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Nigerian airstrike hits market, 200 feared dead in northeast Yobe state

By Thomson Reuters Apr 12, 2026 | 8:43 AM

By Ahmed Kingimi and Adewale Kolawole

MAIDUGURI, Nigeria, April 12 (Reuters) – At least 200 people are feared dead after Nigerian military jets struck a village market while pursuing Islamist militants in the northeast of ​the country on Saturday night, a councillor for the area and ‌residents said on Sunday.

Nigeria’s Air Force said it had killed Boko Haram militants in the Jilli axis in Borno state, but in a statement released to Reuters on Sunday it did not mention hitting a market. It did not respond to further requests for ‌comment.

The ​government of the neighbouring Yobe state later said ⁠in a statement that an ⁠air strike on the area had been conducted near a market that people were attending.

“Some people from Geidam LGA (local government area) bordering Gubio LGA in Borno state who went to the Jilli weekly market were affected,” ​said Brigadier General Dahiru Abdulsalam, military adviser to the Yobe state government.

He gave no further details.

The strike occurred in a village in Yobe on ⁠the border with Borno, the heartland of a ⁠long-running insurgency that has killed thousands of people and ​displaced millions more.

Lawan Zanna Nur Geidam, the councillor and traditional head of Fuchimeram ​ward in Yobe’s Geidam district told Reuters that those injured were ‌being taken to hospitals in Yobe and Borno.

“It’s a very devastating incident at Jilli Market. As I’m speaking to you, over 200 people have lost their lives from the air strike at the market,” he said in a telephone ⁠interview.

Three other residents and an official from an international humanitarian agency confirmed the strike and likely death toll.

The Yobe State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) said it had received ⁠preliminary reports of an ‌incident at Jilli  Market “which reportedly resulted in casualties affecting some ⁠marketers” and activated emergency response.

Ahmed Ali, a 43-year-old resident ​who sells ‌medical consumables at the market, said he had been ​injured in ⁠a blast.

“I became so scared and attempted to run away, but a friend dragged me and we all lay on the ground,” he said from hospital.

(Reporting by Ahmed Kingimi and Adewale Kolawole in Maiduguri, Hamza Ibrahim in Kano and Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Tim Cocks, David ​Goodman and Alexander Smith)