President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s State visit to the United Kingdom was undeniably historic — a moment that placed Nigeria on the global stage with dignity, ceremony, and renewed international engagement. For many of us in the diaspora who have spent decades advocating for unity, representation, and national progress, it was a moment filled with pride and anticipation.
Yet, beneath the grandeur of Windsor Castle and the diplomatic symbolism, this visit revealed a deeper truth about the state of our diaspora engagement — a truth we can no longer afford to ignore.
A Celebration That Exposed a Structural Weakness
While the visit showcased Nigeria’s global relevance, many ordinary Nigerians in the UK diaspora felt marginalised and excluded. The two main diaspora organisations in the UK felt “sidelined” and they complained to the Nigeria High Commission. Access points were dominated by political groups. Narratives were shaped by factions and interest groups. Community voices — the professionals, the leaders, the organisers, the everyday Nigerians who carry the nation’s image abroad — were pushed aside.
This exclusion was not merely disappointing; it was a symptom of a long‑standing structural gap in how the diaspora is recognised and empowered.
And that gap has one root cause:
The Nigerian diaspora still has no formal political voice.
Why the State Visit Reinforces the Urgency of Diaspora Voting
For over 20 years, I have advocated for Nigerian diaspora voting — not as a slogan, but as a unifying national project. This State Visit has made the urgency clearer than ever.
Diaspora voting is not simply about casting a ballot. It is about:
* Recognising the diaspora as a legitimate stakeholder
* Creating accountability between government and citizens abroad
* Strengthening our collective voice and influence
* Ensuring national events reflect the contributions of Nigerians worldwide
Without diaspora voting, we remain spectators — even at moments that should belong to all of us.
The Diaspora Is Powerful, But Power Without Structure Is Weakness
The Nigerian diaspora is one of the most influential communities in the world. We contribute billions in remittances, drive innovation, elevate Nigeria’s global reputation, and serve as cultural ambassadors.
But influence without structure is easily hijacked.
The fragmentation we witnessed during the State Visit — the dominance of political groups, the sidelining of community voices — is exactly what happens when a community lacks a unified political anchor.
Diaspora voting provides that anchor.
It gives:
* Structure
* Legitimacy
* Unity
* Collective power
It transforms the diaspora from observers into participants, from supporters into stakeholders.
A Call to Action for All Nigerian Diaspora Organisations
This moment demands more than reflection — it demands mobilisation.
Every Nigerian diaspora organisation, regardless of size or focus, must now rise to this defining moment.
- Unite Around One Shared Purpose: Diaspora Voting
Diaspora voting is not partisan.
It is democratic.
It is overdue.
It is the foundation for meaningful engagement between Nigeria and its global citizens.
- Build a Coordinated Diaspora Coalition
We need a unified platform that brings together:
* Community associations
* Professional networks
* Faith communities
* Business and investment forums
A coalition that speaks with one voice carries weight. A fragmented diaspora is easily ignored.
- Mobilise, Educate, and Organise
Each organisation must commit to:
* Hosting town halls and webinars
* Educating members on the legislative process
* Engaging with lawmakers and Nigerian institutions
* Building a database of supporters
* Creating advocacy committees
Change requires organised, sustained pressure.
- Engage Nigeria’s Political and Electoral Institutions
We must collectively engage:
* The National Assembly
* INEC
* NiDCOM
* The Ministry of Foreign Affairs
* The Presidency
Our message must be clear:
The diaspora deserves representation. The diaspora deserves a vote.
- Reject Fragmentation and Political Hijacking
The State Visit showed us what happens when we are unorganised — political groups fill the vacuum.
Diaspora organisations must commit to:
* Non‑partisan collaboration
* Transparent leadership
* Shared goals over personal agendas
Unity is our greatest strength.
- Build a Long‑Term Movement
Diaspora voting will not be achieved by emotion or reaction.
It requires strategy, patience, consistency, and collective discipline.
This Is Our Moment. Let Us Not Waste It.
President Tinubu’s visit was historic — but history is not defined by ceremony.
It is defined by what we choose to do next.
To every Nigerian diaspora organisation across the UK, Europe, the Americas, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa:
Let us rise together.
Let us organise with purpose.
Let us demand diaspora voting with one voice.
Let us to more advocacy with the National Assembly
Let us move from talking to doing
Let us shape the Nigeria we want to see.
The future of the Nigerian diaspora is bright — but only if we choose to walk in the same direction.
- Dr Dayo Olomu is a United Kingdom based diaspora icon cum Community Leader









































































