Yusuf Tuggar: The Quiet Architect of A Bolder Nigeria
BY ADEBAYO ADEOYE

In an era when diplomacy is too often reduced to soundbites and outrage, Nigeria’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Maitama Tuggar, has chosen a different path: calm, factual, and unflinchingly principled.
The result is one of the most effective tenures the Ministry has seen in years, capped by his well-deserved recognition as joint winner of The Street Journal’s “Super Ministers of the Year” award alongside distinguished colleagues.
Tuggar did not campaign for applause. He simply delivered.
When the United States designated Nigeria a “Country of Particular Concern” over alleged religious persecution, many expected a defensive outburst.
Instead, Tuggar appeared on Piers Morgan Uncensored and delivered a masterclass in composure. Armed with data and context, he dismantled the one-sided narrative that paints Nigeria’s security crisis as state-sponsored persecution of Christians.
“Cool as a cucumber,” he told Morgan with a smile, correcting the host’s slip about “Chibok boys” and insisting the full interview be aired unedited.
Nigeria’s truth, he said, “must not be distorted to fit external biases.” The exchange went viral, not because of shouting, but because of clarity. In an age of polarisation, Tuggar showed that facts, delivered calmly, can cut through noise more effectively than fury.
That same clarity defines his broader vision.
Tuggar has translated President Bola Tinubu’s 4D foreign policy (Democracy, Development, Demography, and Diaspora) into tangible global wins. Nigeria is now a BRICS partner nation.
Nigerian candidates are frontrunners for top African Union positions.
Economic diplomacy has brought in $14 billion from India, €250 million from the Netherlands, and $2.5 billion from Brazil’s JBS. The West Africa Economic Summit (WAES 2025), hosted brilliantly in Abuja, produced concrete trade pacts and investment commitments that will outlast headlines.
Yet Tuggar never forgets the human element.
His ministry has evacuated stranded citizens from conflict zones, secured scholarships for young Nigerians, and built a Diaspora Database now exceeding 11,000 registrants.
Cultural diplomacy flourishes too. The return of Benin Bronzes, the new MFA Exhibition Atrium, and over 940 million positive global media impressions remind the world of Nigeria’s rich heritage, not just its challenges.
On the tough issues, he stands firm.
He categorically rejected U.S. attempts to deport Venezuelan gang members to Nigeria, insisting that Nigeria will not become a dumping ground for other nations’ criminals.
He has criticised restrictive U.S. visa policies as unfair while pushing for balanced, respectful trade ties instead of one-sided demands.
Security contributions are equally impressive.
The Nigeria-initiated Sealift Agreement with the African Union has strengthened peacekeeping across the continent, reinforcing Nigeria’s role as a stabilising force rather than a problem child.
Perhaps Tuggar’s greatest achievement is restoring dignity to Nigerian diplomacy.
After years of reactive statements and inconsistent messaging, the ministry now speaks with one confident, evidence-based voice. Envoys are energised, missions purposeful, and Nigeria’s interests fiercely but respectfully defended.
In a continent often spoken about rather than listened to, Tuggar has insisted that Africa and Nigeria must be the author of its own story. He does not beg for respect; he commands it through competence.
The Street Journal’s award is welcome recognition, but the real prize is the Nigeria emerging under his stewardship: more invested in, more listened to, and far more confident on the global stage.
It is not hyperbole to say that the extremely brainy minister has assumed the position of the number one public relation officer for Nigeria , transversing around the world polishing the image of the country.
Cool, composed, and relentlessly effective, Yusuf Tuggar is proving that the strongest diplomacy is not the loudest, but the truest. Nigeria is fortunate to have him at the helm.











