🟥 Military Defends Operation As Fresh Questions Emerge Over Shiroro Airstrikes
Fresh questions have emerged over recent military air operations in Niger State after residents alleged that civilian communities may have been affected during strikes the Nigerian military says were directed at armed bandits.
The Shiroro airstrike controversy escalated after Defence Headquarters defended the operation, insisting the strikes were carried out using credible and actionable intelligence targeting terrorist hideouts and armed groups operating in Shiroro Local Government Area.
In a statement signed by the Director of Defence Media Operations, Major General Michael Onoja, the military said the coordinated air interdiction mission was conducted between 11:59 p.m. on May 9 and 6:00 a.m. on May 10 across Katerma, Bokko, Kusasu, and Kuduru villages in Shiroro LGA.
According to Defence Headquarters, the Nigerian Army UAV Command launched the operation after intelligence reportedly confirmed the convergence of armed bandits preparing attacks on nearby communities and military positions.
“The operations were meticulously planned and executed based on credible, actionable intelligence confirming the convergence of terrorists at those specific locations,” the statement said.
The military further stated that approximately 70 armed bandits were neutralised during the mission in Kusasu alone.
🟨 Residents Describe Different Picture After Strikes
But residents near the affected communities painted a different picture following the operation.
A resident of Guradnayi community, Kasim Abbas, alleged that one of the bombs landed near the river in Kusasu while another reportedly struck Guradnayi community itself.
“The military first dropped a bomb near the river in Kusasu, while the second bomb was dropped at Guradnayi,” Abbas claimed.
According to the resident, several houses were allegedly damaged during the incident, although casualty figures had not been independently verified as of press time.
The conflicting accounts have now pushed the security operation into a broader debate over operational precision, civilian protection, and the growing challenges surrounding Nigeria’s anti-banditry air campaigns.
🟥 Defence Headquarters Insists Mission Achieved Its Objective
Despite the allegations, Defence Headquarters maintained that the operation achieved its intended military objective and rejected suggestions that civilians were deliberately targeted.
According to the military, many residents in the wider area had already relocated to Sarkin Pawa because of persistent insecurity threats before the strikes were conducted.
The military also disclosed that post-strike surveillance showed surviving armed bandits fleeing toward Zango on motorcycles after the operation.
At the same time, Defence Headquarters stated that relevant military formations had been directed to verify allegations relating to possible civilian casualties if any were recorded during the operation.
The Niger State Commissioner for Homeland Security, Maurice Magaji, also stated that he had yet to receive full operational details regarding the incident.
🟨 Anti-Bandit Operations Face Renewed Accountability Pressure
The latest development has once again placed Nigeria’s aerial anti-bandit operations under renewed public scrutiny as authorities continue to intensify military campaigns against armed groups across northern Nigeria.
While security analysts acknowledge that air power remains central to the fight against armed banditry, concerns over civilian safety, operational transparency, and post-strike verification continue to remain highly sensitive whenever allegations of collateral damage emerge.
For many observers, the Shiroro airstrike controversy now reflects the growing pressure for military effectiveness and civilian accountability to coexist as Nigeria’s anti-bandit war continues to expand across multiple conflict-prone regions.
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