Close Menu
PARADIGM NEWS
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    PARADIGM NEWS
    • Home
    • About Us
      • Contact Us
      • Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
    • Features

      Against All Odds: How Second Chance Education is Transforming the Lives of Married Girls in Northern Nigeria

      May 21, 2026

      How Kano’s Grassroots Communities Are Responding to eBR

      May 17, 2026

      Multilateralism, Peace Diplomacy Take Center Stage at CGS BUK Symposium

      April 26, 2026

      ‎Healthcare Breakdown in Bebeji: Kuki Town Cut Off by Bad Roads, No Hospital

      February 26, 2026

      MUTECO ’83 Donates Millions to Lagos Retirement Homes, Restores Hope to Elderly

      January 14, 2026
    • News
      1. Local
      2. National
      3. International
      4. View All

      NAWOJ Calls for Probe into Alleged Abuse of 4 Minors by Teacher

      May 24, 2026

      Sallah Ram Prices Hit Record High in Kebbi Markets

      May 22, 2026

      KNSG Trains 132 LGA WESH Personnel to Improve Rural Water Supply

      May 19, 2026

      Kebbi Workers to Benefit From Housing, Motorcycle Loans-Gov Idris

      May 15, 2026

      VON to Provide Global Coverage for World Public Relations Forum

      May 22, 2026

      NSIB, ONSA Collaborate on Safer, Coordinated Transport System

      May 22, 2026

      New Milestone for Inclusion as V-PeSDI Launches Official Banner

      May 22, 2026

      NCAA Confirms Compliance of Six Aviation Security Institutions

      May 22, 2026

      FG, Chinese Firm Deepen Ties on Nigeria’s Automotive Future

      May 30, 2026

      INEC Joins Global Experts to Observe South Korea’s Polls

      May 30, 2026

      NCC Takes Nigeria’s Digital Regulation Success to Global Stage

      May 30, 2026

      Teen Held Friend Hostage for Seven Hours Before Knife Attack

      May 29, 2026

      Regional Stability in Focus as Nigeria Hosts Côte d’Ivoire

      May 29, 2026

      Fake Videos, Religious Manipulation Used to Attack Tinubu-Presidency

      May 28, 2026

      Amnesty Condemns Rising Attacks, Displacement in Sokoto

      May 27, 2026

      KSPHCMB DG Flags Staff Shortage, Poor Sanitation During Inspection

      May 26, 2026
    • Politics

      NDC Unveils Political Heavyweight Gwarzo for Kano Governorship Race

      May 29, 2026

      “Yusuf, Ganduje Are My Political Protégés”-Kwankwaso Fires Back

      May 28, 2026

      What We Discussed Was Deep” — Atiku Breaks Silence on Amaechi

      May 28, 2026

      PDP Set to Crown Jonathan as 2027 Presidential Flagbearer

      May 28, 2026

      Atiku, Amaechi Hold Closed-Door Meeting After ADC Primaries

      May 28, 2026
    • Conflict

      IPCR, GI-TOC Hold Strategic Roundtable on Crime–Conflict Nexus

      May 29, 2026

      Natasha Livestreams Faceoff With Immigration Over Passport Seizure

      November 4, 2025

      Kebbi Gov’t Threatens Legal Action Against Malami Over Defamation Claims

      September 19, 2025

      FG Calls for Conflict-Sensitive Climate Adaptation to Tackle Insecurity

      September 3, 2025

      Kadpoly Retiree faults Committee, Demolition Of Property

      March 27, 2025
    • Advertise With Us
    • More
      1. Analysis
      2. Business
      3. Crime
      4. Cultural events
      5. Economy
      6. Education
      7. Editorial
      8. Entertainment
      9. Environment
      10. Fashion
      11. Health
      12. Lifestyle
      13. Personality profile
      14. Science
      15. Sports
      16. Technology
      17. View All

      FreeTV Represents Nigeria’s Broadcasting Future, Not A Departure From DSO Vision

      May 14, 2026

      27 Million Nigerians Face Hunger Despite Rising Food Imports – Report

      March 22, 2026

      Middle East War Escalates After Death of Iran’s Supreme Leader

      March 1, 2026

      CP Jimoh: The Art of Policing Lagos By Yushau A. Shuaib

      February 25, 2026

      NDIC, NCGC Launch Push for Stronger Financial Safety

      May 29, 2026

      NUPRC Raises Concern Over Skills Gap in Nigeria’s Upstream Oil

      May 29, 2026

      Petroleum Ministers Pledge Support to New NMDPRA Chief

      May 25, 2026

      NDIC Partners Nile to Prepare Students for Corporate Leadership

      May 22, 2026

      Suspected Serial Killer Arrested as Police Uncover Mass Graves

      May 29, 2026

      Police Arrest Chef Over Alleged ₦150m Wristwatch Theft

      May 29, 2026

      Police Arrest Mother, Daughter Over Alleged Romance Scam

      May 29, 2026

      Kebbi Police Arrest Four Over Alleged Hajj Seat Scam

      May 27, 2026

      Zazzau Emirate Set for Grand Turbaning as Ibrahim Jibril Becomes Sarkin Yaki

      March 30, 2026

      Argungu Fishing Festival Shows Nigeria’s Strength,Cultural Pride-Tinubu

      February 15, 2026

      Giant 59kg Fish Sparks Excitement as Tinubu Launches Argungu Festival

      February 14, 2026

      Argungu 2026: Camel Races, Polo, Investors’ Forum Mark Grand Comeback

      February 12, 2026

      Nigeria’s Tax System Gets Major Overhaul with New Unified ID

      May 30, 2026

      Kebbi Trains Thousands in Tailoring, ICT, Solar Installation

      May 19, 2026

      Nigeria’s Economic Future Lies Beyond Oil- Minister

      May 13, 2026

      Nigeria Pushes Cooperative Digitalization to Drive One-Trillion-Dollar Economy

      May 12, 2026

      NOA Sensitises Students on Drug Abuse, Examination Malpractice

      May 30, 2026

      EFCC Chairman Urges Students to Uphold Discipline, Integrity

      May 28, 2026

      FUL Partners NOA to Curb Social Vices Among Students

      May 28, 2026

      Stakeholders Converge in Lagos for 25th Nigerian Book Fair

      May 27, 2026

      Another Grid Collapse, Another Missed Opportunity

      February 3, 2026

      Debunking Myths: Every Girl Deserves Education After Menarche

      August 16, 2025

      How External Forces Shape Electoral Outcomes

      May 8, 2025

      Media Narrative: Between Tinubu’s Birthday and the Lynching of Northerners in Uromi

      March 31, 2025

      Kannywood Celebrities Face One-Year Suspension in Kano

      May 17, 2026

      Security Alerts Disrupt UROMI-16 Premiere in Northern Nigeria

      April 23, 2026

      Nigerian Actor Dumps ‘Papa Ajasco’ Persona, Unveils New Name

      March 22, 2026

      Where Did the Money Go- Mike Adenuga Questions Papa Ajasco

      March 18, 2026

      KANGIS Leads Fresh Crackdown on Illegal Structures in Kano

      May 27, 2026

      V-PeSDI, Partners Empower 100 PWDs, Vulnerable Women in Kano

      May 26, 2026

      NESREA Establishes CCUS Platform to Attract Green Investment

      May 24, 2026

      COWA Plants Over 1,000 Trees as NCS Intensifies Climate Advocacy

      May 19, 2026

      Kamfanin Louis Vuitton ya ƙirƙiri jakar dutse da ruwan zinari

      October 8, 2025

      Icon of Modern Fashion, Giorgio Armani, Dies at 91

      September 4, 2025

      Celebrities Designers Kicked Off Paris Couture Fashion Week

      April 16, 2024

      NESREA Orders Kano Rice Mills, Recycling Firm to Implement Pollution Control Measures

      May 30, 2026

      582 Sit for CBT as FMC Abuja Pushes Merit-Based Selection

      May 27, 2026

      World Bank, UNFPA Funds Key to Tackling FP Crisis in Nig -AHBN

      May 25, 2026

      Zaria Fistula Centre Repairs Over 2,000 Cases Since 1999-Surgeon

      May 23, 2026

      Duchess Of Sussex Meghan Markel Launches New Lifestyle Brand

      April 18, 2024

      NUJ Politics: A Legacy of Service by Bello Mujtaba

      January 12, 2026

      Why Nomiis Gee Remains One of the Most Influential Voices in Hausa Entertainment

      December 9, 2025

      Maryam is The Only Woman Who Captured My Heart, Changed my life–IBB

      February 23, 2025

      Dr. Nasiru Sani Gwarzo: A Life of Service and Impact

      February 8, 2025

      NBMA, FHI 360 Move to Strengthen Nigeria’s Biosecurity Systems

      May 10, 2026

      Minister Strengthens Legislative Alliance to Fast-Track Nat’l STI

      January 9, 2026

      DMCSA, KASSOSA Forge Partnership to Promote Public Health

      November 10, 2025

      REA Scales Up Youth Inclusion with Renewable Energy Training

      September 20, 2025

      Beijing 2027 : Marathoners, Sprinters Face Tough Entry Marks

      May 27, 2026

      Nigeria’s Okowa Clinches Powerful African Athletics Position

      May 20, 2026

      Flying Eagles Camp Opens in Abuja as Maikaba Unveils 35-Man Squad

      May 16, 2026

      Thrills as Katsina, Taraba Win Inter-Schools B/ball Tournament in Kano

      May 15, 2026

      NiMet Strengthens AI, Aviation Research Collaboration with Singapore

      May 24, 2026

      NARICT Assures Support for Sickle Cell Patients Through CSR

      May 23, 2026

      Nigeria Emerges as Global Player in Data Protection-NDPC

      May 12, 2026

      NDPC Takes Data Protection Campaign to NYSC Camp Abuja

      May 6, 2026

      Abba Kabir’s 3 Years Beyond Roads and Projects

      May 30, 2026

      Kano Pilgrims in S/Arabia: A Model of Discipline, Patience and Devotion

      May 30, 2026

      3 Years of Renewed Hope: Mapping Kano’s Dev Under Gov Yusuf

      May 30, 2026

      Public Hospital Care: The Jigawa State Instance, Lessons from the 2025 Ranking

      May 30, 2026
    • Hausa

      Kwankwaso Na Shirin Tsayar da Gwarzo Takarar Gwamnan a Kano

      May 28, 2026

      Gwamna Ya Baiwa Ma’aikatan Kano Tallafin Sallah na N20,000

      May 26, 2026

      Najeriya Ba Za Ta Sauya Suna Ko Tsarin Shari’a Ba- Tinubu

      May 22, 2026

      APC Ta Tabbatar Da Abba A Matsayin Dan Takarar Gwamna A Kano

      May 22, 2026

      Kano:Yan Mata 3 Sun Musulunta a Hannun Hukumar Tace Fina-Finai

      May 19, 2026
    PARADIGM NEWS
    Home » 2027 Elections: The Fear of Trump, ‘Werekaci’ and Nigerian Politics
    Opinion

    2027 Elections: The Fear of Trump, ‘Werekaci’ and Nigerian Politics

    EditorBy EditorMarch 11, 2026Updated:March 11, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Telegram WhatsApp
    FB IMG 1773223402489

    Yushau A. Shuaib

    “The fear of Trump is not the beginning of wisdom. But it is time to tread carefully, with clear eyes and a steady hand.”

    As a child, whenever I refused to eat or take bitter traditional medicine, my mother would threaten to call Werekaci—the unstable and aggressive man who lived at the end of our street. The fear alone was enough to make me comply instantly. I simply obeyed anything out of fear.

    Years later, I have come to recognise that Werekaci has many faces—on social media, in political spaces, and sometimes in the corridors of global power. The psychology remains the same: invoke a frightening name and watch people abandon their better judgment.
    It is through this prism that I now view the growing anxiety in certain Nigerian circles over the posture of United States President Donald Trump toward Nigeria—and the implications this anxiety may have for our 2027 general elections.

    Recently, after publishing a series of opinion articles challenging the so-called “Christian genocide” narrative promoted by separatist advocates and ethno-religious agitators, my social media pages were flooded with coordinated hostility. Within less than an hour of one post, more than 500 abusive comments appeared—attacking not only me but also my family, culture, faith, region and even my country.

    Some thoughtful readers later pointed out that most of the accounts were fake, bots and faceless handles with no real constituency. Since then, I have adopted a simple rule: I welcome criticism from people of reason, but I delete reckless and bad-faith attacks from extremists.

    Isa Kaita College

    The same psychology of manipulation appears to be shaping parts of the discourse around Nigeria and President Trump, whose derogatory remarks about our country are well-documented. In earlier writings, I addressed several of these claims, particularly his repeated references to “protecting Nigerian Christians” without acknowledging Muslim victims of violence. What is troubling is that some Nigerians now amplify such narratives for domestic political advantage.

    When American forces reportedly launched a strike in Sokoto on the eve of Christmas, Trump quickly addressed a Christian audience, invoking what he claimed he could do. Yet Sokoto is neither the epicentre of terrorism nor a major banditry hotspot in Nigeria. The target appeared deliberately symbolic because of its Islamic heritage.

    Ash Noor

    So far, the Nigerian government has gone to extraordinary lengths to placate Washington. Officials have repeatedly shuttled to the United States, hosted American lawmakers in Nigeria, and spent substantial sums on U.S. lobbying firms. Nigeria has also conceded ground on arms-procurement decisions, facilitated the release of Catholic schoolchildren, and even allowed American troops to operate on its soil—an unprecedented development in our history. Yet the so-called Christian-genocide campaign has continued to resurface.

    Then, on Wednesday, March 4, 2026, as Muslims were leaving a mosque after breaking their Ramadan fast in Ngoshe, Borno State, terrorists slaughtered the Imam and several worshippers while abducting more than 100 women and children. There was no comparable outcry—not from American lawmakers and certainly not from President Trump. The silence was both deafening and revealing: the tragedy simply did not fit the narrative being promoted. But the truth remains clear—Muslim lives, to them, appear not to matter.

    Meanwhile, among the most reckless accusations circulating on my posts is the claim that Muslims are complicit in terrorism. I do not dignify such claims with extended debate. Long before Boko Haram became a household name, I had written extensively condemning those who falsely invoke Islam to justify violence. These writings appeared in major Nigerian newspapers.

    During the ethno-religious conflicts that spread from Maiduguri to Onitsha in 2006, precisely twenty years ago, one of my articles then titled “Killing in the Name of the Devil” appeared in national newspapers, including The Punch, Leadership, Daily Sun, Vanguard, Financial Standard, Daily Trust, and Daily Champion, among others. The article remains accessible on my blog, yashuaib. com, with the publication dates included.

    Over the years, I have written about Boko Haram, banditry, and the Nigerian state’s failures in counter-terrorism—always as a proud Northern Muslim guided by the Quranic injunction that states: “Fear a tumult which will affect not only those who caused it, but also the innocent among you.” (Qur’an 8:25).

    Ironically, when I criticise my own people, some critics cheer me. But the moment I point out similar flaws in theirs, those cheers quickly turn into outrage. I have never been hypocritical on this matter. I do not tolerate bullying —whether institutional, political, or digital—and I do not argue with fools.

    Northerners, contrary to certain stereotypes, are far more tolerant than the fanatics often portrayed in social media debates. The behaviour of a divisive minority should not be mistaken for the character of the majority.

    General Theophilus Danjuma, for instance, is widely respected in the North for championing a united Nigeria where all citizens are equal regardless of faith or ethnicity. Similarly, when Abubakar Badaru, a Muslim from Jigawa, was replaced as Defence Minister by General Christopher Musa, a Christian from Kaduna, mainstream Northern opinion—including Islamic clerics—welcomed the development. This acceptance was particularly strong in Sokoto and Maiduguri, where Musa had previously lived, served with distinction and protected civilian lives, leading to the surrender or neutralisation of thousands of terrorists under his watch.

    Following recent global events, some commentators have interpreted the U.S.–Israel strikes on Iran as a warning for Northern Nigeria, even urging President Trump to oppose Sharia law and Muslim-Muslim tickets. While the Middle East conflict has been widely condemned by several global powers, these critics continue to frame the issue through a simplistic “us versus them” narrative.

    They also overlook a geopolitical reality: Iran’s isolation was partly worsened by the silence of several neighbouring Arab Muslim states, who either ignored the attack on a fellow Muslim nation—though a non-Arab one—or appeared aligned with the aggressors. Ironically, the critics also ignore a demographic fact: Iran today has a larger Christian population than Israel.

    Some commentators further argue that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu may be cautious about provoking Donald Trump, citing the pressure Washington has exerted on countries such as Iran and Venezuela. They therefore predict a possible political adjustment within the Presidency, including speculation that Trump might urge Tinubu to reconsider the current joint ticket ahead of the 2027 elections.

    While it would be unfair to deny Vice President Kashim Shettima the continuity enjoyed by his predecessors, Nigeria’s political choices must remain sovereign. One point must also be stated plainly: if Shettima must be compelled to sacrifice his position under foreign pressure, President Tinubu should ensure that any adjustment does not deepen the already glaring imbalance in federal appointments.

    Today, several key institutions in Nigeria’s economic and financial system are disproportionately led by individuals from one geopolitical zone—and largely from one religious background. The Ministry of Finance, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS/NRS), PenCom, NDIC, EFCC, NAICOM, AMCON, the Bank of Agriculture, and the Bank of Industry (BOI) are not minor posts. They represent the commanding heights of the national economy.

    When leadership of these institutions tilts toward “Yorubanisation” or “Christianisation,” it becomes more than a matter of optics—it begins to strain the fragile social contract upon which Nigeria’s unity rests.

    The Igbo, who also feel excluded from sensitive and lucrative positions, must likewise be considered in any recalibration aimed at strengthening national cohesion.

    The global community—including sections of the American public itself—is increasingly realising that fear of Trump is not the beginning of wisdom. It may well be the beginning of capitulation.

    Nigeria must resist the temptation to organise its internal politics around the moods of a foreign leader. We must engage Washington where necessary, push back where appropriate, and above all ensure that our national decisions—including decisions about who leads us in 2027—are made in Abuja, not in Mar-a-Lago.

    Werekaci may be loud. But he does not live here.

    Yushau A. Shuaib is the author of “An Encounter with the Spymaster.” He writes from yashuaib @yashuaib.com.

    #2027 Elections #Nigerian Politics #Trump
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Abba Kabir’s 3 Years Beyond Roads and Projects

    May 30, 2026

    Kano Pilgrims in S/Arabia: A Model of Discipline, Patience and Devotion

    May 30, 2026

    3 Years of Renewed Hope: Mapping Kano’s Dev Under Gov Yusuf

    May 30, 2026

    Public Hospital Care: The Jigawa State Instance, Lessons from the 2025 Ranking

    May 30, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks

    FG, Chinese Firm Deepen Ties on Nigeria’s Automotive Future

    May 30, 2026

    NESREA Orders Kano Rice Mills, Recycling Firm to Implement Pollution Control Measures

    May 30, 2026

    Nigeria’s Tax System Gets Major Overhaul with New Unified ID

    May 30, 2026

    NOA Sensitises Students on Drug Abuse, Examination Malpractice

    May 30, 2026
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    Hajaj Albait 2
    © 2026 PARADIGM NEWS Developed by: ENGRMKS & CO.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Advertise With Us
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.