How 1,300 Nigerians Secured US Asylum In 3 Years — EOIR

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  • Nationals Recorded 1,534 Failed Bids Within Same Period

By Kolawole Ojebisi

Reports from the US Executive Office for Immigration Review have revealed that no fewer than 1,372 Nigerians secured asylum in the country over the last three years.

EOIR published this in its new case-completion data published. According to data breakdown, US judges granted protection to 475 Nigerians in 2022, 514 in 2023 and 383 in 2024, revealing a 25-per cent decline, 2023 and 2024 alone.

Among the 475 in 2022 were 12-year-old Nigerian chess prodigy, Tani Adewumi, whose family fled Boko Haram threats and secured asylum in New York in late 2022 after a legal battle that began in a Manhattan homeless shelter.

Also prominent among those granted asylum in 2024 was LGBTQ activist and memoirist Edafe Okporo.Okporo won protection after documenting life-threatening violence at home.

In that period, however, at least 1,534 Nigerians failed to convince the bench of their asylum claims.

A total of 603, 666 and 265 claims were denied in 2022, 2023 and 2024 respectively, marking a 56-per-cent fall from the 2022 rejection mark.

Nigerian applicants logged 1,534 rejections, alongside 68 abandonments and 552 cases the courts marked “not adjudicated” in 2022, plus smaller numbers of procedural closures in 2023 and 2024.

The EOIR report is published annually on the US Department of Justice’s “Asylum Decisions by Nationality” portal.

It lists every country that registered at least a handful of cases.

In Africa, details show that Nigerians logged the most asylum claims in the US in 2022 and 2023.

But that changed in 2024 as 527 Cameroonians sought cover in 2024, followed by 383 Nigerians and 291 Ethiopians.

Others are Ghana (238), Egypt (203), Eritrea (193), Uganda (86), Senegal (99) and Sudan (42). Closer observations show that African claims still account for a relatively small slice of the U.S. asylum applications, which are dominated by Latin American and Eurasian cases.

Globally, Russian nationals gained the most asylum protection in 2024 with 3,605 grants, a surge U.S. officials attribute to draft evasion and dissident cases sparked by the Ukraine war.

China recorded 2,998 grants as more dissidents flee the communist regime, just as Venezuela recorded 2,656 and Nicaragua 2,000.

U.S. immigration judges also granted protection to 1,684 Salvadorans, 1,624 Hondurans, 1,592 Guatemalans, 1,007 Cubans and 751 Mexicans.

On the denial side, Mexicans recorded the highest rejections with 3,910 denials, followed by China with 903, El Salvador with 2,880, Ecuador with 2,774 and Peru with 2,424.

Under U.S. law, asylum is governed by section 208 of the Immigration and Nationality Act.

Anyone physically present in the United States may request asylum if they can prove a “well-founded fear” on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.

However, criminal convictions, one-year filing deadlines and the notion of “firm resettlement” can all ruin asylum claims before they reach a hearing.

The system operates on two tracks: those who apply affirmatively through U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services and those who assert a “defensive” claim after being placed in removal.

Success depends on corroborating documents, credible testimony and, increasingly, on securing scarce legal counsel. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services first vets “affirmative” cases; if rejected, they are rerouted to EOIR’s immigration courts, where the government’s trial attorneys can still oppose release. “Defensive” claims arise when migrants are already in removal proceedings, the EOIR says.

The EOIR notes that case flow and court staffing can shift outcomes from one fiscal cycle to the next. This is as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement expelled 902 Nigerian nationals since the start of fiscal year 2019, according to data from the agency’s 2024 Annual Report.

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