Missile alerts have become routine for Bella, a Nigerian software engineer living in Qatar. When Iran launched strikes on the country in early March 2026, her first instinct was to sleep. โItโs not the first time,โ she told Techpoint Africa in a recent interview. โWeโve had alerts before. Life goes on.โ
Bella is part of a growing community of Nigerian tech professionals in Qatar who are opting to remain despite the escalating conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran, now in its third week. The war has disrupted airspace, grounded flights, spiked oil prices, and drawn in Gulf states hosting U.S. military bases. Yet many Nigerian expatriates in the tech sector are choosing stability over evacuation.
Qatar has long been a magnet for African talent, particularly in tech, finance, and engineering. Expatriates make up nearly 90% of the population, and Nigerian professionals have found competitive salaries (often 3โ5 times what they earn at home), tax-free income, modern infrastructure, and relative safety compared to Nigeriaโs economic volatility. For Bella and others, the calculus hasnโt changed: the risks of staying are outweighed by the economic realities of leaving.
โBack home, Iโd be earning a fraction of what I make here,โ Bella explained. โEven with the alerts, the job security, the lifestyle, the savings, itโs still better.โ Many in her circle have family depending on remittances, Nigeriaโs diaspora in the Gulf sends home billions annually, a lifeline for households amid naira depreciation and high unemployment. Returning to Nigeriaโs challenges feels riskier than weathering occasional sirens.
The conflict has created real disruptions. Airspace closures stranded thousands, including transit passengers at Hamad International Airport. Nigerian authorities have urged citizens in the region to register and follow safety advisories, with the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM) monitoring the situation and releasing emergency hotlines (e.g., Nigerian Embassy in Doha: +974 30197102). Evacuation plans exist but depend on safe airspace, something not yet guaranteed. Some Nigerians have voiced frustration online about delays, but tech workers like Bella report no immediate plans to leave.
Qatarโs response has helped. The governmentโs civil defense system is highly coordinated, with shelters, alerts, and support for residents. Expatriates praise the efficiency: โThey take care of people here,โ Khadijah Amusat, a Nigerian startup founder in Doha, said. โWe trust the system more than in many other places.โ Many Nigerians in tech roles work for multinational firms or local startups with strong security protocols, including work-from-home options during alerts.
This resilience reflects broader trends. Nigerian tech talent has been migrating to the Gulf for years, drawn by better pay, professional growth, and quality of life. The war hasnโt reversed that pull. Instead, many see it as temporary noise against long-term opportunity. Qatarโs stable environment, compared to conflict zones like Iran or Lebanon, and its distance from direct strike targets have kept most expats calm.
The stakes are high. Nigeriaโs diaspora in the Gulf sends home billions in remittances annually, critical foreign exchange. If the conflict drags on or worsens, economic pressure could build. For now, professionals like Bella are betting on containment. โWeโre not blind to the risks,โ she said. โBut weโve built lives here. Weโre staying.โ
As the Gulf conflict enters its next phase, the decision to remain speaks to deeper calculations: opportunity versus uncertainty, stability abroad versus challenges at home. For Nigeriaโs tech workers in Qatar, the choice is clear, for now.

