In August 2007, eighteen men were arrested by Bauchi state police and charged with sodomy for dressing as women, which is illegal under Shari'a penal code. These charges were later dropped to vagrancy, and the men were held in jail for several years waiting for trial — which eventually dissolved by the end of 2011. Following these incidents the church cancelled conferences for concerns about the safety of attendees. The accused were charged with conspiracy, unlawful assembly, and belonging to an unlawful society.
Lagos State arrested 42 men for homosexuality in August 2017. In June 2018, the Nigerian police arrested more than 100 party-goers at a hotel in Asaba,
Delta State, on charges that they were gays and lesbians. By July 2018, they were facing homosexuality-related charges in court. A birthday party held in a hotel in
Egbeda, a suburban community in
Lagos Nigeria, in August 2018, was interrupted by a police raid that led to the arrest of everyone the police could round up from the hotel's environs. 57 of the young men arrested during the raid were alleged to be having an initiation into the LGBTQ community. Among the victims was
James Brown, a Nigerian crossdresser who become popularly known with the Nigerian slang "They Didnt Caught Me". The Egbeda 57 case held attention of the nation and that of the LGBTQ community in Nigeria for two years. In January 2019, Dolapo Badmos, the spokesperson for the Lagos State Police Command, warned homosexuals to flee the country or face prosecution. She stated in an
Instagram post: "Any persons that are homosexually orientated should leave Nigeria or risk facing prosecution." Dolapo Badmos continues to state that there are laws in Nigeria that forbid homosexual clubs, associations and organisations where anyone found to be associated with these could be penalised up to 15 years in jail. In August 2023, police raided a gay wedding in
Warri in
Delta state and arrested dozens of people. Known as the Warri 67, this case of mass arrest took place at supposed gay party/marriage ceremony at a hotel in
Warri, a suburban city in
Delta state, Southern Nigeria. The victims of the raids were said to be counted in 100s. However, 67 of them charged to court for trial. The police in a statement following the arrest said they acted based on tipped information from undisclosed source about a marriage ceremony that was taking place in a private hotel. The raid however raised eyebrows from human right observers and the internal community, as the party was a private one and the organizers are supposed to be accorded their right to privacy. In October 2023, 76 people (59 men and 17 women) were arrested at a gay party in
Gombe state in northern Nigeria where police said a gay wedding was to be held. == Asylum seekers ==