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Nigerian President Bola Ahmed Tinubu during at visit to Vicars' Hall at Windsor Castle in Windsor, England.
Isabel Infantes - WPA Pool/Getty Images
- Nigerian President Bola Tinubu completed the first state visit by a Nigerian leader to Britain since 1989, meeting with PM Keir Starmer.
- Tinubu emphasised that Nigeria faces significant terrorism threats from a jihadist insurgency that has been ongoing since 2009.
- British Steel announced a £70 million contract to supply 120 000 tonnes of steel for Nigerian port redevelopments.
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu talked of how his country is “challenged by terrorism” as he met Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Thursday as part of his state visit to the UK.
Starmer welcomed Tinubu to Downing Street for talks on the second and last day of the first state visit by the leader of Africa’s most populous nation to Britain in 37 years.
“What we are facing is not a small challenge. Currently the entire world is challenged,” Tinubu said at the top of their meeting.
“Nigeria is not immune, Britain is not immune,” Tinubu added, noting that Nigeria was “challenged by terrorism” and the “conflict from climate change”.
The Nigerian president arrived in Britain on Tuesday, the day after suspected suicide bombings killed at least 23 people in northeastern Nigeria.
The west African nation has been roiled by a jihadist insurgency since 2009, which US President Donald Trump has claimed amounts to a “genocide” of Christians - sparking a diplomatic crisis between Washington and Abuja, which denies the allegations.
READ | King Charles hosts President Tinubu in first state visit by a Nigerian leader in 37 years
Britain and Nigeria remain major partners in trade, aid and defence. Nigeria is a former British colony and London is home to a huge Nigerian diaspora.
“The long and shared history between our countries is obvious and much valued by us,” said Starmer.
“Our ambition is to go even further than we have already gone with our two countries,” he added.
The meeting came after British Steel announced it had secured a £70-million ($94-million) contract for port redevelopments in Nigeria, one of its biggest ever export orders.
The agreement, with Hitech Construction Africa Ltd, will see British Steel supply 120 000 tonnes of steel, sparking an increase in production at its site in Scunthorpe, in northern England.
READ | Nigeria tightens security in Maiduguri after suicide attacks
Tinubu and his wife were treated to a state banquet hosted by King Charles III and Queen Camilla at Windsor Castle, west of London, on Wednesday night.
Earlier in the day, they had a carriage ride and inspected a ceremonial guard of honour.
The last Nigerian state visit to the UK took place in 1989, although Tinubu was received by Charles in September 2024.


























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