Forgotten Dairies
THE UNTOUCHABLES: When Washington Identifies Alleged Terror Financiers and Nigeria Remains Silent -By Daniel Nduka Okonkwo
Ordinary Nigerians, who bear the lethal cost of terrorism every day across the country’s troubled regions, have a right to more than government assurances that investigations are ongoing. They have a right to know that the financial infrastructure sustaining violence against their communities is being systematically dismantled, and not merely monitored in perpetuity.
Despite repeated assurances from officials that investigations into terrorist financiers are “ongoing” and require extreme delicacy, the Nigerian government’s reluctance to act decisively has become a dangerous liability. By hiding behind constitutional technicalities, sluggish judicial processes, and political sensitivities, authorities have failed to send the kind of unambiguous message that would deter sponsors of terrorism and kidnapping. The delay in prosecuting these powerful figures, many of whom are suspected to be wealthy or politically connected, only emboldens criminal networks, undermines public trust, and signals to the world that Nigeria lacks the political will to confront its deepest security threats head-on.
The United States government has moved decisively against a transnational Islamic State financing network, designating a Nigerian national and three Nigeria-registered companies as alleged financial facilitators of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), in a sweeping action that exposed terror money trails running from Nigeria to Istanbul and Idlib.
The action, announced by U.S. Department of State spokesperson Thomas Pigott and taken under Executive Order 13224, targets three individuals and six entities across France, Syria, Turkiye, and Nigeria. Among those designated is Mukhtar Adamu Muhammad, a Nigerian national whose money exchange businesses Washington alleges served as conduits for ISIS financing. Three Nigerian bureau de change companies, Generation Currency Bureau De Change Limited, Manhattan Bureau De Change Limited, and Nine to Nine Exchange Bureau De Change Limited, were added to the U.S. Treasury’s Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list in the same action.
“Today’s designations target three individuals and six entities operating across Europe, the Middle East, and West Africa who have enabled ISIS to move money across borders,” Pigott said in the State Department statement, “exposing a network that spans from France and Syria to Turkiye and Nigeria.”
The Nigeria-linked designations formed part of a broader sanctions action that also targeted Miloud Abderrahmane, a France-based facilitator who allegedly provided information on the construction and use of explosives to ISIS supporters, and Abdelhakim Boukich, a Syria-based operator whom U.S. authorities accused of helping transfer funds through financial networks linked to ISIS across multiple countries, including the United States.
The action carries added diplomatic weight. The United States reaffirmed its partnership with Nigeria, noting that Nigeria jointly participated in the May 16, 2026 operation that resulted in the killing of Abu-Bilal al-Minuki, described as the second-in-command of ISIS. Yet even as Washington publicly credits Nigeria as a counterterrorism partner, a pointed question hangs over this announcement: why were these designations made in Washington rather than in Nigeria?
The silence of Nigeria’s domestic counterterrorism architecture on this designation is telling. While the United States has named, profiled, and sanctioned the Nigerian facilitators and their companies, Nigeria’s own enforcement machinery has a documented history of stalling, delay, and selective inaction when confronted with terrorism financing.
Officials in Abuja have, over the years, offered a familiar set of explanations for why suspected terrorism sponsors and financiers remain untouched by the Nigerian state. The government routinely argues that hastily naming or arresting suspects without absolute evidence risks violating the constitutional presumption of innocence, and that extensive profiling is required to build cases sturdy enough to withstand judicial scrutiny rather than collapse on legal technicalities.
These are not unreasonable arguments in isolation. Due process is a cornerstone of any legitimate legal system. But when the same institutions citing due process as justification for restraint simultaneously fail to demonstrate any visible progress toward prosecution, no charges filed, no assets seized, no court dates set, the argument begins to sound less like principled caution and more like institutional cover.
Security analysts and critics of the government point to a more uncomfortable truth: many terror networks operating in Nigeria do not function in a vacuum. They operate with the protection, active participation, or deliberate blindness of wealthy, politically connected figures. Prosecuting the financial infrastructure of such networks, risks exposing politically sensitive truths and triggering consequences that powerful interests within the system are unwilling to set in motion.
Nigerian lawmakers and government officials have also invoked the imperative of protecting ongoing intelligence operations as grounds for withholding arrests or public disclosures of terrorism financiers. Many terror networks are international in scope, the argument goes, and prematurely arresting or publicly unmasking local sponsors could alert co-conspirators elsewhere, disrupt active intelligence operations, and damage collaborations with foreign partners.
This is a legitimate law-enforcement consideration, and no responsible security analyst would dismiss it categorically. The problem is that Nigeria’s security agencies have invoked this reasoning so consistently, across so many years, and in relation to so many unresolved cases, that its credibility as a genuine operational constraint rather than a convenient shield has been severely eroded.
Consider what the U.S. government has now done: it has publicly named, profiled, and sanctioned a Nigerian ISIS facilitator along with three of his registered companies, providing passport numbers, registration numbers, and registered addresses. If the concern were genuinely about alerting co-conspirators, it is difficult to explain why Nigeria’s own law enforcement agencies could not have taken equivalent domestic action, such as asset freezes, investigations initiated, and company licences suspended in parallel with or ahead of Washington’s announcement.
There is a further layer of institutional dysfunction that must be named plainly. Nigeria’s judicial system is notoriously slow, and this slowness is not merely a passive characteristic. It has become a structural feature that those who wish to avoid accountability actively exploit. Financial crime prosecutions, particularly those involving high-profile or politically sensitive defendants, can stretch across years and even decades, exhausting the resources of prosecutors and demoralising the witnesses whose cooperation is essential to securing convictions.
This judicial lag is well understood within Nigeria’s law enforcement and prosecution community. It has been the subject of extensive commentary by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, the Office of the Attorney General, and successive administrations. And yet the structural reforms that would accelerate terrorism financing trials, strengthen financial intelligence units, and insulate prosecutors from political interference have not been implemented with any consistency or urgency. The result is a system in which the government can point to the complexity of prosecution as an explanation for delay, while never confronting the deeper institutional failures that make that complexity so durable.
Nigeria’s Information Minister and other government agencies have periodically asserted that investigations into terrorism financing syndicates are ongoing and require extreme delicacy. This assertion, standing alone, is not accountability. It is a promise to investigate, repeated so many times over so many years that repetition has become a substitute for result.
What genuine accountability would look like is not difficult to describe. It would mean the Nigeria Sanctions Committee’s lists of suspected financiers are cross-referenced with company registration records and acted upon. It would mean registered bureau de change companies are subject to meaningful financial intelligence monitoring under the Central Bank of Nigeria’s regulatory framework. It would mean that when a foreign ally provides evidence sufficient to sustain a formal designation under its own law, Nigeria’s domestic law enforcement machinery responds with equivalent rigour and not with silence. It would also mean that the political pressure that has historically insulated terrorism sponsors from prosecution is confronted directly, not navigated around.
Ordinary Nigerians, who bear the lethal cost of terrorism every day across the country’s troubled regions, have a right to more than government assurances that investigations are ongoing. They have a right to know that the financial infrastructure sustaining violence against their communities is being systematically dismantled, and not merely monitored in perpetuity.
The American designations released this week provide a concrete and actionable starting point. Three Nigerian companies, bearing registered numbers RC 1555604, RC 1763824, and RC 1462752, have been publicly linked by a foreign government to ISIS financing. Their Nigerian operating licences, their domestic financial transactions, and their relationships with any regulated financial institutions should now be the subject of urgent and transparent domestic investigation.
That is not a radical demand. It is the minimum that Nigerians are owed.
Daniel Nduka Okonkwo is an investigative journalist, human rights advocate, and policy analyst based in Abuja, Nigeria. He is the publisher of Profiles International Human Rights Advocate, a platform focused on accountability journalism, governance reporting, and the documentation of human rights issues across Africa. His work examines the intersection of political power, institutional accountability, systemic failure, and the human impact of corruption, with particular focus on Nigeria and the wider African continent.
Okonkwo’s reporting and analysis have been published in Sahara Reporters, African Defence Forum, Daily Trust, Vanguard, Daily Intel, Opinion Nigeria, African Angle, Local Newsbreak, and other international media outlets. His work is driven by a commitment to transparency, democratic governance, and justice. He also collaborates with Daniels Entertainment on human rights initiatives, extending his advocacy beyond traditional journalism into broader public engagement.
He is based in Abuja, Nigeria, and can be reached at dan.okonkwo.73@gmail.com.
