India and other unnamed countries reportedly declined President Bola Tinubu’s recent ambassadors-designate. They cite diplomatic policies against envoys from governments with under two years tenures left.
This rejection stems from standard protocols prioritizing long-term diplomatic ties.
Nigeria now faces hurdles in key postings amid Tinubu’s remaining term.
India Rejects Nigerian Envoys from “Near-End” Administrations, Presidency Confirms to Punch
High-ranking Presidency and foreign service officials disclosed the ambassador rejections to Punch Tuesday. India maintains a firm policy against envoys from near-end administrations.
This development highlights diplomatic norms favoring stable, long-term postings.
Nigeria grapples with similar pushback from other nations on Tinubu’s nominees.
One of the nominees affected is career diplomat Ambassador Muhammad Dahiru, who was designated to serve in New Delhi.
Presidency Confirmation Validates Punch’s February Report on Rejected Tinubu Ambassador Nominees
This confirms Punch’s February 2026 report on potential rejections of Tinubu’s ambassadorial nominees tenures.
Host countries worry over the administration’s limited remaining time for effective diplomacy.
Concerns focus on short tenures hindering meaningful bilateral ties.
Nigeria’s foreign posting strategy now demands urgent adjustments amid global diplomatic realities.
Sources familiar with the matter said the Federal Government had begun receiving diplomatic signals from New Delhi and possibly other capitals indicating reluctance to grant agrément for some of the nominees.
Agrément is the formal approval given by a host country for a diplomat appointed by another nation.
It is a mandatory requirement before an ambassador can assume office in the receiving state.
Presidency Source: India Informally Signaled Rejection of Tinubu’s Ambassador Nominees
A Presidency official, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the issue, said India had already communicated its position informally.
“They don’t accept an ambassador from an administration that has less than two years in office.
So they are giving us that body language already,” the official said.
Sources clarify countries hesitate not due to nominees’ credentials but administration tenure uncertainty. Short remaining time raises doubts on envoys’ effectiveness in building ties.
India’s Rejection Policy: Long-Term Diplomacy Over Short-Term Envoys
This policy-driven stance prioritizes long-term diplomatic investments over brief postings.
Nigeria must navigate these norms in finalizing key ambassadorial appointments swiftly.
The official said, “Some countries are reluctant to accept some people, not because of the individuals but because of time.
They are already seeing the Tinubu government as an outgoing government.
“So their concern is that he has just one year left, so what if he doesn’t win the election? Another government may come and remove them.
“We also understand that some countries have this policy.
Any ambassador from an administration that has less than a year or two in office will not get accepted. And one of such countries is India.”
FG Hopeful Of Diplomatic Exception
A senior foreign service official confirmed India’s strict policy on short-tenures ambassadors.
He remains optimistic about Nigeria securing an exception through strong bilateral ties.
Leveraging longstanding diplomatic relations could sway New Delhi’s stance.
This approach might unlock postings despite tenure concerns in other nations too.
“I know India has that policy. If you are less than two years to the end of the tenure, there will be difficulties accepting an ambassador.
Maybe we can leverage our relationship with them to scale through that,” the official said.
Presidency: Foreign Governments Scrutinizing Nigeria’s Politics Before Approving Envoys
The official added that some foreign governments might also assess Nigeria’s political landscape before making a final decision.
“Of course, there are those among them who gauge political tides, and some may see that this government can win the next election.
“Perhaps they may see that the election may not be so competitive because virtually everybody has moved towards the APC.
Presidency to Pitch APC’s High Election Odds to Secure Foreign Envoy Approval
They may say the chances for APC’s victory are high. That is one of the arguments the government will push forward,” the source added.
“India is the only one I can confirm to you for now.
The others will be based on their conventions and practices. But the one I know for sure now is India.
We will have to do a lot of convincing because they have a standing rule,”the official stated.
Ambassadorial Training Yet To Commence
A Foreign Affairs official revealed secured funds for ambassadors-designate’s mandatory induction course.
However, the training schedule remains unfinalised amid diplomatic hurdles.
This delay ties to ongoing rejections over tenure concerns from host nations.
Nigeria presses ahead with preparations despite uncertainties in key postings.
“On the training, we don’t know when for now. But the Foreign Ministry has the funds already to undertake the induction course,” the source said.
Tinubu Approves 65 Ambassadors, High Commissioners for Global Postings Including UN
Tinubu’s nominees include ex-Aviation Minister Femi Fani-Kayode for Germany and aide Reno Omokri for Mexico. Both face potential rejections over short tenure issues.
Others are ex-Katsina Governor Lt. Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazzau for China.
Senator Jimoh Ibrahim eyes UN Permanent Representative role amid diplomatic challenges.
Foreign Affairs Ministry secured agrément from only UK for High Commissioner Aminu Dalhatu and France for Ambassador Ayodele Oke so far.
Of 65 total nominees, 63 remain in limbo amid tenures concerns.
Rejections loom large for Tinubu’s late-term diplomatic appointments.

