NIGERIA GRANTS ASYLUM TO GUINEA BISSAU OPPOSITION LEADER

Nigeria grants asylum to Guinea Bissau opposition candidate after military takeover and disputed elections.

Nigeria has granted asylum to Guinea Bissau opposition presidential candidate Fernando Dias da Costa, who fled to the Nigerian Embassy in Bissau after receiving credible threats to his life following a disputed election and subsequent military takeover.

The Nigeria asylum Guinea Bissau crisis represents one of Abuja’s strongest foreign policy interventions since President Tinubu assumed leadership of ECOWAS.

Dias da Costa and incumbent President Umaro Embaló both declared victory after the disputed vote, plunging the country into chaos before soldiers seized control in an abrupt coup.

Incumbent President Umaro Embaló Of Guinea Bissau
Opposition presidential candidate Fernando Dias da Costa

Nigeria Asylum Guinea Bissau Crisis: Tinubu Moves to Stabilise a Region Under Coup Pressure

Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yusuf Tuggar, informed ECOWAS Commission President Omar Touray that President Tinubu had approved asylum for the opposition politician due to “credible threats” to his safety.

Tuggar requested ECOWAS Stabilisation Support Mission officers to provide security for the candidate while inside the embassy.

Presidential aide Alkasim Abdulkadir confirmed the development, saying Nigeria’s action is rooted in its longstanding commitment to peace and constitutional order in West Africa.

“Nigeria acted to prevent escalation and to promote social cohesion,”
Abdulkadir said.

ECOWAS Suspends Guinea Bissau as Crisis Deepens

Amid the turmoil, ECOWAS held an emergency summit and suspended Guinea Bissau until civilian authority is restored.

The coup adds to the growing list of military takeovers across West Africa—including Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso, and Gabon—creating mounting pressure on ECOWAS’s credibility and stability.

Tinubu’s Diplomatic Test × Regional Security × Coup Contagion

Jonathan briefs President Tinubu on his recent assignment to Guinea-Bissau.

The asylum move signals Tinubu’s willingness to play a more assertive role in West African geopolitics after criticism over ECOWAS’s handling of Niger’s coup.

Strategically, it positions Nigeria as:

  • a protector of democratic actors,
  • a regional stabiliser,
  • a center of asylum diplomacy,
  • and a potential peace-broker as tensions rise.

Diplomats say Nigeria’s move may encourage other West African opposition figures facing persecution to seek refuge in Abuja.

Dias da Costa remains inside the embassy under Nigerian protection while regional leaders seek a political solution.

This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.

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