Nigeria Rejects US Push To Deport 300,000 Venezuelan Prisoners To Abuja

. ‘We’re already facing significant domestic challenges. No to being a dumping ground for prisoners of Venezuelan descent being Deported by US,’ word-for-word statement by foreign affairs minister, Yusuf Tuggar

 

 

The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yusuf Tuggar has declared that Nigeria will not yield to pressure from the United States to accept Venezuelan deportees.

Speaking in an interview on Thursday, Tuggar said Nigeria is already facing significant domestic challenges and cannot become a “dumping ground” for Venezuelan prisoners being deported amid the U.S. immigration crackdown.

“We have enough of our own problems. We cannot accept Venezuelan deportees—especially prisoners—into Nigeria. We already have a population of 230 million,” Tuggar stated.

The minister also addressed the recent BRICS Summit held in Rio de Janeiro from July 6 to 7, 2025, where President Bola Tinubu joined other global leaders.

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Tuggar downplayed the link between Nigeria’s BRICS participation and the proposed tariffs hike.

The minister revealed that Nigeria has initiated diplomatic discussions with the U.S. concerning its recent visa restrictions, which now limit Nigerian non-immigrant visas to three months, single entry. He also described the UAE’s visa ban on Nigerians as unfortunate.

Us President Trump (left); his Nigerian counterpart, Bola Tinubu. Inset: some inmates in US prison

Nigeria officially became a partner country in BRICS+ in January 2025. The expanded BRICS group—which includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the UAE—represents about 37% of global GDP and nearly half of the world’s population, challenging the economic dominance of Western nations.

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