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Suicide blast kills 20 anti-jihadist fighters in Nigeria

Suicide blast kills 20 anti-jihadist fighters in Nigeria

Japan Today22-06-2025
Civilians have borne the brunt of the violence plaguing Borno state
By Audu Marte and Aminu Abubakar
A suicide attack in Nigeria's Borno state by a woman allegedly acting for Boko Haram insurgents has killed at least 20 anti-jihadist fighters, militia members told AFP on Saturday.
Police have confirmed 10 people were killed and said the overall toll could be higher.
Boko Haram and its rival, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), have in recent months intensified attacks on villages in Borno and neighboring states.
They have also overrun military bases, killing soldiers and carting away weapons.
Late on Friday, a woman allegedly detonated explosives strapped to her body at a haunt for vigilantes and local hunters assisting the Nigerian military in fighting "jihadists" in the town of Konduga, the militia told AFP.
"We lost 20 people in the suicide attack which happened yesterday around 9:15 p.m. while our members were hanging out near the fish market," said Tijjani Ahmed, the head of an anti-jihadist militia in Konduga district.
Konduga is about 40 kilometers from Maiduguri, the capital of the northeastern state of Borno.
Surrounding villages have been repeatedly targeted by suicide bombers said to be acting for Boko Haram, a group of armed Islamic militants that has been active in the area for at least 16 years.
Konduga town itself had seen a lull in such attacks in the past year.
"Eighteen people died on the spot, while 18 others were injured. Two more died in hospital, raising the death toll to 20," Ahmed said.
Sixteen were wounded, with 10 of them nursing severe injuries in two hospitals in Maiduguri, he said.
The dead were buried in a mass funeral on Saturday, an AFP reporter saw.
Corpses wrapped in white cloths -- some covered in bamboo mats -- were laid out in rows on the ground on wooden biers ahead of the burial.
"The young men who lost their lives are those who, day and night, suffer while checking people entering and leaving the town," said 35-year-old Konduga resident Ali Kyari, who lost a brother.
"I was with him. It wasn't even 30 minutes after we parted ways when God took his soul in that suicide attack," he said.
The alleged bomber was dressed as a local heading to the crowded nearby fish market.
She detonated her explosives as soon as she reached the shed used by the militia fighters as a hangout, said militia member Ibrahim Liman.
He gave the same toll as Ahmed.
Borno state police spokesman Nahum Daso told AFP that 10 bodies had been recovered from the "suicide attack".
He said the toll could be higher as "details are sketchy".
Konduga's fish market, which is usually busy at night, has been the target of a series of suicide attacks in the past.
"I was in the market to buy fish for dinner when I heard a loud bang some meters behind me," Konduga resident Ahmed Mallum said.
"I was flung to the ground and I couldn't stand. I just lay down," Mallum said.
The conflict between the authorities and Boko Haram has been ongoing for 16 years.
In that time, more than 40,000 people have died and around two million have been displaced from their homes in the northeast, according to the United Nations.
The violence has spread to neighboring Niger, Chad and Cameroon, prompting a regional military coalition to fight armed militant Islamic groups.
© 2025 AFP
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Zelensky urges allies to seek 'regime change' in Russia
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Japan Today

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Zelensky urges allies to seek 'regime change' in Russia

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Intimate no more? Japan clamps down on 'host clubs'
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Intimate no more? Japan clamps down on 'host clubs'

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How Syrian attackers killed: One hand on the gun, another on the camera
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Japan Times

time3 days ago

  • Japan Times

How Syrian attackers killed: One hand on the gun, another on the camera

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The violence killed hundreds of mostly Druze people, according to reporting and two monitoring groups. Reporters were able to use visible landmarks in each video to geolocate the incidents. The events depicted and their dates were verified through interviews with seven relatives and friends of the victims. All said they believed Syrian government forces killed their loved ones. The news agency could not identify the attackers in the videos, which were not time-stamped, or determine who first posted them online. The pieces of footage began appearing online after July 18, a review of social media posts found. A woman carries an image from a widely circulated video showing an 80-year-old man in front of his home as another man in military attire forcibly shaved off his mustache — a grave insult in the Druze community. | AFP-JIJI The media offices of the Syrian defense and interior ministries didn't respond to questions on the filmed attacks. Syria's defense ministry said on July 22 that it was aware of reports that an "unknown group" wearing military fatigues committed "shocking and gross violations" in Sweida. It didn't mention execution-style killings targeting Druze people. The ministry vowed to investigate the abuses, identify those responsible and impose "maximum penalties" on perpetrators, "even if they are affiliated with the ministry of defense." On the same day, the interior ministry condemned "in the strongest terms the circulating videos showing field executions carried out by unidentified individuals in the city of Sweida." Rights group: At least 1,000 dead Syria has been plagued by bouts of sectarian strife since the sudden fall of President Bashar Assad and his police state in December last year after 14 years of war. The new government, led by a former Sunni Islamist group that has its roots in global jihad, dissolved Assad's army and sought to integrate dozens of former rebel factions into a national army, but those forces have struggled to fill the security vacuum. Sweida province is predominantly populated by the Druze community, a distant offshoot of Islam that comprises about 3% of Syria's pre-war population of 24 million. The atrocities there came four months after a spree of killings against the Alawite minority, with armed factions affiliated to the new government killing hundreds of people in coastal settlements. The Sweida unrest began on July 13, when longstanding local tensions over land and resources in the province escalated into clashes between local Druze militia and Bedouin tribal fighters, who like government forces largely adhere to the country's majority Sunni faith. The violence worsened significantly after the Syrian military was deployed to the province on July 14 to quell the clashes and entered Sweida city itself on July 15, according to residents, two war monitors and reporters on the ground. The Syrian Network for Human Rights said 1,013 people have been killed in the bloodshed since July 13, including 47 women, 26 children and six medical personnel. The group said victims were mainly Druze, adding that it wasn't clear how many were fighters or civilians. The network said the vast majority died after the army's arrival led to a sharp increase in fighting. A bedouin fighter walks near a burned building after sectarian clashes escalated in Syria's predominantly Druze region of Sweida on July 19. | REUTERS The organization's head, Fadel Abdulghany, said it had documented execution-style killings by Syrian troops, Bedouin fighters and Druze groups. 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The exchange is filmed by someone standing directly next to the fighters and it is unclear if the person is also armed. When the older man answers, "I'm Syrian," one fighter responds: "What does Syrian mean? Muslim or Druze?" Rajma says: "My brother, I'm Druze." Three of the fighters immediately open fire. "This is the fate of every dog among you, you pigs," one of them says. In another verified video, a group of seven fighters in military fatigues carrying rifles are seen guiding eight men in civilian clothes down a sidewalk. Based on the shop signs and road layout, reporters identified the street as lying just west of Tishreen Square in the heart of Sweida city. A drone view of the city of Sweida, following renewed fighting between Bedouin fighters and Druze gunmen, despite an announced truce, in Syria on July 18. | REUTERS The only visible insignia on the fatigues is a small black patch on the right arm of one of the fighters bearing the Islamic declaration of faith in a design popularized by the Islamic State group. reporters have also seen some soldiers at checkpoints in government areas wearing them. Syria's defense and interior ministries didn't respond to questions on whether their forces wear the patches. The Islamic State group did not mention Sweida in any of their posts on their social media propaganda channels, including in the period after July 13. Reporters couldn't reach a representative for the group. A few seconds into the video, the fighter filming turns his phone camera around to his own face: He's a bearded man dressed in military fatigues, with a red bandana wrapped around his head and the butt of a rifle visible across his chest. The eight victims walk in single file, each resting his hands on the shoulders of the man in front. The last man in line, wearing a tan shirt and sandals, was identified by a friend who watched the video as Hosam Saraya, a 35-year-old Syrian-American citizen. The friend said the older man directly in front of him in line was Hosam's father, and the next man was Hosam's brother Kareem. Most of the others were from the same extended family, the friend added. Dima Saraya, the wife of Ali Saraya — another of the men in line — told reporters that armed men in military fatigues had surrounded the apartment building where the extended Saraya family lived west of Tishreen Square on July 16 and demanded that the men inside surrender themselves, promising to question them for a few hours and return them home safely. U.S. Sen. James Lankford of Oklahoma confirmed that Hosam, who had lived in Oklahoma, "was tragically executed alongside other members of his family in Syria." He didn't give further details. A separate video shows the same eight unarmed men kneeling in the dirt of a roundabout in Tishreen Square. Reporters were able to verify the video's location from the statue in the roundabout and a tower block visible directly behind it. The same friend identified Hosam, his brother and his father among the kneeling men in the second video. At least two fighters fire their rifles directly at the kneeling group, from close proximity and for at least seven seconds. The kneeling men crumple into the dirt and lie motionless as the armed men yell, "God is great."

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