“Here, of course, there are a good number of Nigerians that don’t have papers. So, there are worrying,” Wariboko said while describing the mood of the Nigerian community in the US barely three weeks after Trump resumed at the Oval Office.
Henzodaily.ng journalist Esther Odili has over two years of experience covering political parties and movements.
A Professor of Social Ethics at Boston University, Nimi Wariboko, has said that the sweeping crackdown on undocumented immigrants in the United States has triggered palpable fear among Nigerians living in America.
US-based professor says Nigerians go into hiding amid Trump’s deportation crackdown. Images for illustration purposes.
Photo credit: Bonnie Cash/UPI/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Source: Getty Images
Trump’s deportation crackdown forces Nigerians to go into hiding
The enforcement of immigration laws has intensified since American President Donald Trump assumed office on January 20, 2025.
Henzodaily.ng reported that Nigeria ranks third among African nations with the highest number of citizens scheduled for deportation, following closely behind Somalia, Ghana, and Senegal.
Over the past few days, a large-scale crackdown by ICE officials has led to the arrest of thousands of undocumented immigrants across major US cities.
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But the don, speaking virtually from the US on the Friday edition of Inside Sources with Laolu Akande, a socio-political programme aired on Channels Television, said many Nigerians living in the US, don’t have legal documents.
“If you are a pastor, if you are a leader in those communities, you are worried for those people; you have concerns for them. Are they going to be deported?
“Some of them are hiding – there is that palpable fear that they could be raided. If you quarrel with your neighbours, they can call the immigration enforcement unit. There is that palpable fear. They are fearful, they are angry, they don’t know what is going to happen.”
$20bn diaspora inflow at risk?
Meanwhile, the United States is one of the top destinations for migrating Nigerian youths and the middle class in search of greener pastures.
Speaking further, Wariboko said undocumented Nigerian immigrants in America are angry with their countrymen on Nigerian soil for not being compassionate.
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According to the World Bank, remittance from Nigerians living abroad reached $20bn in 2023.
In light of the above, the professor argued that the Nigerian government should be interested in defending its citizens in the United States because any immigration policies that lead to deportation would affect the Nigerian economy as Nigerians overseas contribute a significant amount to the local economy.
He said:
“They (undocumented Nigerian immigrants) are saying at the end of the day, if this great replacement holds, they are going to be sent back home. Do you have jobs to absorb them?”
“If anybody in the world is coming up with policies that will affect the Nigerian economy, the government should defend Nigerians in that regard.”
Read more about Trump’s order here:
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Full list of countries whose citizens Trump is deporting
Earlier, Henzodaily.ng also reported that the US had begun a large-scale deportation operation affecting over 1.4 million noncitizens under President Trump’s order.
The deportations, targeting individuals with final removal orders, span more than 150 countries, making this one of the most extensive removal efforts in U.S. history.
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Source: Henzodaily.ng