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Nigeria killed 13,000 terrorists in 2025: President Tinubu claims

CGTN

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, August 25, 2025. /CFP
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, August 25, 2025. /CFP

Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, August 25, 2025. /CFP

Nigeria's military has "neutralized" over 13,000 insurgents over the past year, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu announced on Friday. 

The claim comes as the West African nation continues to battle a relentless, multifaceted security crisis marked by mass casualties and high-profile kidnappings.

In a televised national address commemorating Nigeria's Democracy Day, which marks the country's return to civilian rule in 1999, Tinubu struck a victorious tone. 

He asserted that security operations have yielded massive success, claiming that the death toll from armed conflict across the country has plummeted by 81 percent since he took office in 2023.

Mass surrenders amidst ongoing crises

In addition to the battlefield casualties, Tinubu highlighted the ongoing success of Operation Safe Corridor, a government-led initiative designed to de-radicalize and rehabilitate repentant fighters.

"At least 124,000 fighters and their dependents have laid down their arms since 2023 through Operation Safe Corridor," Tinubu stated, emphasizing the administration's dual approach of military pressure and reintegration.

Despite the optimistic data presented by the presidency, the reality on the ground remains stark. Nigeria is grappling with a sophisticated network of security threats, ranging from criminal bandits engaging in mass abductions for ransom to deeply entrenched Islamist insurgencies linked to ISIL (ISIS) and al-Qaeda.

The geography of Nigeria's conflict is shifting. Historically confined to the country's northeastern region, insurgent groups and heavily armed gangs have increasingly used thick forest corridors to expand their reach into the previously stable southwestern states. 

Officials attribute this migration to sustained military pressure pushing the groups out of their traditional strongholds.

As the conflict spreads, vulnerable rural populations with little to no state security presence bear the brunt of the violence.

A women's technical college in Dapchi, Yobe State, Nigeria, was reportedly attacked by the extremist group Boko Haram, February 22, 2018. /CFP
A women's technical college in Dapchi, Yobe State, Nigeria, was reportedly attacked by the extremist group Boko Haram, February 22, 2018. /CFP

A women's technical college in Dapchi, Yobe State, Nigeria, was reportedly attacked by the extremist group Boko Haram, February 22, 2018. /CFP

Growing US military involvement

The security crisis has drawn intensifying international attention and direct Western intervention. 

Following controversial allegations of a "Christian genocide" in Nigeria made by US President Donald Trump late last year, Washington has significantly ramped up its defense footprint in the West African nation.

The United States military is now actively supporting Nigerian forces by providing intelligence and coordinating precision air strikes on militant encampments. 

This strategic pivot culminated in February with the official deployment of 100 American soldiers to Nigeria, marking a critical escalation in international efforts to stabilize the region.

(With input from wires)

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