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ConflictsNigeria

Nigeria says it killed 35 jihadis near Cameroon border

Alex Berry with AFP, Reuters
August 23, 2025

The West African country has seen an uptick in attacks this year, as well as counter-insurgency operations.

Nigerian Army soldiers are seen driving on a military vehicle in Ngamdu, Nigeria, on November 3, 2020
The Nigerian military has reported an intensification of operations against armed militias this year [FILE: November 3, 2020]Image: Audu Marte/AFP/Getty Images

The Nigerian military said more than 35 jihadis had been killed in an air strike on Saturday.

The attack was carried out close to the border with Cameroon, where Islamist militants had reportedly gathered.

Violent attacks have been resurging in the West African country following a period of relative calm.

What did the Nigerian military say about the attack on the jihadis?

"Acting on multiple intelligence from several sources, the Air Component executed precision strikes in successive passes, engaging the terrorists and neutralising more than 35 fighters at four identified assembly areas," the Nigerian Air Force (NAF) said in a statement.

Ground troops in the area later confirmed that the "situation around their location had been stabilized," the statement added.

The reports could not be independently verified.

Northeastern Nigeria, along the borders with Cameroon, Chad and Niger, has seen an uptick in attacks, including against military facilities, by the Islamist group Boko Haram and their rivals, the so-called "Islamic State West Africa Province" (ISWAP).

The NAF said Saturday's attack was proof of the resolve to support ground forces in the region that are battling the insurgency, "while also disrupting terrorist logistics and movement corridors along the north east border regions."

Last week, the military said it had killed 592 armed insurgents this year, marking an intensification from 2024.

Nigeria's northeast sees resurgence of Islamist attacks

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Nigeria's insurgency and banditry problems

The violence reached a peak around 2015 before declining. However, insurgent attacks have been on the rise again since the beginning of the year.

More than 40,000 people have been killed since the fighting started and 2 million people have been forced to flee their homes.

In addition to the jihadi attacks, rural Nigeria is also reeling from armed "bandit" gangs in the northwest of the country.

The government has been criticized for failing to bring the dual problems under control.

Last week, Nigeria sealed a deal with the US State Department to purchase $346 million (€295 million) in weapons, including bombs, rockets and munitions, subject to approval by Congress.

A US embassy spokesperson told AFP news agency that officials in Washington and the embassy in Nigeria "regularly engage with the Nigerian government at the highest levels to protect civilians from harm and to ensure investigations into civilian casualty incidents and allegations of human rights violations are conducted transparently and to press for accountability."

Edited by: Karl Sexton

Alex Berry Writer and Editor in DW's online newsroom.
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