Nigeria has been taken off the European Union’s (EU) list of high-risk countries, a change anticipated to facilitate trade, payments, and investment transfers between the nation and Europe, as reported by Business Insider.
Business Insider stated on Wednesday that the European Commission verified that Nigeria, together with South Africa, Burkina Faso, Mali, Mozambique, and Tanzania, had enhanced its AML/CFT frameworks and no longer exhibited “strategic deficiencies” according to EU evaluation criteria.
The commission observed that the impacted nations had enacted reforms aligning their financial systems with the international standards established by the FATF.
In response to the announcement, the Minister of State for Finance, Dr. Doris Uzoka-Anite, called Nigeria’s exclusion from the list a significant enhancement to investor confidence.
In a statement on X on Thursday, she wrote, “Big win for Nigeria! Removed from the EU’s financial ‘high-risk’ list! Congrats to President @officialABAT on this achievement. As Minister of State for Finance, I’m proud of this boost to trade and investor confidence.”
Being on the EU’s high-risk list traditionally meant that transactions with European partners necessitated increased due diligence, tougher documentation, and greater control.
Nigerian businesses and banks came under increasing scrutiny, slowing cross-border commerce and complicating investment flows.









