Tag: counterterrorism

  • Five killed in Maiduguri mosque blast as officials warn of revived suicide-attack risk

    Five killed in Maiduguri mosque blast as officials warn of revived suicide-attack risk

    Photo Credit: Reuters
    2025-12-27 07:09:00

    In an update published by Reuters, an explosion during prayers at a mosque in Maiduguri killed worshippers and injured others, with authorities treating the incident as a likely suicide bombing as investigations continue.

    The blast reinforces a troubling security pattern: even as the frequency of suicide attacks had reduced compared with earlier years, insurgent networks appear capable of reactivating tactics when pressure eases.

    Authorities urged calm and vigilance while bomb disposal and investigative units worked the area, and leaders renewed calls for tighter protection around worship centres during festive periods.

    The incident adds urgency to hospital readiness, trauma support, and intelligence coordination in Borno—given Maiduguri’s long-standing position as a focal point of the insurgency.

    AP reported officials found “fragments of a suicide vest” at the scene, while Nigeria’s State House said the federal government “remains resolute in its duty to protect lives and property” following the bombing.

    Echotitbits take:
    The immediate story is casualties; the deeper story is capability. Watch for who claims responsibility, whether arrests follow, and whether security upgrades at mosques and markets become visible and sustained beyond a short post-attack surge.

    Source: Reuters — December 25, 2025 (https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/five-killed-nigeria-mosque-attack-police-say-2025-12-25/)
    Reuters December 25, 2025

  • Shettima visits Maiduguri blast victims, promises tighter protection for worship centres

    Shettima visits Maiduguri blast victims, promises tighter protection for worship centres

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-27 07:00:00

    According to Saturday PUNCH, Vice President Kashim Shettima visited survivors of the Maiduguri mosque bombing and assured residents that Nigeria will defeat terrorism and restore stability.

    The visit focused on victims receiving treatment after the explosion, with Shettima urging calm while promising sustained federal–state collaboration to protect places of worship and civilian centres.

    He also framed the attack as a test of national resolve, insisting that security agencies would intensify operations and improve intelligence-led prevention as communities head into the new year.

    Beyond condolences, the trip signalled a renewed political push for coordinated security measures in Borno and neighbouring hotspots, especially around markets, mosques, and other high-footfall areas.

    Reuters and the Associated Press also reported the incident, with Reuters describing it as a “suspected suicide bombing” that killed worshippers and injured others, while AP said investigators found “fragments of a suicide vest” at the scene.

    Echotitbits take:
    This is a familiar cycle in the North-East—attack, reassurance, then a security surge. What to watch next is whether the promised coordination produces visible changes: tighter perimeter control at worship centres, quicker incident response, and disruption of supply lines for IED materials.

    Source: The Punch — December 27, 2025 (https://punchng.com/nigeria-will-conquer-terrorism-says-shettima/?utm_medium=web&utm_source=rss.punchng.com)
    The Punch December 27, 2025

  • Christmas-day U.S. strike jolts Sokoto as Abuja tightens counter‑terror coordination

    Christmas-day U.S. strike jolts Sokoto as Abuja tightens counter‑terror coordination

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-27 06:00:00

    According to Punch, residents in parts of northern Nigeria reported heightened anxiety after U.S.-linked strikes were announced against suspected ISIS camps in Sokoto State, with local authorities urging calm and continued vigilance.

    The report said the operation was framed as a coordinated effort with Nigerian authorities amid concerns about cross‑border militant movement from the Sahel and the growth of terror logistics in forest corridors.

    Security analysts quoted in the coverage warned that kinetic operations can disrupt camps but also trigger displacement of fighters, making intelligence‑driven follow‑up and community protection measures critical in the weeks ahead.

    Echotitbits take:
    Beyond the headline drama of “Christmas‑day” strikes, the key story is the evolving Abuja‑Washington security alignment. Watch for: official briefings on targeting safeguards, clearer rules for joint operations, and what Nigeria does next on ground‑holding after air action.

    Source: The Punch — December 27, 2025 (https://punchng.com/trumps-christmas-missiles-strike-fear-in-northern-nigeria/)
    The Punch December 27, 2025

  • Abuja Confirms U.S. Strikes on Terror Cells in Northwest Nigeria

    Abuja Confirms U.S. Strikes on Terror Cells in Northwest Nigeria

    Photo Credit: Worldstagenews
    2025-12-26 06:00:00

    According to *PUNCH*, Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs says it has formally acknowledged U.S. military strikes that targeted suspected terrorist enclaves in the country’s northwest, describing the action as part of a wider counter-terror push.

    The ministry’s statement framed the episode as a security partnership step, while also emphasising Nigeria’s sovereignty and the need for coordinated action against armed groups operating across hard-to-police terrain.

    The development comes amid heightened regional security concerns, with officials stressing that insurgent and terror-linked violence is no longer a “local” problem but one with spillover risks for trade routes, border communities, and internal displacement.

    In Abuja, the confirmation is likely to renew debate about the rules, scope, and accountability of foreign military assistance—especially as public pressure grows for visible gains against violent networks.

    Reuters also described the action as “a joint operation” to “target terrorists,” while The Associated Press quoted the U.S. president describing a “powerful and deadly strike.”

    Echotitbits take: This is a security milestone and a political risk at once—helpful if it degrades networks, controversial if civilians are harmed or if sovereignty questions resurface. Watch for operational details, casualty clarifications, and whether Nigeria formalises a clearer framework for foreign kinetic support.

    Source: Worldstagenews — Dec 26, 2025 (https://www.worldstagenews.com/nigeria-tinubu-confirms-approval-of-successful-precision-strikes-on-foreign-isis-elements/)

    Photo credit/source: Worldstagenews
    Worldstagenews 2025-12-26

  • Trump says U.S. ordered ‘deadly’ strike on ISIS targets in Nigeria amid Christian-persecution claim

    Trump says U.S. ordered ‘deadly’ strike on ISIS targets in Nigeria amid Christian-persecution claim

    Photo Credit: Daniel Torok / Wikimedia Commons (Public domain)
    2025-12-25 19:00:00

    In a Christmas Day post on Truth Social, President Donald Trump said he had ordered what he described as a “powerful and deadly strike” on ISIS militants in northwest Nigeria, accusing the group of “targeting and viciously killing” Christians.

    In a separate public release, U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) said it conducted strikes against ISIS terrorists on Dec. 25 in Sokoto State, in coordination with Nigerian authorities, adding that its initial assessment was that multiple ISIS fighters were killed at ISIS camps, while withholding additional details for operational security.

    Reuters reported that Trump framed the operation as a response to attacks he said were hitting Christian communities, while also noting Nigeria’s security crisis is multi-layered and has affected different communities in the country.

    Additional coverage by Al Jazeera and The Guardian also reported Trump’s announcement and AFRICOM’s confirmation of the strike, as details continued to emerge.

    Sources: Truth Social (as cited in Reuters/other outlets); AFRICOM press release; Reuters; Al Jazeera; The Guardian.

    Links: AFRICOM statement: https://www.africom.mil/pressrelease/36158/us-africa-command-conducts-strike-against-isis-in-nigeria | Reuters report: https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/us-launches-strikes-against-islamic-state-militants-northwest-nigeria-trump-says-2025-12-25/ | Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/12/25/trump-says-us-launched-strikes-against-isil-in-northwest-nigeria | The Guardian: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/dec/25/us-carries-out-airstrikes-against-islamic-state-terrorist-scum-in-nigeria-trump-says

    Truth Social; U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM); Reuters; Al Jazeera; The Guardian 2025-12-25

  • NSCDC Confirms Attack on Niger Outpost, Says Officers Are Safe

    NSCDC Confirms Attack on Niger Outpost, Says Officers Are Safe

    Photo Credit: GazetteNGR (NAN)
    2025-12-25 10:05:00

    In an update published by GazetteNGR (via NAN), the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps confirmed a terrorist attack on its officers stationed at the Wawa area of Borgu LGA in Niger State.

    The report says the incident involved an assault on the NSCDC post, with attackers carting away a rifle and personal items during the raid, triggering immediate security concerns around remote outposts.

    Crucially, the NSCDC’s Niger command said the personnel involved were not missing after all, stressing that “officers involved in the attack had been accounted for and were safe.”

    Other outlets also reported the same incident, including Daily Post and Daily Trust, as the security services intensify efforts to secure border-adjacent and hard-to-reach communities in Niger’s northern corridors.

    Echotitbits take: The “accounted for and safe” clarification is important, but the bigger signal is vulnerability of lightly manned outposts—especially where attackers can seize weapons. Watch for whether NSCDC escalates joint patrols with police/army, and whether Niger’s security architecture shifts toward better early warning and rapid response.

    Source: GazetteNGR (NAN) — December 24, 2025 (https://gazettengr.com/terrorists-attack-nscdc-officers-at-niger-lg-cart-away-rifle-belongings/)

    GazetteNGR (NAN) 2025-12-24

  • Maiduguri Mosque Blast: Deaths Reported as Borno Reels Again

    Maiduguri Mosque Blast: Deaths Reported as Borno Reels Again

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-25 09:30:00

    Police updates referenced by The Punch say an explosion at a mosque in Maiduguri, Borno State, left multiple casualties during prayers, reviving fears over insurgent-linked attacks in Nigeria’s northeast. The incident reportedly caused panic and rushed evacuations as victims were taken for treatment.

    The attack fits a long-running pattern in the region, where civilians and places of worship have been targeted amid the Boko Haram/ISWAP-linked insurgency. While responsibility is often unclear in early hours, authorities typically tighten security and launch bomb-disposal and investigation protocols immediately after such incidents.

    The broader concern is the timing: festive periods and crowded gatherings can increase vulnerability, making community vigilance and intelligence-led policing especially critical.

    Two international reports aligned on the incident details: Reuters quoted Borno Governor Babagana Zulum condemning the bombing as “barbaric and inhumane,” while the Associated Press described it as an “apparent suicide attack” after authorities found fragments consistent with a suicide vest.

    Echotitbits take: The key question is whether this marks a tactical resurgence (suicide devices returning) or an isolated breach. Watch for official forensics, arrests, and whether security agencies issue broader threat advisories for the North-East during the holiday window.

    Source: The Punch — December 25, 2025 (https://punchng.com/four-killed-14-injured-in-borno-mosque-bombing/)

    The Punch 2025-12-25

  • NCTC warns Sahel coups are intensifying security pressure on Nigeria

    NCTC warns Sahel coups are intensifying security pressure on Nigeria

    Photo Credit: The Nation
    2025-12-24 07:55:00

    Reporting by The Nation indicates Nigeria’s counterterror leadership is linking Sahel instability to worsening insecurity at home, citing cross-border extremist networks and spillover effects.

    Officials argue that coups and the resulting security gaps in Burkina Faso, Niger, and Mali have increased militant mobility, deepened recruitment, and complicated joint operations.

    The warning reinforces that Nigeria’s security challenge is increasingly transnational—requiring regional diplomacy, intelligence fusion, and stronger border controls.

    Major General Garba Laka said: “We have these countries facing these threats and we think we will see peace in Nigeria? No.” He added: “As long as those countries keep on facing this threat, Nigeria will continue facing the brunt.”

    Echotitbits take: Nigeria cannot stabilize fully if the Sahel remains a revolving door for armed groups. Watch for concrete steps on border surveillance, regional coordination, and local stabilization in frontline states.

    Source: The Nation — December 23, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/nctc-boss-coups-in-mali-niger-burkina-faso-worsen-security-in-nigeria/)
    The Nation 2025-12-23

  • Nigeria steps up push to remove terror-linked social media accounts

    Nigeria steps up push to remove terror-linked social media accounts

    Photo Credit: The  Punch
    2025-12-24 06:36:00

    Speaking in an end-of-year security briefing cited by Punch, Nigeria’s counter-terror coordination officials say they are working with major social media platforms to identify and take down accounts tied to terrorist recruitment, propaganda, and coordination.

    Authorities argue that extremist networks have shifted tactics—from purely physical coordination to digital messaging, financing cues, and disinformation aimed at confusing communities and pressuring authorities.

    The government’s focus is on disruption: removing visibility, breaking distribution networks, and reducing the “viral” spread of extremist content while investigations continue offline.

    Officials also signalled the effort requires speed: platform cooperation and rapid verification are key, because terror-linked accounts can reappear under new names within hours.

    TVC News reported Nigeria is “collaborating with major social media companies” to remove terror-linked accounts, while The Point similarly referenced the push to “identify and remove accounts linked to terrorist activities.”

    Echotitbits take: Content takedowns are useful but not sufficient—terror networks will migrate. Watch for whether Nigeria pairs takedowns with digital evidence preservation (for prosecutions) and community-based counter-messaging to reduce recruitment pull.

    Source: The  Punch — December 24, 2025 (https://punchng.com/fg-orders-takedown-of-terrorists-social-media-accounts/)
    The  Punch 2025-12-24

  • U.S. Ramps Up Recon Flights Over Nigeria After Trump Threat Talk

    U.S. Ramps Up Recon Flights Over Nigeria After Trump Threat Talk

    Photo Credit: The Punch
    2025-12-23 09:00:00

    A Reuters dispatch referenced by The Punch says the U.S. has been conducting surveillance flights over Nigeria since late November 2025, signalling deeper intelligence cooperation amid worsening security fears.

    The report says the flights are linked to reconnaissance priorities—tracking extremist networks and gathering actionable intelligence—while also reflecting Washington’s broader posture toward countries it deems failing on security outcomes.

    For Nigeria, the optics are sensitive: foreign surveillance can help operations, but it also exposes how international partners perceive Abuja’s capacity to contain violence.

    The development lands alongside fresh diplomatic pressure—from religious-violence narratives to travel restrictions—raising the stakes for Nigeria’s security messaging and results on the ground.

    Validation: Reuters wrote that “the U.S. has been conducting surveillance flights over Nigeria” since late November. Guardian Nigeria echoed that “The United States has been carrying out intelligence-gathering flights over large parts of Nigeria since late November.”

    Echotitbits take: Intelligence support is useful, but Nigeria still needs domestic coordination: clearer command structure, rapid response, and accountability. Watch whether this becomes a joint-task-force outcome—or just headlines without measurable security improvements.

    Source: The Punch — December 23, 2025 (https://punchng.com/killings-us-conducts-surveillance-flights-over-nigeria-report/)
    The Punch 2025-12-23