Africa
a month ago

US expands Nigeria travel warning, lets embassy staff leave Abuja

A drone view of The Abuja City Gate, monument that acts as a ceremonial entrance to the capital, in Abuja, Nigeria, May 10, 2025.
A drone view of The Abuja City Gate, monument that acts as a ceremonial entrance to the capital, in Abuja, Nigeria, May 10, 2025. Photo : REUTERS/Sodiq Adelakun/Files

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The United States has urged its citizens to reconsider travel to Nigeria ​and authorised the departure of non‑emergency US government employees and their families ‌from the embassy in Abuja, citing worsening security conditions in Africa’s most populous nation.

The embassy said separately it had closed for visa appointments but American citizen services were available in emergencies ​and by appointment. It did not give a reason for the closure ​or say how long it would last.

US travel advisories often shape ⁠how investors, international organisations and airlines assess country risk. The move to allow ​staff departures signals heightened concern in Washington as kidnappings, banditry and attacks on security ​forces persist, particularly in northern Nigeria.

In an updated advisory late on Wednesday, the State Department kept Nigeria at Level 3: Reconsider Travel, but added Plateau, Jigawa, Kwara, Niger and Taraba to ​states Americans were warned not to visit. That puts 23 out of 36 of the country's ​states in the “Do Not Travel” category.

The US highlighted threats from Islamist insurgents in the northeast, criminal gangs ‌in ⁠the northwest and ongoing violence in parts of southern and southeastern Nigeria, including oil‑producing regions

Nigeria's information ministry said in a statement that the travel alert was guided by US internal protocols and did not reflect the overall security situation across Nigeria.

“While ​we acknowledge isolated security ​challenges in some ⁠areas, there is no general breakdown of law and order, and the vast majority of the country remains stable,” the statement ​said.

Last month, Washington warned of a “terrorist threat” against US facilities ​and affiliated ⁠schools in Nigeria.

The US reviews the advisory several times a year and has kept Nigeria at Level 3 or Level 4 for much of the past decade due ⁠to ​persistent insecurity.

The US military has multiple MQ-9 drones operating in ​Nigeria alongside 200 troops to provide training and intelligence support to the military, which is fighting Islamist ​militants across the north.

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