WORLD & GLOBAL NEWS
From Onitsha Market Stall to Washington War Rooms: How Unverified Claims by a Screwdriver Trader, Emeka Umeagbalasi, Shaped U.S. Narrative on Nigeria’s ‘Christian Genocide’ and Triggered Airstrikes
In the bustling heart of Onitsha, southeastern Nigeria’s commercial capital, a short man wearing a single earbud weaves through wheelbarrows of sugarcane and porters balancing stacks of hard hats. He stops at the tool section of the market, unlocks a tiny shop, and arranges screwdrivers and wrenches for sale. His name is Emeka Umeagbalasi, a modest trader whose daily livelihood depends on the hum of Nigeria’s informal economy.
Yet far beyond the noise of Onitsha Main Market, Umeagbalasi has emerged as an unlikely figure in global geopolitics, one whose claims have reverberated through the corridors of the United States Congress and, ultimately, the Oval Office.
Umeagbalasi, who runs a non-governmental organisation known as the International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety) from his home alongside his wife, has become a primary source of data cited by prominent U.S. Republican lawmakers advancing the controversial narrative that Christians are being systematically targeted for extermination in Nigeria.
According to a detailed report by The New York Times, U.S. Senators and lawmakers including Ted Cruz of Texas, Riley Moore of Virginia, and Chris Smith of New Jersey have all relied on Umeagbalasi’s research in promoting what the newspaper described as “the misleading idea that Christians are being singled out for slaughter” in Africa’s most populous nation.
Armed with these claims, U.S. President Donald Trump took a dramatic step. On Christmas Day, American air power was deployed on the other side of Nigeria, following months of increasingly incendiary rhetoric from Washington.
To Umeagbalasi, the global attention his work attracted and the decisive action it inspired—felt extraordinary. He described the moment as “miraculous.”
“If nothing is done,” he warned in an interview from his home, “Nigeria will explode.”
Central to the controversy are Umeagbalasi’s assertions that 125,000 Christians have been killed in Nigeria since 2009.
However, in conversations with The New York Times, he acknowledged significant limitations in his methodology. He admitted that he often does not verify his figures and that his findings are largely drawn from “secondary sources,” including Nigerian media reports, Christian advocacy organisations, and even Google searches.
The report further revealed that Umeagbalasi rarely travels to the regions where violent attacks occur. Instead, he frequently infers the religious identity of victims based on geography.
“If a mass abduction or killing happens in an area where he thinks many Christians live, he assumes the victims are Christians,” the report stated.
Despite these methodological gaps, his data gained traction at the highest levels of U.S. politics.
In October, President Trump redesignated Nigeria as a “country of particular concern”, citing allegations of a Christian genocide.
“Christianity is facing an existential threat in Nigeria. Thousands of Christians are being killed,” Trump declared, blaming radical Islamists for what he termed a “mass slaughter.”
A month later, the rhetoric escalated further. Trump warned that the U.S. Department of War would move into Nigeria “guns-a-blazing” to eliminate Islamic terrorists if the Nigerian government failed to halt the alleged genocide.
On December 26, U.S. forces carried out airstrikes against ISIS-linked targets in north-western Sokoto State, an operation Washington said was conducted “at the request of Nigerian authorities.” The strikes followed sustained lobbying and congressional pressure anchored on data repeatedly traced back to Umeagbalasi’s reports.
The New York Times noted that Trump had specifically tasked lawmakers Riley Moore and Ted Cruz both vocal proponents of the genocide narrative to probe the situation in Nigeria. Alongside Congressman Chris Smith, they consistently referenced Umeagbalasi’s figures in congressional statements and briefings.
Umeagbalasi describes himself as a criminologist and investigator. He holds degrees in security studies and peace and conflict resolution from the National Open University of Nigeria, credentials he cites to defend his authority on matters of national security.
In an interview with The Sun, when questioned about his data sources, he pointed to “location and space of an incident or crime scene”, calling his approach “one of the oldest natural methods in the world.”
He has also made sweeping claims beyond casualty figures, asserting that Nigeria is facing a deliberate plot to “annihilate all Christians and Islamize Nigeria.” He alleged that out of roughly 100,000 churches in the country, 20,000 have been destroyed over the past 16 years. When pressed on how he arrived at those numbers, his response was blunt: “I Googled it.”
That such unverified data could influence the foreign policy and military decisions of the world’s most powerful nation has raised serious questions about information vetting, political agendas, and the dangers of oversimplifying Nigeria’s complex security challenges.
Nevertheless, the reality remains that relying heavily on information promoted by three U.S. congressmen, each repeatedly citing Umeagbalasi’s work, President Trump ordered a series of military strikes in Nigeria during the yuletide season.
From a screwdriver stall in Onitsha to U.S. airstrikes thousands of kilometres away, the trajectory of Emeka Umeagbalasi’s claims underscores how local narratives, when amplified without rigorous scrutiny, can reshape international perception and trigger co
nsequences far beyond their point of origin.
