The FFK Dossier: A Decade of Commentary on Nigeria's Christian Killings
A chronological deep-dive into Femi Fani-Kayode's X (Twitter) posts from 2012 to 2025, documenting his persistent narrative on violence targeting Christians and his dramatic September 2025 reversal.
Femi Fani-Kayode (@realFFK), a prominent Nigerian politician and former Minister, has been a vocal commentator on the violence plaguing Nigeria. For over a decade, his X platform has been a megaphone for describing attacks on Christian communities as "genocide," "ethnic cleansing," and "mass murder," primarily attributing them to Fulani militants, Boko Haram, and ISWAP.
The timeline below compiles his most significant posts, formatted to mirror their original X appearance for clarity and impact.
The Timeline: A Decade of Accusations (2012 - 2025)
🚨 The September 2025 Somersault
For years, FFK's commentary consistently called for international attention to what he framed as a genocide against Christians. However, on September 30, 2025, his narrative shifted dramatically after After hearing the starter's pistol sound of their WhatsApp group admin, the APC-Tinubu disinformation agent, and a popular conspiracy entrepreneur, David Hundeyin and other APC-Tinubu disinformation apparatus.
This post marked a complete reversal, refuting the very kind of statistics and international focus he had long championed, now framing it as an attack on national sovereignty.
Analysis: Fani-Kayode's commentary, spanning over a decade, reveals a consistent pattern of highlighting violence against Christians, often using incendiary language. His sudden pivot in late September 2025 to a more unifying, nationalist rhetoric—dismissing exaggerated figures and emphasizing that terrorists kill both Christians and Muslims—represents a significant shift in his public stance, aligning more closely with the narrative of the current administration and marking one of the most notable political somersaults in recent Nigerian political discourse.
Compiled from direct X (Twitter) posts, essays, and media statements. All citations refer to internal post identifiers from the original compilation.
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