
By Temitope Ajayi
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity
President Bola Tinubu arrives in London on March 17, 2026, for a landmark state visit hosted by King Charles III and Queen Camilla at Windsor Castle—the first for a Nigerian leader in 37 years and the fifth overall. Accompanied by First Lady Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the two-day event from March 18-19 underscores deepening Nigeria-UK ties in trade, security, and culture, building on the UK-Nigeria Enhanced Trade and Investment Partnership (ETIP) signed in 2024
This visit eclipses prior Nigerian state honours: Tafawa Balewa’s 1965 Buckingham Palace reception post-independence; Yakubu Gowon’s 1973 trip; Shehu Shagari’s 1981 stay; and Ibrahim Babangida’s 1989 engagement. Nigeria leads Africa with five such visits, outpacing South Africa’s three (last in 2010). Unlike predecessors at Buckingham, Tinubu’s Windsor hosting signals elevated status, echoing King Charles’s role at Olusegun Obasanjo’s 1999 inauguration.
Bilateral trade hits £8 billion yearly, with Nigeria as the UK’s second-largest African partner in energy, finance, and tech. ETIP unlocks zero-tariff access for over 3,000 Nigerian goods via the Developing Countries Trading Scheme, targeting agriculture, fintech, renewables, and Nollywood. Tinubu will meet Prime Minister Keir Starmer and business leaders to pitch reforms like FX liberalization, amid post-Brexit UK bids for African markets and Nigeria’s pivot to investment-led growth.
UK aid bolsters Nigeria’s counter-terrorism via training and intel, vital against insurgency. The 500,000-strong Nigerian diaspora fuels remittances and icons like Anthony Joshua, Bukayo Saka, and Kemi Badenoch bridge cultures. Over 36,000 student visas in 2025 highlight education links.
Yet, the pomp draws fire: An open letter from Nigerian academic Kio Amachree urges postponement over insecurity, economic woes, and instability. IPOB UK plans London protests demanding Nnamdi Kanu’s release and Biafra referendum, rejecting the “royal welcome.” Critics decry trip costs amid soaring inflation and reforms’ pains, echoing broader flak on Tinubu’s foreign jaunts. UK imposes Windsor no-fly zones, road closures from March 17, and armed policing, amplifying optics of extravagance.
Protests aside, the visit spotlights Nigeria as Africa’s top democracy and market, with population set to rank third globally by 2050. It advances Commonwealth roles amid global tensions, blending history with commerce for mutual prosperity. As relations evolve from colonial past to economic alliance, Tinubu’s trip reaffirms Nigeria’s global heft despite domestic headwinds.
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