Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka, has said he predicted mass revocation of visas and green cards by the United States Government.
In an interview published by BBC News Pidgin on Facebook on Wednesday, the world-acclaimed writer, whose visa was recently revoked by the US, said he knew that once Donald Trump got into office as President, ‘the first thing he will do is cancel even the green cards’.
Soyinka said, ‘This is a petty-minded dictator, you see how he deals with his objects of hate. We saw that dark side of the American side. There were more killings, extrajudicial killings by the police of black people, of minorities, during that build-up, during the campaign, and on account of hate rhetoric, the hate rhetoric of this individual.
‘I saw it and I said, listen very carefully — and you can go and check this –I said, “When that man comes to power, the first thing he will do is cancel even the green cards”‘.
Soyinka’s comment comes amid diplomatic tension between Nigeria and the US after Trump at the weekend designated Nigeria a ‘Country of Particular Concern’, citing alleged Christian genocide in the country.
Trump, in a series of X posts, also warned that if the Nigerian government fails to stop killings, the US would intervene militarity, coming into Nigeria ‘gun-ablazing’, a comment that has generated widespread panic and pushback both locally and internationally.
Soyinka, a vocal critic of Trump, had threatened ahead of Trump’s first inauguration to tear his Green Card once Trump was sworn in, a threat the Nobel laureate has since carried out.
‘I have already done it, I have disengaged (from the United States). I have done what I said I would do’, Soyinka, who was 82 years old, said then on the sidelines of an education conference at the University of Johannesburg, according to AFP.
He added, ‘I had a horror of what is to come with Trump… I threw away the (green) card, and I have relocated, and I’m back to where I have always been’ – meaning his homeland, Nigeria.
In July this year, the US Department of State announced an update to its non-immigrant visa policy for Nigerian citizens.
According to a press release by the U.S. Embassy in Abuja, ‘most non-immigrant and non-diplomatic visas issued to citizens of Nigeria will be single-entry visas with a three-month validity period’.
Soyinka had, during a media parley last Tuesday in Lagos, disclosed the revocation of his B1/B2 visa by the US Embassy.
The US Consulate announced the revocation of the visa in a letter addressed to Soyinka dated 23 October 2025.
The Consulate further requested Soyinka to bring his visa to the Lagos Embassy ‘for physical cancellation’, a request the Nobel laureate described as ‘a joke’.
‘If you have plans to travel to the United States, you must apply again to re-establish your qualifications for a new non-immigrant visa’, the letter added.
While Soyinka said he did not know the reason for the revocation of his visa, the US Mission in Nigeria clarified last Thursday in response to an inquiry from The PUNCH that visas granted by the country are a privilege, not a right.
While the Mission noted that it would not discuss details of individual visas, its spokesperson said, ‘Visas are a privilege, not a right. Every country, including the United States, can determine who enters its borders. Visas may be revoked at any time, at the discretion of the U.S. government, whenever circumstances warrant’.
Speaking further in the interview with the BBC, Soyinka, who had vowed that he would never reapply for a US visa, said he had since left the country because he would not allow himself to be ‘kicked out’.
‘I said I’m not going to wait to be told to come for a reinterview or simply told, “Get out! The green card is cancelled!” That’s all. People failed to understand. Even though I said it, people failed to accept it. I said I don’t like to be kicked out; I like to kick myself out, it’s more dignified’, the 91-year-old author and playwright said.
He said he knew he would not be able to resist comments on the Trump administration.
‘I knew I would not be able to resist making comments on what I knew would happen, and sure enough, he did not disappoint me’.
The Nobel laureate also touched on an incident that happened prior to the revocation of his visa. He spoke of how he got a letter from the US Internal Revenue Service notifying him of a tax audit.
‘After he took office, I got a letter from the IRS telling me to report for an audit. The coincidence for me was very impressive’, he said.
Soyinka had during the media parley in Lagos, given an insight into the tax audit, which he said he had no problem with.
He told journalists, ‘I think it’s important for me to begin by reminding us about the history of this visa, which was issued when an accident happened to my Green Card, so it became no longer valid.
‘Unfortunately, or fortunately, whichever way you want to look at it, not long after that, maybe by accident or maybe it’s related or not, I got a letter from the Internal Revenue Service of the United States of America saying that an audit of my tax return was about to take place, going back about five years’.
He noted that audits are done periodically just to make sure one is not cheating, ‘and that’s okay’.
He narrated, ‘So I went to the embassy to say this is the letter I just received from the Internal Revenue Service. My Green Card is no longer usable. I don’t want to be advertised as a tax dodger owing the United States money and being chased all over the world with letters and police, and I said I needed to go in and see the audit, and that’s exactly what happened’.
Soyinka has maintained that he has no issue with members of the US Embassy or the American people, as he noted he was always treated with courtesy anytime he was at the embassy.
