The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has publicly expressed solidarity with Nigeria following recent allegations by U.S. President Donald Trump, who asserted via a social media post that religiously motivated killings were occurring at a genocidal scale in the West African nation. The regional body has categorically dismissed these claims as not only inaccurate but also dangerously misleading in the context of Nigeria’s multifaceted security challenges.
In a statement issued from Abuja and shared with Xinhua, the ECOWAS Commission emphasised that terrorist violence across West Africa, particularly in countries like Nigeria, lacks religious or ethnic specificity. Instead, these acts of violence have consistently targeted diverse civilian populations — Muslims, Christians, traditional worshippers, and those with no religious affiliations alike.
“The idea that one group is being uniquely targeted undermines the complex and painful reality of terrorism in the region,” the statement read. ECOWAS underscored that propagating narratives which frame regional insecurity as religious persecution not only distort facts but also threaten to weaken the social fabric that underpins many communities.
This response follows President Trump’s remarks on the Truth Social platform, where he alleged that “radical Islamists” were responsible for the mass killing of Christians in Nigeria, framing the violence as a form of religious genocide. He further labelled Nigeria as a “country of particular concern,” a designation previously used by the U.S. Department of State to monitor issues of religious freedom abroad.
The Nigerian government promptly refuted the designation, characterising it as “inaccurate and unhelpful.” It reaffirmed its constitutional commitment to religious freedom and its ongoing efforts to combat violent extremism and insurgent groups such as Boko Haram and ISWAP (Islamic State West Africa Province). These groups have, over the past decade, attacked communities indiscriminately across northern and central Nigeria, displacing millions and killing thousands without a religious pattern.
Security experts and scholars, including analysts from the African Centre for the Study and Research on Terrorism (ACSRT), have long argued that the motivations behind extremist violence in the Sahel and Lake Chad Basin are rarely reducible to religious ideology alone. Structural drivers such as poverty, marginalisation, state fragility, and foreign interference have played a significant role in fuelling cycles of violence.
The ECOWAS Commission called on global partners and multilateral organisations, including the United Nations, to support regional governments in their multidimensional fight against terrorism, while resisting attempts to oversimplify the conflict into a singular religious narrative. “Narratives that seek to racialise, politicise, or theologise terrorism without adequate grounding in on-the-ground realities risk exacerbating tensions and eroding community trust,” the Commission warned.
Pan-African institutions and intellectuals have consistently advocated for a reframing of security discourses in Africa to reflect the region’s plural realities. According to CODESRIA, the tendency to interpret African crises through a western-centric lens often sidelines local knowledge systems and undermines African agency in peacebuilding processes.
The ECOWAS statement aligns with this broader effort to construct an African-centred security paradigm that resists reductive binaries. Rather than viewing religious identity as the sole or primary determinant of victimhood or culpability, the bloc emphasises a unified regional front that prioritises all lives and seeks inclusive governance solutions.
In this context, the ECOWAS call is not only a rebuttal to an external mischaracterisation but a reaffirmation of African solidarity. It insists on the recognition of African states as capable actors navigating their own security futures, while also demanding responsible international engagement that is collaborative rather than paternalistic.
The broader implications of this episode extend beyond diplomatic ripples. They highlight the urgent need to elevate authentic African narratives that resist sensationalism and instead humanise the lived experiences of those enduring the consequences of violent extremism — regardless of faith, ethnicity, or nationality.







