Why Nigerians and the World Should Pay Attention
Iran has warned that banks and economic centres linked to the US and Israel in the Gulf are now legitimate targets. This comes after reports of recent airstrikes in Tehran that Iran called “unlawful.”
The statement comes from Iran’s top military command, which also told civilians to stay away from banks and financial buildings because they could become targets in any escalation.
What’s happening on the ground
• Some global banks, like Citibank and Standard Chartered, have evacuated staff from Dubai.
• Others temporarily closed branches in Qatar.
• Gulf states are boosting security, especially around financial districts.
Even the fear of attacks is enough to disrupt day-to-day business and make international investors nervous. Dubai and Doha are major hubs for finance in the Middle East, so any threat to banks has ripple effects on global trade and money flow.
Why it matters to ordinary people
Even if you’re in Nigeria, these developments affect you:
• International banks may tighten services or reduce operations in the Gulf.
• Oil and shipping costs could rise if regional trade is disrupted.
• Global markets react quickly to threats like this meaning prices for imports, fuel, and goods could increase.
The bottom line
This isn’t just about missiles or drones. It’s about economic pressure and financial instability. Iran’s warning shows how modern conflicts often target money and business infrastructure, not just armies.
For anyone who sends money, imports goods, or tracks oil prices, the Gulf tension is something to watch closely in the coming weeks.

