The Centre for Crisis Communication (CCC) has raised fresh concerns over a dangerous convergence of insecurity, political distrust, and disinformation across Nigeria’s information ecosystem, warning that the trend is already shaping public sentiment ahead of the 2027 general elections.
In its latest new media and social listening analysis, the Centre reported a growing mix of public emotions – ranging from grief over persistent insecurity to anger at perceived leadership gaps – combined with a countercurrent of government support. CCC described this blend as a “volatile compound sentiment” spreading across digital and traditional platforms.

The study relied on PRrev, an automated AI driven media monitoring and social listening tool developed by IMPR, complemented by human intelligence. It tracked narratives across mainstream and social media relating to security incidents, political developments, economic pressures, religious and ethnic tensions, human rights concerns, misinformation, electoral manipulation, hate speech, and conflict early warning signals. The brief also incorporated regional community listening insights and an assessment of disinformation patterns affecting Nigeria’s socio political landscape.
The 42 page report, produced for Crisis Communication Hub (CCH) stakeholders, analysed conversations on X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, WhatsApp groups, online news platforms, and diaspora driven forums. It found that recent national events are increasingly triggering volatile public reactions shaped by both factual developments and coordinated falsehoods.
A key focus of the analysis was the March 16, 2026, triple suicide bombing in Maiduguri, which occurred just as President Bola Ahmed Tinubu departed for an official visit to the United Kingdom from March 17 to 19. CCC said the overlap of these events created what analysts termed a “leadership legitimacy strain,” with competing narratives dominating public discourse.
One of the strongest narratives online argued that national leaders should prioritise domestic crises over foreign engagements. CCC noted that this sentiment quickly evolved from political commentary into a “viral moral judgement,” blurring the line between opinion and fact.
A major highlight of the report was the uncovering of a high impact disinformation campaign tied to the unfolding events. CCC revealed that PRNigeria’s fact checking team detected a fabricated statement falsely attributed to U.S. President Donald Trump, purportedly criticising President Bola Ahmed Tinubu over his trip to the United Kingdom following the Maiduguri suicide bombings. The fake statement spread rapidly across social media, garnering more than 500,000 views and over 5,200 reposts before corrective information could gain comparable visibility.
CCC warned that the speed, reach, and coordination behind the false narrative reflect the growing sophistication of disinformation networks operating within Nigeria’s digital space.
“The incident represents one of the most consequential disinformation spikes in Nigeria’s emerging 2027 pre election environment,” the report stated.
The analysis also highlighted a widening gap between official communication and public perception, especially during national crises. CCC observed that delayed or inconsistent government responses often create information vacuums quickly filled by speculation, misinformation, and emotionally charged narratives. In today’s hyperconnected environment, the report stressed, timeliness, clarity, and credibility of official communication are critical to shaping public trust.
CCC identified five dominant narrative streams shaping public discourse: leadership accountability versus political loyalty; national security concerns versus diplomatic priorities; public grief amplified by digital outrage; diaspora driven narratives influencing domestic perception; and disinformation campaigns exploiting emotional vulnerabilities.
The Centre warned that the intersection of insecurity, distrust, and disinformation poses a significant threat to national cohesion as political activities intensify ahead of the 2027 elections. CCC cautioned that unchecked fake news could deepen divisions, erode institutional credibility, and undermine democratic processes.
The report called for urgent reforms in Nigeria’s crisis communication architecture, including real-time digital monitoring systems, strengthened fact-checking mechanisms, improved inter-agency coordination, and strategic engagement with media and digital influencers. It also urged stakeholders to prioritise media literacy and public awareness to help citizens identify and resist false information.
CCC concluded that the current media environment offers a preview of the challenges likely to define Nigeria’s pre-election landscape. “The convergence of insecurity, political narratives, and digital misinformation is no longer incidental – it is systemic,” the report warned.
It stressed that without proactive intervention, Nigeria could face a deeper crisis of public trust as the election season approaches. The findings underscore the urgent need for credible, transparent, and technology-driven communication strategies to safeguard national stability in the digital age.
