Tinubu’s visit: A New Momentum In Nigeria And The United Kingdom’s Cooperation


By: Temitope Ajayi
President Bola Tinubu will arrive at the airport on 17 March 2026 to begin a historic State Visit that will showcase to the world the unique bond between Nigeria and the United Kingdom.  When the formalities of the visit begin on 18 March, President Bola, in the company of his wife, Senator Oluremi Tinubu, will be the fifth Nigerian leader to be so honoured at the highest level of diplomacy by the British Crown and the first to be hosted at Windsor Castle. The four previous Nigerian leaders were hosted at Buckingham Palace.

This visit carries symbolism beyond ceremony. It reflects the steady evolution of a relationship shaped first by history, then by diplomacy, and now increasingly by commerce, investment, and shared global ambition.

Nigeria’s post-independence leader, Prime Minister Tafawa Balewa, the first to be invited on a State Visit by a British sovereign, was received on 14 December 1965 by Queen Elizabeth II in a move that signalled the preeminent status of Nigeria as the giant of Africa on a global stage, just five years after independence from British colonial rule. Eight years later, Queen Elizabeth II hosted General Yakubu Gowon, the Military Head of State, on 12 June 1973. That visit was followed by that of the first democratically elected President of Nigeria, Alhaji Shehu Usman Shagari, which began on 17 March and ended on 20 March 1981.

By the time the fourth visit by a Nigerian leader took place in 1989, the country had again fallen under military rule after the short-lived Shagari administration from 1 October 1979 to 31 December 1983. Queen Elizabeth II hosted General Ibrahim Babangida and his late wife, Mariam Babangida, to a spectacular State Visit that ended on 12 May 1989.

If the previous four State Visits elevated the special relationship between Nigeria and the United Kingdom, President Tinubu’s scheduled visit, which was first announced by the British Royal Family on 10 February 2026, is taking the bond between the two great nations to a new era of cooperation and shared values. It is worth stating that Nigeria is the only country in Africa whose leader will be hosted on a state visit by His Majesty’s government for the fifth time. Only South Africa, whose President has been received three times, came close, and the last was when President Jacob Zuma and his wife, Thobeka Zuma, were hosted between 3 March and 5 March 2010. Other African leaders, such as Egypt, Ghana, Zimbabwe, Senegal, Morocco, Malawi, Liberia, Zambia, and Tanzania, have been hosted only once.

Middle East Conflict: Implications For Nigeria
Since its Independence in 1960, Nigeria and the United Kingdom have enjoyed robust bilateral relations covering education, defence, trade, culture, technology, and sports.

Security cooperation has also remained a central pillar of this partnership. The United Kingdom continues to support Nigeria in areas such as counter terrorism training, intelligence collaboration, and military capacity building, particularly in efforts to stabilise parts of the country affected by insurgency and organised crime. This cooperation reflects the shared interest of both nations in regional stability and international security.

President Tinubu’s visit to the UK on the invitation of King Charles III, at a time the United Kingdom is redefining its global trade relationships following its exit from the European Union, is not just another visit. It is a visit that speaks to Nigeria’s status as the world’s largest Black democracy and the continent’s largest market. It is also coming on the heels of significant economic reforms initiated by President Tinubu to stabilise Nigeria’s economy, liberalise the foreign exchange market, reform the tax system, and reposition the country for investment-led growth.

Nigeria today stands at an inflexion point, where bold domestic reforms are aligning with a renewed diplomatic push to attract global capital, expand trade, and reposition Africa’s largest economy for long-term competitiveness. With a population projected to become the third-largest in the world within the next three decades, Nigeria’s economic trajectory will increasingly shape Africa’s growth story. As global investors look toward emerging markets for the next wave of growth, Nigeria is positioning itself to become one of the most consequential economic frontiers of the twenty-first century.

The post-Brexit UK government continues to expand trade and market access for British goods and services through strategic bilateral partnerships worldwide. Nowhere else in Africa will the UK seek to deepen cooperation more than with the continent’s largest market, where hundreds of British corporations have maintained a strong and profitable presence for more than a century.

Nigeria is the United Kingdom’s second-largest trading partner in Africa, with annual bilateral trade volumes estimated at about 8 billion pounds across energy, finance, education, technology, and retail. Nigeria’s trade and economic partnership with the United Kingdom has been significantly strengthened through the UK-Nigeria Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership (ETIP), signed in 2024 under the leadership of President Tinubu. Under the ETIP, the two countries developed a strategic framework to boost bilateral trade beyond current levels, remove barriers to commerce, and expand cooperation across sectors such as agriculture, technology, renewable energy, fintech, manufacturing, retail, and the creative economy. In an era of shifting global supply chains and emerging markets competing for capital, deeper economic cooperation between Nigeria and the United Kingdom offers opportunities for both nations to expand trade, investment, and innovation across multiple sectors.

Other key aspects of the ETIP include economic diversification and support for export-led economic activities. With ETIP, Nigerian exporters can effectively leverage the Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS), which offers low or zero tariffs for more than 3,000 products to access the UK market. The framework is also focused on job creation for citizens of both countries by stimulating private-sector investment, strengthening value chains, and supporting Nigeria’s broader economic reform agenda.

.Ajayi is Senior Special Assistant to President Tinubu on Media and Publicity.

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Wike to SSDC: don’t disappoint Tinubu, focus on grassroot development

2027:Nnewi -South APC okays Tinubu for second term, Celebrates the Appointment Of Rt. Hon. Rita Maduagwu

Tinubu grants automatic employment to children of late FCT Head of ServiceGrace Adayilo