Among African nationals, Nigeria recorded the highest number of criminal alien arrests in the US

  • The U.S Department of Homeland Security specifies that the data reflects the “worst of the worst” criminal aliens arrested by ICE, not general immigration arrests.
  • Nigeria leads the list with 40 arrests, the highest among all African nationals reported.
  • Somalia (27) and Liberia (21) follow, forming a concentrated top tier.
  • Most countries report fewer than 10 arrests, showing a sharp decline beyond the top group.

During his campaign, Donald Trump pledged sweeping deportations, vowing to remove what he repeatedly described as the “worst criminal illegal aliens.” The U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s data offers a glimpse into the African nationals who fall under that category - individuals the agency labels as the “worst of the worst.”

Among African countries, the arrest figures are heavily concentrated in a small cluster of nations. Nigeria leads with 40 arrests, followed by Somalia (27) and Liberia (21), forming the highest tier. A second tier - Sudan, Kenya, DR Congo, Egypt, Ghana, Cape Verde, Eritrea, and Ethiopia - recorded between 9 and 18 arrests each. Most other African countries appear only sparingly, with three or fewer cases in the dataset. In total, only 37 African countries have available arrest data, and only those listed had at least three individuals flagged.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security explains that this category includes individuals already convicted of serious crimes as well as others facing pending criminal charges at the time they are encountered. In other words, not everyone in the dataset has been newly convicted in U.S. courts, but all are placed under DHS’s highest-severity tier because of their connection to major offenses such as murder, aggravated assault, sexual offenses, child exploitation, burglary, identity theft, robbery, drug related offences, fraud schemes, and weapons violations. These are the types of crimes DHS cites when identifying those considered the “worst of the worst

Source:

U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Period:

2025
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Nigeria has lost more senior military officers in early 2026 than in any year since 2016
  • 2026 is already Nigeria’s deadliest year, with six senior officer deaths as of April.
  • Borno accounts for most of the deaths.
  • 2025 already showed renewed pressure before the rise in 2026.
  • Lieutenant colonels account for the largest share of deaths by rank.
  • The pattern suggests attacks are increasingly targeting military command structures.

6 of the 14 countries with over 1 million displaced people are in Africa
  • Sudan leads globally with 10.1 million IDPs.
  • 6 out of 14 countries with over 1 million IDPs are in Africa.
  • Syria has the highest displacement intensity (26.2% of its population).
  • Nigeria’s 3.6 million IDPs are large in absolute terms but represent only 1.5% of its population.
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  • Non-African countries like Colombia (7.1 million) and Ukraine (3.8 million) show that displacement is a global issue.

While global terrorism-related deaths decreased by 28% in 2025, they surged by 46% in Nigeria
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  • Nigeria recorded a sharp 46.2% increase in terrorism-related deaths, rising from 513 to 750.
  • Burkina Faso saw a major decline of 44.8%, dropping from 1,532 to 846 deaths.
  • Niger also improved, with deaths falling by 25.5% to 703.
  • Democratic Republic of the Congo recorded an increase of 27.9%, showing mixed trends within Africa.
  • Pakistan saw a slight increase of 5.7%, indicating relatively stable but still elevated risk.

Nigeria’s 2026 defence budget is just 0.5% of the USA’s
  • Nigeria’s 2026 defence budget is $3.9 billion, placing it far below the top global spenders.
  • It is just 0.5% of the US’ $831.5 billion budget, highlighting a massive scale difference.
  • Compared to China ($303 billion), Nigeria’s budget is only 1.3%.
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  • Even a mid-tier top spender like Australia ($57.4 billion) has a budget almost 15x Nigeria’s.
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Nigeria’s budget for security tilts heavily toward ground forces, with the Army taking the most significant share
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  • Police formations and commands receive ₦1.3 trillion, exceeding the ₦ 1 trillion threshold in the 2026 budget.
  • The Nigerian Navy’s proposed allocation stands at ₦443.9 billion, keeping it well below the trillion-naira range reached by the top two.
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Kidnapping for ransom accounted for 40% of terrorist funding in Nigeria (2018-2024)
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