At Least 18 Killed in Vigilante Clash With Bandits in Nigeria’s Katsina

By Camillus Eboh and Hamza ⁠Ibrahim

ABUJA, ⁠March 18 (Reuters) – At least ⁠18 people were killed on Tuesday in ​Nigeria’s northwestern Katsina state, authorities and police said on ‌Wednesday, exposing the fragility of ‌peace pacts with gunmen with the second ⁠most deadly ⁠attack in a month.

Katsina and neighbouring states have pursued ​amnesty deals and community security pacts to persuade armed gangs known locally as bandits to surrender weapons, but rural ​villages still face sporadic raids, reprisals and tit-for-tat violence.

The ⁠latest assault ⁠began when a ⁠vigilante ​patrol killed three suspected bandits in Falale village, triggering a reprisal ​by armed ⁠men that killed 15 people in Falale and neighbouring Kadobe, said Nasir Mua’zu, Katsina’s commissioner for security.

Katsina police spokesperson Abubakar Aliyu also said the reprisal attack left ⁠15 people dead.

While there have been smaller assaults over the ⁠past weeks, the death toll in Tuesday’s attack was the highest since February 3, when armed men killed at least 21 people in Doma town in Katsina state, leaving a six-month local truce in tatters.

Attacks by gangs of heavily armed men have wreaked havoc across Nigeria’s northwest in ⁠recent years, kidnapping thousands, killing hundreds and making it unsafe to travel by road or on farms in some areas.

(Reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja ​and Hamza Ibrahim in Kano; Writitng by Elisha ​Bala-Gbogbo; Editing by Alison Williams)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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