The Prague Post - 'No warning': Survivors say Nigerian air force bombed packed market

EUR -
AED 4.200026
AFN 73.183571
ALL 94.287773
AMD 421.026666
ANG 2.047321
AOA 1048.586954
ARS 1702.648013
AUD 1.652202
AWG 2.061154
AZN 1.941914
BAM 1.95972
BBD 2.302796
BDT 140.970124
BGN 1.933517
BHD 0.431056
BIF 3413.339331
BMD 1.143497
BND 1.479152
BOB 7.917768
BRL 5.979232
BSD 1.143282
BTN 109.128898
BWP 15.504878
BYN 3.316906
BYR 22412.54636
BZD 2.299489
CAD 1.621273
CDF 2568.29477
CHF 0.918569
CLF 0.026898
CLP 1058.308216
CNY 7.763317
CNH 7.761944
COP 3853.402818
CRC 520.338524
CUC 1.143497
CUP 30.302677
CVE 110.747577
CZK 24.190338
DJF 203.221838
DKK 7.474675
DOP 67.578109
DZD 152.459298
EGP 56.130051
ERN 17.152459
ETB 184.537004
FJD 2.591908
FKP 0.861199
GBP 0.856613
GEL 3.018706
GGP 0.861199
GHS 13.041559
GIP 0.861199
GMD 82.899296
GNF 10034.188838
GTQ 8.722332
GYD 239.157325
HKD 8.968009
HNL 30.600941
HRK 7.537017
HTG 149.547823
HUF 354.258308
IDR 20564.654783
ILS 3.423231
IMP 0.861199
INR 109.156705
IQD 1497.782819
IRR 1573395.059545
ISK 143.886243
JEP 0.861199
JMD 179.569181
JOD 0.810742
JPY 184.136273
KES 147.849167
KGS 99.999062
KHR 4585.42379
KMF 492.847711
KPW 1029.147937
KRW 1759.087781
KWD 0.354313
KYD 0.952797
KZT 542.881142
LAK 25236.984322
LBP 102400.180395
LKR 383.75088
LRD 207.830933
LSL 18.627533
LTL 3.37645
LVL 0.69169
LYD 7.335571
MAD 10.727715
MDL 20.248324
MGA 4856.672013
MKD 61.664242
MMK 2400.494521
MNT 4098.511119
MOP 9.236895
MRU 45.808199
MUR 54.052987
MVR 17.678815
MWK 1986.254835
MXN 19.991757
MYR 4.665809
MZN 73.080833
NAD 18.627087
NGN 1567.166433
NIO 42.073605
NOK 11.257788
NPR 174.609497
NZD 2.006963
OMR 0.439668
PAB 1.143277
PEN 3.907966
PGK 5.022993
PHP 70.217023
PKR 317.924363
PLN 4.287998
PYG 6947.897428
QAR 4.167736
RON 5.233101
RSD 117.376518
RUB 88.618763
RWF 1676.138012
SAR 4.307784
SBD 9.204129
SCR 15.435748
SDG 686.666083
SEK 11.05337
SGD 1.476993
SHP 0.853736
SLE 27.872744
SLL 23978.570052
SOS 653.401242
SRD 43.049218
STD 23668.084638
STN 24.548996
SVC 10.00401
SYP 126.393151
SZL 18.715189
THB 37.975691
TJS 10.575708
TMT 4.00224
TND 3.382466
TOP 2.753267
TRY 53.392861
TTD 7.756481
TWD 36.464871
TZS 3001.683759
UAH 51.23593
UGX 4190.363389
USD 1.143497
UYU 45.891191
UZS 13620.064667
VES 723.34514
VND 30062.543051
VUV 137.216382
WST 3.167081
XAF 657.268818
XAG 0.018827
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.090358
XCG 2.060485
XDR 0.817621
XOF 657.271698
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.842831
ZAR 18.604246
ZMK 10292.849052
ZMW 20.836496
ZWL 368.205652
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    65.61

    0%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    75.93

    +0.59%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    21.99

    +0.18%

  • RYCEF

    0.2500

    19.75

    +1.27%

  • RIO

    1.0700

    94.42

    +1.13%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    22.15

    -0.14%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13

    +0.46%

  • BCE

    0.4000

    21.42

    +1.87%

  • VOD

    0.1400

    13.15

    +1.06%

  • NGG

    2.6700

    82.85

    +3.22%

  • RELX

    0.5500

    31.93

    +1.72%

  • BTI

    1.2100

    61.77

    +1.96%

  • AZN

    11.2900

    195.15

    +5.79%

  • BP

    1.2500

    37.4

    +3.34%

  • GSK

    2.3600

    53.66

    +4.4%

'No warning': Survivors say Nigerian air force bombed packed market
'No warning': Survivors say Nigerian air force bombed packed market / Photo: Joris Bolomey - AFP

'No warning': Survivors say Nigerian air force bombed packed market

The market was packed, like it was every Saturday, when the Nigerian air force jets screamed overhead.

Text size:

Soon after, swathes of trading stalls at a market in Jilli, a small town in Nigeria's northeastern Yobe state, were reduced to ash, with incinerated bodies lying in the rubble, a video from the scene shared with AFP shows.

Survivors, human rights groups and local officials say it is yet another massacre of civilians by the Nigerian air force.

The Nigerian military said it targeted a "logistics hub" located "near the abandoned village of Jilli", on the Borno-Yobe state border, targeting militants from Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP).

But according to a conflict monitoring report prepared by the UN and seen by AFP, the strikes hit the Jilli market and "mistakenly killed at least 56 people," with local chief Lawan Zanna Nur saying that the dead and injured together numbered "around 200".

"I don't know if there were jihadists at the market. We are just ordinary people," Mala Garba, 42, told AFP from a hospital in Borno state capital Maiduguri while recovering from bullet wounds.

He was among the 46 victims from the town an AFP reporter saw at the hospital, some heavily bandaged, others with IV drips attached.

The governor of Borno state, the epicentre of Nigeria's 17-year-long jihadist insurgency, said the government shut the market down five years ago.

But Yusuf Bagana, a tailor who survived the strike, said it was operating normally.

He told AFP he "didn't know" about any closure orders and "was just focusing on my daily activities" before the bombing knocked him unconscious.

The "airstrike hit the entire Jilli town," said Garba. "All of us were living in the town. There was no warning."

- Living under, among jihadists -

During the peak of Nigeria's insurgency, about a decade ago when ISWAP forerunner-turned-rival Boko Haram controlled swathes of territory, "some elders knew there were Boko Haram and informants around," Garba said.

More recently, he said, in 2023 the army conducted house-to-house searches in the village and arrested two people. But there had not been any major security incidents since then, he added.

A security source told AFP that jihadists "control" and collect taxes from the market.

Pictures released by the military showed trucks and motorcycles allegedly belonging to jihadists amid what appeared to be a crowded market -- with one of the photos even labelled "market". Photos then show the site destroyed by strikes.

The Nigerian air force said it is investigating reports of civilian casualties.

When civilians are killed by the military, they are often accused of "harbouring" jihadists, said Isa Sanusi, country director at Amnesty International Nigeria -- an accusation that is often impossible to distinguish from simply living under jihadist control, as many Nigerians do across swathes of the northeastern countryside held by the militants.

Lieutenant Colonel Sani Uba, spokesman for operations in the northeast, said that the strikes followed "sustained intelligence" and "a rigorous and professional targeting process".

The military also said the strike hit targets that were affiliated with the killing of a Nigerian brigadier general last week, the second killing of a high-ranking officer in five months.

But Sanusi, who spoke to local residents and shared the video of the scorched market with AFP, said that militants simply being present did not justify the high civilian death toll.

"If the market is entirely run by insurgents, that is a different story," he told AFP. "But if the allegation is that insurgents used the market, that makes their claim very baseless."

- US says not involved -

The United States, which has sent troops to the country to train the Nigerian military, including in target selection, was "not involved in the planning, intelligence sharing, or execution of this operation," a US Africa Command spokesperson told AFP.

Over the years, Nigerian airstrikes have repeatedly killed civilians, with Human Rights Watch warning after a deadly strike in January that "such deaths have become a recurring feature".

Issa Mammane, another man recovering in Maiduguri hospital, told AFP that "five members of my family were killed" in the strikes.

Across Borno state, the violence has continued.

On Sunday, about 150 kilometres away from Jilli, ISWAP militants struck the garrison town of Monguno, near Lake Chad.

Ten soldiers, including a colonel, were killed, two anti-jihadist militia sources told AFP.

J.Marek--TPP