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ConflictsNigeria

Nigeria airstrike kills 100 at market, Amnesty says

Louis Oelofse with AFP, Reuters
May 12, 2026

Amnesty International is calling for an investigation, saying the strike was the latest deadly attack to kill civilians. The military denies that civilians were harmed.

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In this symbol picture for military forces deployed in Anambra, Nigeria on February 24, 2023
The Nigerian military denied its strikes killed civiliansImage: Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP Photo/picture alliance

According to Amnesty International, at least 100 civilians have been killed in a Nigerian military airstrike on a crowded market in the country's northwest.

The rights group's Nigerian office said the attack hit Tumfa market in Zamfara State on Sunday and is calling for an immediate investigation.

"The authorities must investigate these deadly strikes, and put an end to reckless attacks on civilians," Amnesty said on social media.

The Red Cross also confirmed the strike.

A spokesman for Nigeria's military, Major General Michael Onoja, told the AFP news agency reports of civilian deaths in Zamfara were "not true."

In a separate statement to the Associated Press, the military said, there was "no verifiable evidence of civilian casualties as being suggested in the media has been established."

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Dozens of injured people are being treated in nearby hospitals, and many of the dead are reported to be women and girls, according to community leaders in the area.

"Everybody, residents and bandits, goes to the market,"Garba Ibrahim Mashema said. "People are at the mercy of the bandits. There is nothing they can do."

 A Red Cross official in the state, Ibrahim Bello Garba, told the Associated Press "multiple civilians" were killed.

Sunday's strike follows another deadly market airstrike last month in Jilli, in northeastern Nigeria, in which around 200 civilians were killed.

"In parts of the north facing conflicts, civilians have borne the brunt of suffering far too often," Amnesty said. "These horrific deaths must not be overlooked."

The strike comes as Nigeria is dealing with banditry and a jihadist insurgency in parts of the country, where profit-driven gangs raid villages, kidnap people and extort money in rural areas.

The groups are loosely organized and have both fought and cooperated with jihadist factions.

Jihadist groups in Africa and their links

Edited by: Jenipher Camino Gonzalez

Louis Oelofse | News and Current Affairs
Louis Oelofse DW editor and writer covering international politics with a focus on transnational security