It is a bitter but necessary truth that must be told plainly: Nigeria is not failing because of its diversity; it is failing because we have permitted diversity to be weaponized into the principles of politics. Tribe and creed —beautiful as expressions of belonging and faith—have been twisted into instruments of patronage, grievance, and distraction.
Instead of being the scaffolding of a plural civic life, identity has become the test and the excuse, the first question asked about every leader and the last test we ever apply to policy. We now choose loyalty over competence, sectarian advantage over the national interest, and identity before integrity. The consequence is predictable and grim: a politics of grievance, an economy of underperformance, and a society that slowly bleeds itself into fragmentation.
This piece is a response to that corruption of loyalty and to a particular manifestation of it abroad: the recent legislative initiative in the United States led by Senator Ted Cruz, which frames Nigeria’s complex insecurity through an exclusively sectarian lens. The bill—popularly referred to as the Nigeria Religious Freedom Accountability Act—poses as a moral intervention on behalf of persecuted Christians. But it simplifies, essentializes, and in so doing risks doing more harm than good. It flattens a multi-causal crisis into a single axis of explanation: religion. That is dangerous because the nation’s security crisis is not a simple tale of Christian victims and Muslim perpetrators. It is a tragic mosaic of insurgency, criminal enterprise, climate pressures, weak governance, and local grievances—one whose victims and perpetrators cut across faith lines, geography, and class.
The facts, if read honestly, complicate this neat narrative. Nigeria currently hosts millions of internally displaced persons (IDPs). The National Commission for Refugees, Migrants, and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRMI)—the federal agency responsible for IDPs—reports that over 3.5 million Nigerians are currently living in displacement camps across the country. When including those living with host families and in informal settlements, the figure rises beyond 6 million people displaced by conflict, insurgency, banditry, and natural disasters. The overwhelming concentration of these IDPs is in the North-East and North-West—Borno, Yobe, Adamawa, Zamfara, Katsina, and Niger States—areas that are predominantly Muslim. The NCFRMI also notes that more than 70 percent of these displaced persons are women and children. This data alone dismantles the illusion that only one religious group bears the brunt of violence.
It is essential to acknowledge that NCFRMI does not categorise IDPs by religious affiliation in its official reports—a fact that should caution those who insist on sectarian interpretations of Nigeria’s crisis. But demographic and geographic realities make one thing undeniable: the majority of Nigeria’s IDPs come from regions where Muslims form an overwhelming share of the population. This does not diminish the suffering of Christian communities in the Middle Belt or South, but it does remind us that pain is not denominational, and that violence in Nigeria respects no religion.
The temptation to frame Nigeria’s complex tragedies as a simple war of religion is not new. It has been the convenient narrative of both local opportunists and foreign moralists. Senator Cruz’s bill plays into this long-standing reductionism—declaring persecution where there is, in truth, a multifaceted collapse of governance. Such simplification turns Nigeria’s sorrow into political theatre. It allows foreign politicians to posture as saviours and domestic politicians to play the victim. Meanwhile, the real victims—the millions languishing in displacement camps, mothers who lost children to airstrikes or bandits, farmers dispossessed by climate change, and children out of school—remain unseen.
Nigeria’s Senate recently reiterated that insecurity and terrorism in the country are not religion-driven. It is a position rooted not in denial but in realism. The pattern of violence is not neatly divided by creed: Boko Haram’s bombs have killed Muslims and Christians alike; banditry in Zamfara and Katsina has decimated largely Muslim communities; farmer-herder conflicts in Plateau and Benue have claimed lives on both sides; and communal clashes in the South are often more about politics, land, and ethnicity than theology. To mistake these tragedies for a religious war is to misdiagnose the disease and prescribe the wrong cure.
If foreign governments genuinely wish to help, they must begin by understanding that Nigeria’s crisis is fundamentally socio-economic and governance-related. Insurgency thrives where the state has failed—where education, justice, and opportunity are absent. Terror groups recruit not only by appealing to ideology but by exploiting hunger, poverty, and despair. When a young man in the Sahel feels abandoned by the state and alienated by society, extremism becomes less an ideology and more an outlet. Banditry and kidnapping are sustained not by faith, but by economics. These are the hard truths foreign policymakers must face if they intend to help rather than harm.
The NCFRMI data, properly read, offers a sobering picture of the scale of neglect. Over 3.5 million Nigerians living in displacement camps, with millions more scattered across host communities, is not just a humanitarian crisis—it is an indictment of the Nigerian state’s ability to protect its citizens. Each of those millions represents a failure of governance, not of religion. To respond to that crisis with a foreign bill that threatens sanctions under the banner of “religious freedom” is to misunderstand both the problem and the people.
Moreover, the internationalisation of Nigeria’s identity politics risks deepening domestic divisions. When foreign powers take sides in what they perceive as a religious conflict, they lend legitimacy to extremists who claim to fight on behalf of faith. It emboldens those who recruit by preaching that the world is at war with their religion. The danger is that a moral crusade launched in Washington could ignite a real one in Kaduna or Maiduguri.
None of this absolves Nigeria’s leaders of blame. For too long, our ruling elite have profited from the same politics of identity they publicly condemn. They mobilise ethnicity and religion to ascend to power, then weaponize them to stay there. Corruption, exclusion, and impunity have eroded state legitimacy and created fertile ground for insecurity. When government officials loot funds meant for displaced persons, they do more harm to national unity than any insurgent could. When political appointments are made on the basis of tribe or creed rather than competence, the state itself becomes complicit in sustaining the conditions for its own failure.
What Nigeria needs is not the sympathy of foreign politicians but the solidarity of honest partners. The United States and others should support programs that rebuild livelihoods, strengthen local governance, and restore education in conflict zones. Investment in trauma care, agriculture, vocational training, and youth rehabilitation would do far more for religious freedom than any sanction list. Real freedom begins with dignity—with the ability to live without fear, to work, to learn, and to worship without hunger.
Domestically, Nigerians must rise to the challenge of moral citizenship. We must begin to value ideas over identity, competence over connections, and service over self. Political parties must recruit and reward leaders on the basis of merit and moral character, not merely religious balance. Clerics must teach compassion and civic duty, not suspicion and segregation. The media must resist the easy story of religious rivalry and instead tell the harder, truer story of collective failure and shared hope.
The NCFRMI statistics remind us that our humanitarian crisis is enormous but not hopeless. If properly harnessed, the same energy that drives faith communities can rebuild the social fabric. Faith can be a bridge of healing if leaders refuse to let it be a weapon of division. Every displaced family, every orphan of conflict, and every widow in the camps is a Nigerian before they are anything else. Their pain should unite us, not divide us.
To Senator Cruz and his allies, Nigeria says: do not reduce our pain to propaganda. We welcome partnership, not paternalism; empathy, not exploitation. Help us rebuild institutions, not stigmatize our nation. To Nigerian leaders, the message is equally urgent: you cannot demand international respect while governing without integrity. The credibility of Nigeria abroad begins with justice and compassion at home.
And to the Nigerian people—Muslim, Christian, or otherwise—the call is clear. We must reject manipulation by those who trade in fear. We must refuse to hate our neighbours in the name of faith. The poor Christian in Jos and the poor Muslim in Sokoto share the same hunger, the same insecurity, and the same hope for a better country. Our task is not to argue whose suffering counts more, but to ensure that no Nigerian suffers needlessly again.
The millions of displaced citizens documented by the NCFRMI are a mirror held up to our collective conscience. They ask no questions about creed; they simply seek compassion and justice. If we, as a people, can respond to that suffering without prejudice, then perhaps Nigeria’s story is not yet lost. But if we continue to measure pain by religion and justice by tribe, then no foreign bill will save us—from ourselves.
Ultimately, what Nigeria needs is not a saviour, but sincerity. Not foreign sermons, but internal reform. Not pity, but partnership. Our salvation lies not in the halls of Congress, but in the conscience of our people. The test of leadership, now and forever, is whether we can rise above the politics of division to build a nation where creed is private but citizenship is shared—where faith inspires compassion, not conflict; and where being Nigerian is, at last, enough.
GOD BLESS THE FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF NIGERIA!





