Nigerian airstrike leaves 200 feared dead in Yobe, councillor and residents say
Africa's most populous country has been fighting a jihadist insurgency for 17 years, since Boko Haram's 2009 uprising, and civilians have been caught in the crossfire and killed in military air strikes aimed at militants before.
A file photo of members of the Nigerian army providing security during an event in Minna, Nigeria, Dec. 22, 2025. (Photo: AP/Sunday Alamba, File)
MAIDUGURI: Nigerian military jets struck a village market while pursuing Islamist militants in the northeast on Saturday night, with at least 200 civilians feared dead, a councillor for the area and residents said on Sunday (Apr 12).
The incident happened in a Yobe state village, on the border with Borno state, the heartland of a long-running insurgency that has killed thousands and displaced millions more.
Civilians have been caught in the crossfire and killed in military air strikes aimed at militants, though the authorities sometimes dispute hitting civilians.
Africa's most populous country has been fighting a jihadist insurgency for 17 years, since Boko Haram's 2009 uprising, which has seen the emergence of powerful splinter groups, including Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).
A UN security memo seen by AFP, stated that "4 Nigerian Air Force (NAF) fighter jets launched airstrikes that mistakenly killed at least 56 people and injured 14 others at the Jilli market... on April 11."
"This occurred during a military operation targeting Boko Haram fighters who visited the market to conduct terrorism activities," it said.
Amnesty International earlier said on X that there were "more than 100 dead" and 35 people seriously wounded.
Local chief Lawan Zanna Nur, meanwhile, said: "The total casualties, dead and injured, are around 200."
MILITARY SAY AIR STRIKE SUCCESSFUL
Nigeria's military said it had "successfully conducted a precision air strike on a known terrorist enclave and logistics hub located near the abandoned village of Jilli".
It said "scores of terrorists" were killed in the strike, but did not mention any civilian casualties.
In a separate statement, the air force said it had launched an investigation following reports that its airstrike "may have affected a local market in Jilli, resulting in civilian casualties".
This strike is the latest in a series of such incidents in the north of the country.
In January 2025, a military airstrike killed at least 16 people in northwestern Zamfara state after an army jet mistook local vigilantes for criminal gangs.
A month earlier, a military jet killed 10 people when it hit villages while bombing jihadist positions in neighbouring Sokoto state.
In December 2023, a Nigerian military airstrike mistook a Muslim religious gathering for bandits in Kaduna state, killing at least 85 people.
And in January 2017, at least 112 people were killed when a fighter jet struck a camp housing 40,000 people displaced by jihadist violence near the border with Cameroon.
BOKO HARAM, ISWAP INCREASE ATTACKS
Jihadist violence had slowed from its peak in around 2015, but Boko Haram and ISWAP have recently increased attacks in northeastern Nigeria, vying to establish a caliphate.
They have also ramped up their assaults on the military, overrunning bases and killing soldiers.
Northwestern parts are gripped by criminal gangs - locally called bandits - that raid villages and extort farmers and artisanal miners and kill.
Nigeria is facing international scrutiny over its security situation, including pressure from US President Donald Trump, who ordered bombardments on Islamists militants last Christmas.
Early this year, the United States began deploying 200 troops to Nigeria to provide technical and training support to soldiers in fighting jihadist groups.