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Nigeria Military Says No Evidence of Civilian Casualties From Zamfara Market Airstrike

ABUJA, May 13 (Reuters) – ⁠Nigeria’s ⁠military said on ⁠Wednesday that there has been no evidence ​of civilian casualties from an airstrike on militants in ‌the northwest Zamfara state ‌this month, calling reports of large ⁠death tolls ⁠unverified and misleading.

Amnesty International said this week that ​at least 100 civilians were killed in the May 10 airstrike on a crowded market in Tumfa village, ​urging authorities to open an immediate investigation.

Citing witnesses, ⁠Amnesty said ⁠that many of ⁠those ​killed were women and children. Local media also reported a ​similar death ⁠toll.

“No credible, substantiated evidence of civilian casualties has been established through any official assessment or independent verification,” Defence Headquarters spokesperson Major-General Michael Onoja said ⁠in a statement.

He said the strike was conducted under international ⁠humanitarian law and targeted a “confirmed high-level gathering” of militant leaders in the village which was based on multi-sourced intelligence.

Onoja added that the nature of the strike meant that immediate casualty verification was difficult, but a post-strike assessment showed that “several terrorists were neutralised.”

Nigeria’s military has ⁠been battling bandits in the northwest but often describes them as terrorists. It is also battling a 17-year Islamist insurgency in the northeast.

(Reporting ​by Camillus Eboh; Writing by Elisha Bala-Gbogbo; ​Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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