an end to these terrorism. Maybe because in their holy book,war and disfunction is recurrent, they believe it's normal so far the Christians are being offed. Now we Christian have found a way to attract foreign interest to put an end, the Muslims act as if they don't want the terrorism to be put to an end.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by TimeManager(m):
Calling him a screwdriver salesman is nothing but a clickbait. He's the founder of Intersociety. And the funny thing is, his office is being operated from the corner of his room.

Umeagbalasi, a Catholic, founded the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law (Intersociety) in 2008, which he operates from his home.
BBC and New York Times have ratted him out.

-Kiss the truth!

Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by tesseract: 6:52pm On Jan 18
Useless article...smh
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by ElSudani: 6:55pm On Jan 18
"Mr. Umeagbalasi, who is Catholic, founded the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law, or Intersociety, in 2008. He runs the organization out of his home. His wife, Blessing, an evangelical Christian, is a board member."

A superpower's equivalent of getting your intelligence from a mad man.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Northernblood8(m): 6:56pm On Jan 18
They are trying to project the South Easterners for h8red by Nigeria
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Adaisback(f): 7:07pm On Jan 18
grin cheesy grin chai! There is nothing Adadike no go see for nairaland. Keep blaming the igbos until Trump strike your backyard again. If you like, don't ask Tinubu the terrible to do the right thing. Trump is coming again. Inukwa , Emeka the screw driver seller? Can you even listen to yourself?
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by jmoore(m): 7:12pm On Jan 18
ElSudani:
"Mr. Umeagbalasi, who is Catholic, founded the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law, or Intersociety, in 2008. He runs the organization out of his home. His wife, Blessing, an evangelical Christian, is a board member."

A superpower's equivalent of getting your intelligence from a mad man.
And Tinubu agreed to work with Trump to bomb terrorists because of that intelligence.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by SpaceX:
Muslims trying hard to cover their ass, all this campaign to make him look untrustworthy
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by LadyExcellency: 7:45pm On Jan 18
TimeManager:
Calling him a screwdriver salesman is nothing but a clickbait. He's the founder of Intersocietal. And the funny thing is, his office is being operated from the corner of his room.



BBC and New York Times have ratted him out.

-Kiss the truth!
Christian genocide in Nigeria is a bipartisan consensus in USA and not a party affair.

BBC and New York Times are Islamic outposts. Their operations are inherently anti-Christian. Thank goodness, they don't exist as far as Trump and Republicans are involved.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Chibuzoc(m): 7:50pm On Jan 18
$9 million lobbyists at work
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by motymop: 7:53pm On Jan 18
The guy is a cia agent but wondering why the New York times released this information.

This can create attacks on igbo people living in the north
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by motymop: 7:56pm On Jan 18
jmoore:
Screwdriver seller wey be CIA agent.

He convinced Riley Moore to visit Benue state to see for himself the largest IDP camp in Nigeria.
How come they don't do research about ipob

It is only areas far away from the south east they love pointing fingers
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by jmoore(m): 7:59pm On Jan 18
motymop:
How come they don't do research about ipob

It is only areas far away from the south east they love pointing fingers
Cry me River Niger.

Cry me Atlantic ocean.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by yang(m): 8:22pm On Jan 18
zoo people

he said 7000, someone projected 6700 and NY Times said he is foolish

why is NYTimes fighting hard to Install Fulani everywhere in Nigeria?
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by kpankpangolo: 8:31pm On Jan 18
Stupid western media trying to make Trump look delusional. I don’t buy this for a second.

On Christmas Day, President Trump ordered airstrikes in another part of Nigeria, inspired in part by the narratives Umeagbalasi had been promoting.

In a bustling market in Onitsha, the commercial hub of southeastern Nigeria, a short man with a single earbud weaves his way through wheelbarrows piled high with sugar cane and porters balancing stacks of hard hats. His destination is the tool section, where he runs a modest shop selling screwdrivers and wrenches.

That man, Emeka Umeagbalasi, is far more than a local salesman. Despite his humble trade, he has become an unexpected source of research cited by U.S. Republican lawmakers to support the misleading claim that Christians are being systematically targeted for slaughter in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation.

Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, Representative Riley Moore of Virginia, and Representative Chris Smith of New Jersey have all referenced his work, according to reporting by Ruth Maclean, West Africa bureau chief for The Times. Maclean’s coverage spans 25 countries, including Nigeria, Congo, the Sahel, and Central Africa.

From Onitsha in Anambra State, Maclean observed how Umeagbalasi’s ideas reached the highest levels of power. On Christmas Day, President Trump ordered airstrikes in another part of Nigeria, inspired in part by the narratives Umeagbalasi had been promoting. For the screwdriver merchant, seeing the American president embrace his cause was nothing short of “miraculous.”

“If nothing is done,” Umeagbalasi warned in an interview from his home, “Nigeria will explode.”

He claims to have documented 125,000 Christian deaths in Nigeria since 2009. Yet, as he admitted to The New York Times, his figures are often unverified, drawn largely from “secondary sources” such as Christian advocacy groups, Nigerian media reports, and even Google searches.

According to The New York Times, Senator Cruz, Representative Riley Moore, and Representative Chris Smith did not respond to requests for comment. A White House spokeswoman declined to address questions about Emeka Umeagbalasi’s data and methods, but issued a statement declaring that “the massacre of Christians by radical, terrorist scum will not be tolerated.”

Collecting reliable data on Nigeria’s violence has long been fraught with difficulty. The government does not publish comprehensive figures on killings, kidnappings, or attacks, nor does it record the religious identities of victims. Many incidents occur in remote areas and are reported only much later, if at all.

Research indicates that Christians have been killed in significant numbers, but scholars emphasize that insecurity and impunity in the hardest-hit regions threaten both Christians and Muslims alike.

Umeagbalasi, a Catholic, founded the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law (Intersociety) in 2008, which he operates from his home.

His wife, Blessing, an evangelical Christian, serves as a board member. He claims academic credentials in security studies and peace and conflict resolution from the National Open University of Nigeria, and describes himself as a “powerful” and “knowledgeable” investigator, likening his work to that of veteran CNN journalist Christiane Amanpour.

Yet when pressed on the accuracy of his findings, Umeagbalasi admitted that he seldom travels to the regions where attacks occur. Instead, he often assumes the religion of victims based on location.

He has asserted that more than 7,000 Christians were killed in Nigeria during the first seven months of 2025. However, independent monitors at the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project estimate roughly 6,700 deaths in that period, including Islamist insurgents and military personnel. Of those, about 3,000 were civilians, but the data does not specify religious affiliation.

Umeagbalasi explained his methodology: if a mass killing or abduction takes place in an area he believes to be predominantly Christian, he classifies the victims as Christians.

“For instance, if killings take place in Borno today, when I look at it, I will just look at the zone where the killings take place,” he said.

“Once they take place in southern Borno, there is likelihood of the victims being Christians or many of them or most of them being Christians.”

The New York Times emphasized that many of Boko Haram’s victims are, in fact, Muslim. One recent case illustrates the discrepancy: 25 schoolgirls were abducted in Kebbi State. Local officials and the school principal confirmed that all of the girls were Muslim. Yet Emeka Umeagbalasi insisted they were mostly Christian.

“The girls — a majority of them are Christians, but you know what Nigerian government did?” he said. “They went and Islamized them. Gave them Islamic names just to confuse people.”

Alkasim Abdulkadir, spokesperson for Nigeria’s foreign minister, rejected claims that the government misrepresented the girls’ religion.

“There’s a lot of fallacy to his research, a lot of confirmation bias,” he said of Mr. Umeagbalasi. “He’s very performative.”

Mr. Umeagbalasi rarely travels to Nigeria’s Middle Belt, the area most affected by violence against Christians.

Instead, he relies largely on secondary sources such as news reports and data from Open Doors, a Christian advocacy organization that has also been referenced by U.S. President Donald Trump. Another key source for him is Truth Nigeria, a project run by Judd Saul, a filmmaker and evangelist based in Iowa.

Like several other Christian advocacy groups in Nigeria and the United States, Truth Nigeria and Intersociety often attribute attacks on Christians to Fulani ethnic militias.

The Fulani are a large, predominantly Muslim ethnic group spread across West Africa, many of whom have historically been nomadic herders.

Umeagbalasi has made highly inflammatory remarks about the Fulani, describing them in dehumanizing terms and suggesting they should be confined to a single Nigerian state, a proposal critics say would amount to ethnic cleansing.

His claims and statistics have been challenged by researchers, journalists, and even senior Christian figures in Nigeria. Nnamdi Obasi of the International Crisis Group criticized Intersociety’s methodology as unreliable and said its reported figures contain basic mathematical errors.

Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah of Sokoto has argued that focusing narrowly on casualty figures among Christians misses the broader problem of a weak Nigerian state that fails to protect all its citizens, regardless of religion.

Despite the criticism, Umeagbalasi continues his work undeterred. At the time of reporting, he was nearing completion of a new report on what he describes as the deteriorating security situation for Christians in Nigeria.

“This is our heavenly marathon,” he said.

In his living room, its walls painted green and black, a crowded bookshelf sagged under the weight of old papers and plaques. One plaque bore the inscription: “For excellent service to humanity.”

From this setting, he claimed that nearly 20,000 churches had been destroyed in Nigeria over the past 16 years. He further asserted that the country had 100,000 churches in total.

But with no official government data on the number of churches, how did he arrive at that figure?

His answer was simple: “Googled it
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by CodeTemplarr: 9:15pm On Jan 18
The $9m is working.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Scholes007(m): 9:26pm On Jan 18
I knew one way or the other the narrative will be spun to include Biafra.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Buking1: 9:46pm On Jan 18
The Lobby money is at work, at least this will keep Nigeria business while the new task law penetrate deep without any new protest.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Buking1: 9:46pm On Jan 18
Haknn jshdjjd hshdjdj hshjdjd yshdjdjd hshdhdjjjdjd jejdjdjjdd udhdjjdje ushdjdj uhwuuw I have h
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Racoon(m): 9:47pm On Jan 18
Chai! cheesy And Trump govt stroke @Lukarawa terrorists in Sokoto state? And Shiekh Gumi is afraid of the US missiles flying over his head?

And this is how the $9m money spinning for propaganda to lobby against Christian genocide will be disbursed? Nigeria is really a tragicomedy
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by udemzyudex(m): 9:48pm On Jan 18
$9m is really working.
Lol.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by PHIPEX(m): 9:48pm On Jan 18
This is shameful propaganda. Does it mean the people who paid 9m dollars for propaganda are so dull that this is what NYT could deliver?

They should also tell us that Trump relied on a fisherman's report to attack Maduro in Venezuela
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Flangelo12: 9:48pm On Jan 18
See him face.

Ghen Ghen.

grin

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by XtraFortunes: 9:48pm On Jan 18
Shame $9m at work. Propaganda machine activated undecided
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Believeintruth: 9:49pm On Jan 18
motymop:
The guy is a cia agent but wondering why the New York times released this information.

This can create attacks on igbo people living in the north
Until you are invited to explain how he is a CIA agent una go rest.
Re: Emeka Umeagbalasi: The Screwdriver Salesman Behind Trump’s Airstrikes In Nigeria by Czarugo007: 9:49pm On Jan 18
JUST BECAUSE THEY SUSPECT PETER OBI MAY COLLECT THE ADC TICKET.
1 2 3 4 5 6 Reply

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