Airstrikes near Cameroon border kill scores of militants

A sharp uptick in military activity in Nigeria’s northeast culminated this weekend in a high-impact air campaign that the Nigerian Air Force says neutralised a significant militant grouping near the Cameroon border. According to military briefings, precision strikes were carried out after intelligence reported fighters massing and preparing to attack ground troops; initial tallies put the death toll among militants in the mid-30s. The operation also restored critical communications to embattled army positions and allowed ground units to consolidate their lines.

Local humanitarian sources warn that while strikes disrupt planned attacks, they also risk displacing civilians already living under chronic insecurity — a long-running consequence of the Boko Haram/ISWAP insurgency that has fuelled years of population displacement across Borno and neighbouring states. Aid agencies are calling for stricter safeguards and clearer civilian-protection protocols alongside kinetic operations; they say access corridors and rapid needs assessments must be activated to prevent a fresh humanitarian surge.

Security analysts describe the strikes as tactical successes but say they are unlikely to end the insurgency without synchronized political, economic and stabilisation measures: community policing, restoration of services, and stronger cross-border coordination with Cameroon and Niger. For many residents, security gains are judged in weeks and months, not single operations — and the resilience of militant networks, plus rising gang violence in other regions, means Nigerians are watching developments warily.

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