I Lost 3 Children To Niger Military Airstrike .. Injured Father

Cknnigeria | 11-05-2026 06:55pm |

A 50-year-old victim of an airstrike on Guradnayi village near Kusasu community in Galadima-Kogo District of Shiroro LGA, Niger State, Victor Solomon, said he lost three of his children in the incident. At least 13 civilians, mostly children, were reportedly killed in the aerial assault on Guradnayi, one of the terrorised villages in the LGA Residents said the incident occurred in the early hours of Sunday as aerial forces pursued bandits riding on motorcycles through the village. However, the Defence Headquarters denied reports that civilians were killed in the airstrikes. The Director of Defence Media Operations, Major General Michael Onoja, in a statement on Sunday, said the operation was conducted following intelligence reports indicating the convergence of armed bandits in Shiroro LGA on May 9, 2026. Onoja said the strikes targeted terrorist enclaves and achieved their objectives, neutralising about 70 armed bandits in Kusasu alone. Victims recount incident Solomon said he was asleep around 5 am on Sunday when the airstrike occurred, leaving him with severe facial injuries. Speaking from his hospital bed, Victor Solomon, who expressed doubts about surviving the incident, said he lost three of his children. “I don’t know if I can survive this. I sustained severe injuries to my face. I am in pain. We need help from the government,” he said in a low voice. Also speaking on the telephone, Gideon Bamaiyi said bandits had earlier passed through their usual route in the area before the airstrike occurred He said 13 people, including seven children who were taking shelter in his elder brother’s house, were killed in the airstrike. He added that six others were receiving treatment at a private hospital in Zumba, Shiroro LGA. As of 6 pm on Sunday, Bamaiyi said five of the victims, including a little girl, were still unconscious in their hospital beds. He said the hospital had demanded N400,000 for surgery on one of the female victims, and appealed for assistance for the affected families. “Bandits had earlier passed through their usual route, and we had all fled. So, after they passed, some people returned home. The airstrike occurred around 5 am when people were still sleeping. “In my elder brother’s house, 13 people lost their lives, including children, because one of the bombs landed on the house. Nobody survived. “My elder brother had already left the house when the incident happened; otherwise, he would have been a victim too. “Currently, we have six people, including three women, a little girl, a little boy and a man, critically injured. In fact, five of them are still unconscious,” he said. Auta Awododo, a resident of Kusasu, told Premium Times that one of those killed was his cousin’s son. He said terrorists may have been killed in the airstrikes, but innocent civilians also lost their lives. “The military first dropped a bomb near the river in Kusasu. The second bomb was dropped in Guradnayi,” another resident, who did not want to be named, said. “Even though terrorists were killed in the assault, the operation did not deter them from their mission,” a security source told Premium Times. “As I speak to you now, they (terrorists) are operating in Kabula near Kuchi. There is no confirmed report of abduction or killings yet, but they have rustled many cattle from several communities in Munya,” the source, a member of a local vigilante group, added. A senior government official, who preferred anonymity because he was not authorised to speak, confirmed the airstrike but did not provide details of the civilian casualties. He also confirmed the movement of bandits in the area, which led to the airstrike. Many residents have been killed in accidental airstrikes across communities in Shiroro. In 2022, a Nigerian Air Force fighter jet killed six minors in Kurebe village, according to a Premium Times investigation. Five months later, another military airstrike killed eight civilians in the same village. Military denies civilian deaths, says 70 bandits killed The Director of Defence Media Operations, Major General Michael Onoja, denied civilian casualties in the airstrikes. Onoja said the Nigerian Army UAV Command subsequently carried out multiple air interdiction strikes across suspected bandit hideouts in Katerma, Bokko, Kusasu and Kuduru villages. He disclosed that about 70 bandits were killed in Kusasu alone, while surviving fighters were seen evacuating the bodies of their colleagues for burial. Onoja said local intelligence sources confirmed that the aerial bombardments were “precise on target” in Kusasu, Katerma and Bokko villages. The statement said, “In line with the AFN mandate to conduct operations to rout out all forms of insecurity in the country, on 9 May 2026, intelligence reports indicated the convergence of armed bandits at Lukupe Village in Shiroro LGA. “Subsequently, on the 10 May 2026 between the hours of 1159pm to 6am, the Nigerian Army UAV Command acting on intelligence conducted multiple air

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