• *The funeral preparations:

- Iran is preparing to bury Late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei at the holiest shrine in Mashhad
  • Nigel Farage’s Resignation : Political Money, Broken Rules and the Africa Diaspora Question

Nigel Farage’s resignation as MP for Clacton has turned a parliamentary standards controversy into a wider test of political money, democratic accountability and migration politics. With major parties refusing to contest the by-election, the episode raises urgent questions about whether electoral theatre can be used to weaken parliamentary scrutiny — and what that means for African diasporas in Britain, Ireland and at home....

https://www.morganable.com/nigel-farage-resignation-african-diaspora-impact-2/?utm_source=instagram-business&utm_medium=jetpack_social
  • Plateau CP Commends Sheikh Sani Yahaya Jingir for Promoting Peace, Seeks His Blessings Ahead of Expected Promotion

The Commissioner of Police in Plateau State, CP Bassey Ewah, has publicly commended the National Chairman of the Ulama Council of Jama
  • Sunusi Lamido Sanusi Holds No Official Khalifa Status in the Tijaniyya Movement

Alhaji Ibrahim Sheikh Dahiru Usman Bauchi has stated that Sunusi Lamido Sanusi, the former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) and deposed Emir of Kano, does not hold any official position as a Khalifa within the Tijaniyya Movement.

He made the clarification while speaking with journalists shortly after a religious gathering held in Kano in 2025, amid public discussions surrounding Sanusi
  • Teaching Al-Musannaf Requires Rare Scholarly Expertise Beyond the Reach of Many Nigerian Scholars

Renowned Islamic scholar and founder of Darul Hadith Salafiyya, Zaria, Sheikh Muhammad Auwal Adam (Albani Zaria), has stated that teaching Kitabul Al-Musannaf requires an exceptional level of scholarly competence that, according to him, many Nigerian Islamic scholars do not possess.

The late cleric made the remarks during one of his Sahih al-Bukhari lectures in 2013, while discussing contemporary religious issues and the qualifications required to teach classical Islamic texts.

According to Sheikh Albani, Al-Musannaf is among the most comprehensive works in Islamic scholarship and demands mastery of several disciplines before a scholar can competently teach its contents.

"Teaching Kitabul Al-Musannaf requires rare scholarly expertise beyond what many Nigerian scholars possess," he said.

He explained that a scholar seeking to teach the book must possess extensive knowledge of Islamic jurisprudence (Fiqh), Hadith sciences (Mustalah al-Hadith), Islamic history (Tarikh), principles of narration, and other related Islamic sciences.

Albani argued that beyond academic qualifications, teaching the text requires years of specialization, extensive research, and a deep understanding of the differences among classical scholars and schools of thought.

According to him, many scholars lack the time, specialization, and depth of knowledge necessary to undertake such a demanding scholarly responsibility.

The respected scholar maintained that teaching advanced Islamic texts without the required expertise could lead to misunderstanding, inaccurate interpretations, and confusion among students of knowledge.

Sheikh Muhammad Auwal Adam (Albani Zaria), who passed away in 2014, remains one of Nigeria
  • Jang
  • England fans in London were jubilant after watching Harry Kane score twice in the final 15 minutes to see England overcome Democratic Republic of Congo 2-1,  making it through to the World Cup round of ‌16.

#worldcup #footbal #iran
  • Pope Leo Shows Firm Leadership as 
Excommunications Signal Tough Stance

Pope Leo has demonstrated a willingness to make difficult decisions, with recent excommunications underscoring his firm approach to Church discipline. 

The move is seen as reinforcing his commitment to upholding Catholic doctrine and ecclesiastical authority.
  • About Morganable
    • Editorial Team
    • Ownership and Funding
  • Contact Us
  • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Standards | Morganable
    • Corrections Policy | Morganable
    • Terms of Use | Morganable
    • Advertising Policy | Morganable
    • Privacy Policy | Morganable
  • My Account
    • Sign Up
    • Log In
    • Reset Password
    • My Profile
  • Share Your Story
Friday, July 10, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
MORGANABLE
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
MORGANABLE
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Trump’s Labelling of Kwankwaso

Trump’s Labelling of Kwankwaso, Fulani, and Nigerians

by Alhassan Salihu
July 2, 2026
in News, World
0 0
0
Trump Labelling Kwankwaso

Trump Labelling Kwankwaso-Photo-Credit-Google

Article Lens
How to read this story
Desk
World
Story Mode
Global Affairs Report
Region
Nigeria
Public Interest
International affairs, diplomacy, conflict and global consequence

I write this with deep concern, not anger, but concern over what increasingly appears to be a troubling pattern in the posture of the United States under President Donald Trump toward Nigeria, particularly its northern communities leadership.

Since Trump’s return to office, a narrative has steadily gathered momentum in Washington: that Nigeria is a theatre of “Christian genocide,” orchestrated or tolerated by Muslim political actors. It is a grave allegation. 

It is also one that many credible Nigerian authorities, religious leaders, security experts, and independent analysts have consistently challenged as simplistic, selective, and dangerously misleading.

Nigeria’s security crisis is real.

Terrorism, banditry, communal clashes, and criminal violence have devastated communities, that Muslim and Christian alike, in Borno, Zamfara, Niger, Benue, Plateau, Kaduna and beyond.  

But to reduce this complex web of criminality, governance failure, climate pressure, and arms proliferation into a one-dimensional religious war is not analysis; it is advocacy.

The genesis of this framing can be traced to lobbying efforts and reports amplified in foreign policy circles, with some originating from discredited advocacy groups, whose data and claims have been publicly questioned by investigative journalists.

Yet, these narratives have found fertile ground among certain US lawmakers and religious pressure blocs eager to fit Nigeria into a broader global persecution template.

President Trump’s earlier designation of Nigeria as a “Country of Particular Concern” (CPC) over alleged religious persecution was controversial. The redesignation months later reinforced the perception that Washington had settled on a narrative, regardless of Nigeria’s internal complexities.

Driven by this ill-informed framing, Trump ordered a Christmas Day airstrike on Sokoto, historically the seat of Nigeria’s Islamic Caliphate, as a symbolic gesture aimed at appeasing his Christian constituency. 

I write this with deep concern, not anger, but concern over what increasingly appears to be a troubling pattern in the posture of the United States under President Donald Trump toward Nigeria, particularly its northern communities leadership.

The strike occurred despite Sokoto being neither an epicentre of terrorism nor banditry. The Muslims did not protest the deliberate provocation, even after discovering that local collaborators were feeding Americans the so-called ‘Christian genocide’ narrative as a strategic ploy to influence Nigeria’s 2027 presidential tickets.

Now comes the introduction of the “Nigeria Religious Freedom and Accountability Act of 2026” by US lawmakers Chris Smith, Riley Moore, Brian Mast, Mario Diaz-Balart, and Bill Huizenga. The bill seeks sanctions including visa bans and asset freezes, against former Kano State Governor Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso and certain Fulani-affiliated groups such as the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) and Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore.

More disturbingly, the legislation appears designed to pave the way for categorising Muslim political leaders as well as “Fulani-ethnic nomad militias” as foreign terrorist organisations.

It is so worrisome to scandalise a prominent political figure like Kwankwaso, a Muslim who is not known as a religious extremist, on the eve of his alignment ahead of Nigeria’s upcoming presidential election is deeply scandalous. 

Equally dangerous is the attempt to criminalise an entire ethnic identity under the sweeping label of “Fulani militia,” setting a perilous precedent.

Criminal elements exist across all ethnic and religious lines in Nigeria. But the Fulani, like the Igbo, Yoruba, Tiv, Kanuri, Ijaw or any other group, are a diverse population numbering in the millions. Collective blame is not justice; it is profiling.

I write this with deep concern, not anger, but concern over what increasingly appears to be a troubling pattern in the posture of the United States under President Donald Trump toward Nigeria, particularly its northern communities leadership.

Nigeria has welcomed increased U.S. military engagement, with AFRICOM officials meeting Nigerian security leaders and American troops now permitted to operate in the country. 

The government has also invested millions of dollars in diplomatic outreach and strategic lobbying. Yet the shift from partnership to punitive labelling raises an uncomfortable question: what exactly is Washington seeking?

And more importantly, what does Trump’s new posture mean for Nigerians, Muslims and non Muslims alike? Should it push us toward suspicion of one another or toward questioning the motives behind externally driven narratives, including those shaped by controversial reports from certain advocacy groups, especially the Onitsha-based Intersociety operated by a screwdriver salesman and other IPOB platforms?

If the concern is truly religious freedom, then policy must be anchored in verifiable evidence, not selective outrage. Terrorism’s epicentres; Borno under Boko Haram, Zamfara under banditry networks, Niger under insurgent infiltration do not fit neatly into a Christian-versus-Muslim binary. Victims in these theatres include imams, pastors, farmers, traders, and children of every faith.

As I reflected previously, the narrative that Nigeria’s Muslims are collectively complicit in anti-Christian persecution is not only inaccurate; it is inflammatory. It risks deepening mistrust within Nigeria’s fragile social fabric. It emboldens extremists who thrive on polarisation. And it externalises what should remain a sovereign, evidence-driven security discourse.

But sanctions based on politicised framing or fictitious advocacy-driven reports by secessionist and anti-Muslim groups undermine the credibility of international accountability mechanisms.

If President Trump’s America truly seeks stability in West Africa, it must engage Nigeria in partnership, not profiling; in evidence, not emotion; in diplomacy, not designation.

Nigeria’s Muslims and Fulani ethnic groups do not need appeasement. They need fairness. Our country needs fact-based engagement, not fearI write this with deep concern, not anger, but concern over what increasingly appears to be a troubling pattern in the posture of the United States under President Donald Trump toward Nigeria, particularly its northern communities leadership.

 

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • More
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
Morganable Briefing Stay with the story beyond the headline.

Get Morganable’s independent reporting, analysis and data-backed insight on Nigeria, Africa and the wider world.

Join the Briefing
Editorial Trust How Morganable protects public-interest journalism.

Our reporting is guided by accuracy, independence, fairness, transparency, correction discipline and public-interest relevance.

Editorial Standards Corrections Ownership & Funding
Morganable articles are produced for readers who want reporting with context, analysis with discipline and journalism that treats public consequence seriously.

Like this:

Like Loading…

Related

Tags: NigeriaTrump Labelling Of Kwankwaso
Alhassan Salihu

Alhassan Salihu

A young passionate journalist, that think global, striving to provide solutions to problems of the world

Recommended

Bala and the Adaidaita Sahu Movement

Bala And The Adaidaita Sahu Movement

11 months ago
Eddie Jordan: F1 Team Owner Dies At 76

Eddie Jordan: F1 Team Owner Dies At 76

1 year ago

Popular News

  • Defence Minister's 100,000 Salary Claim Sparks Outrage

    Defence Minister’s N100,000 Salary Claim Sparks Outrage

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Best Moments from Afro Nation Portugal

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Blood Sister Season 2 Review

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Rising Prices Fueling Poverty in Nigeria- IMF

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Northern Governors Unveil Fund To Address Insecurity

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Follow me

Morganable News Logo

Morganable News Logo

Morganable News Logo

Morganable

Morganable Logo

Morganable

Independent Digital-First Newspaper

Morganable is an independent digital-first newspaper owned by Morganable Media Group, publishing journalism across news, business, entrepreneurship, spotlights, entertainment, sports, lifestyle and opinion for readers in Nigeria, Africa and the wider world.

Editorial Trust

  • Policy Hub
  • Editorial Standards
  • Publishing Principles
  • Ethics Policy
  • Corrections Policy
  • Actionable Feedback Policy

Transparency & Commercial

  • Ownership and Funding
  • Diversity Policy
  • Advertising Policy
  • Sponsored Content Policy
  • Diversity Staffing Report

Legal & Reader Rights

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2019–2026 Morganable. Owned by Morganable Media Group. Independent digital-first newspaper. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Facebook
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Security & Justice
    • Communities
    • Health
    • Education
    • World
  • Politics
    • Governance
    • Policy
    • Political Analysis
    • Elections
  • Africa
    • West Africa
    • East Africa
    • Southern Africa
    • North Africa
    • African Union
    • History & Civilisation
    • Africa Analysis
      • Africa’s Forgotten Human Rights Charter
  • Business
    • Markets
    • Industries
    • Currencies
    • Crypto & Digital Assets
    • Personal Finance
  • Technology
    • Fintech
    • Startups
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Digital Economy
    • Telecoms
    • Cybersecurity
  • Agriculture
    • Food Security
    • Agribusiness
    • Farming
    • Supply Chains
    • Markets & Prices
    • Data Intelligence
  • Life & Culture
    • Fashion
    • Music
    • Film & TV
    • Arts & Culture
    • Books
    • Travel
    • Gaming
    • Health & Wellbeing
    • Food & Drink
    • Personal Development
  • Analysis
    • Explainers
    • Special Reports
    • Investigations
    • Briefings
    • Data Intelligence
  • Video
    • Interviews
    • Video Explainers
    • Video Briefings
    • Documentaries
  • Opinion
    • Executive Editor’s Desk
    • Op-Eds
    • Editorials
    • Columns
    • Letters
  • More
    • Sports
    • Features
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Morganable Hausa
    • Policy Hub
    • Editorial Team
    • About Morganable
    • Corrections Policy
    • Advertise With Us
    • Share Your Story
    • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Sign Up

© 2019–2026 Morganable. Owned by Morganable Media Group. Independent digital-first newspaper. All rights reserved.

%d
    Verified by MonsterInsights