Manny Ita
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has released a formal list of 79 Nigerian nationals scheduled for immediate deportation as part of an intensified federal crackdown on criminal immigrants. According to official documentation, the individuals were identified on a “worst-of-the-worst” criminal list, a designation used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to prioritize the removal of foreign nationals who pose significant risks to public safety. The offenses cited for those on the list span a broad spectrum of serious felony convictions, ranging from high-level wire fraud and drug trafficking to manslaughter.
Federal authorities stated that this move is a key component of the current administration’s “maximalist” immigration enforcement strategy, which focuses on the “detention, confinement, and expulsion” of non-citizens with established criminal records. The Department of Homeland Security emphasized that the 79 individuals represent a priority tier of offenders, noting that approximately 70 percent of all recent ICE arrests involve individuals already “charged or convicted of a crime in the United States.” This specific operation follows a series of broader enforcement actions that have seen thousands of foreign nationals placed on final orders of removal over the past year.
The scheduled removals are part of a wider diplomatic and security framework involving “recalcitrant countries” and those that have recently seen a surge in visa restrictions. While the DHS has celebrated these enforcement actions as essential for “protecting national security” and “ensuring public safety,” the move has drawn significant attention from international observers and the Nigerian diaspora. Officials have confirmed that the deportation process will proceed through specialized charter flights, with the DHS maintaining that it will continue to target “violent criminal illegal aliens” to fulfill federal mandates regarding border and interior security.

