The plant of Jamaat Ahmadiyya was planted in Niger in November 1976 with Khalid Abdullah SB accepting the Promised Messiah (as) and entering the Ahmadiyya Muslim Jamaat. He was fortunate enough to fulfil his pledge of allegiance with sincerity and loyalty until his demise. He had the privilege of serving as Deputy Emir, Secretary of Finance and Secretary Wasaya. He also had the honour of meeting Hazrat Khalifatul Masih twice.
The Boupo Jamaat has the distinction of being the first Jamaat in the country. It was fortunate enough to become a part of Ahmadiyyat in 1999. With the efforts of Hafiz Ehsan Sikandar SB, the Ameer of Jamaat Ahmadiyya Banin, the formal registration of Jamaat Ahmadiyya Niger came into effect on December 22, 2000. The first offiial appointment of an Ahmadiyya Muslim missionary took place in Niger in 2001. Arif Mehmood SB served as the first missionary and Akbar Ahmad Tahir SB was honoured to be the first emir and missionary in-charge of the Jamaat.
They built the first Ahmadiyya mosque in Niger in Radadawa, a Jamaat of the Bkonni department of the Tahoua Region. The first Jalsa Salana (annual gathering) of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community Niger was also held in 2005 in the same Jamaat. The first Ahmadiyya mosque in the capital, Niamey, was built in 2007 in the neighbourhood of Cite Depute. The largest Ahmadiyya mosque was built in 2015 in Tillabéri.
According to the annual report Tabshir 20/21, there are 10 markazi centers in seven of the eight regions which are as follows:
- Niamey
- Dosso
- Gaya
- Birni Konni
- Madaoua
- Gidan Roumji
- Maradi
- Dakoro
- Tessaoua
- Zinder
Moreover, in Niger, there are:
- 10 Muallimeen (missionaries) and local missionary centres
- 62 dai’een ilAllah centers
- 678 Jamaats
- 194 mosques
- 12 central missions houses
- 2 model villages
- 3 primary schools