HomeAfricaFactbox-Nigerian airstrike at village market is latest in which civilians have been...

Factbox-Nigerian airstrike at village market is latest in which civilians have been killed

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LAGOS, April 13 (Reuters) - A ‌Nigerian airstrike at a village market in which more ​than 200 people are feared dead is the latest incident in which the military has ⁠hit civilian targets while pursuing Islamist militants or armed groups.

Here are some of the recent incidents where airstrikes killed civilians.

April 2026 - At least 200 people ​were feared dead after Nigerian military jets struck a village market L6N40V03N while pursuing Islamist ‌militants in the northeast of the country on Saturday night, a councillor for the area and residents said on Sunday.

January 2025 - Nigeria's Air Force said it was ⁠investigating reports of civilian casualties during an airstrike that targeted ⁠armed gangs in the northwest L8N3O90FR. Residents told Reuters that at least 15 civilians, including local security guards, were killed.

December 2024 - Nigeria's military acknowledged that an airstrike targeting a Lakurawa militant group hideout in the northwestern Sokoto state ‌killed 10 civilians because of secondary explosions.

September 2024 - At least 24 people were killed ⁠in an airstrike on a village in Kaduna ‌state during an Air Force operation targeting armed ​gangs and their hideout. 

April 2024 - An airstrike on a village in Nigeria's northwestern Zamfara state killed at least 33 people during Eid after a military ‌operation targeting armed kidnapping gangs and their hideouts. 

December 2023 - At ​least 85 people, including women ⁠and children, were killed following a military drone attack in ‌northern Kaduna state. Two military officers faced ⁠court-martial for the incident after President Bola Tinubu ordered an investigation.

January 2023 - Dozens of ethnic Fulani herders were killed in an aerial bombing in the central Nigerian ​state of Nasarawa as ‌they were unloading cattle retrieved from authorities in a neighbouring state. The incident ⁠was the subject of a Reuters special ​report and the Nigerian Air Force later acknowledged responsibility for it.

(Reporting by ​MacDonald Dzirutwe, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

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