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ABSTRACT
The research examines Nigeria's foreign policy from the time Boko Haram first appeared there. The Nigerian government has established diplomatic ties with Cameroon, Niger, Benin, and Chad, its immediate neighbors, in recent times. Nigeria has focused its foreign policy on Africa, particularly its neighbors in West Africa, ever since gaining its independence. The idea that Africa is essential to Nigeria's foreign policy, which was emphasized prior to independence, serves as the foundation for the majority of Nigeria's actions on issues pertaining to the African continent in general and West Africa in particular.But Nigeria's African-centered foreign policy has been undermined in recent times as the country's dynamics toward Africa have expanded and changed. This research will look at Nigeria's interactions with its neighbors ever since Boko Haram was established. To ascertain whether Nigeria still regards Africa as its top priority, research is crucial. The study, which rejects the idea that Africa is central to Nigeria's foreign policy, concludes, based on a qualitative research approach, that the emergence of Boko Haram is a major factor in Nigeria's Afrikaans foreign policy, which lays out its foreign policy against the neighboring countries.