Thursday, April 9, 2026

US expands Nigeria travel warning, lets embassy staff leave Abuja

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

U.S. 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 brings to 23 ​out of 36 the number of states under the “Do Not Travel” ‌category.

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

The U.S. 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 U.S. 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.

By MacDonald Dzirutwe, Reuters

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