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8:39 pm, Sep 6, 2025
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Dozens of people killed in assault on village in Nigeria’s Borno State 

Fighters have slaughtered at least 55 people in an attack on a village in northeastern Nigeria’s Borno State where people had recently returned after years of displacement.

Residents of Darul Jama, located near the border with Cameroon, said the raid occurred on Friday night and fighters believed to be from Boko Haram arrived on motorbikes, shooting indiscriminately and setting homes ablaze.

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Accounts on the number of deaths varied. Babagana Ibrahim, a commander of a government-aligned militia, told the news agency AFP that 55 people were killed, including six soldiers.

The traditional head of Darul Jama, who requested anonymity, told the Reuters news agency that 70 bodies had been recovered by Saturday morning and more residents were still missing in the surrounding bush.

“They went house to house, killing men and leaving women behind. Almost every household is affected,” he told the agency, adding that more than 20 houses and 10 buses were destroyed.

Nigeria’s military said it has stepped up operations in Borno State in recent months to try to contain militias and fighters from Boko Haram and its splinter group, the ISIL (ISIS) affiliate in West Africa Province (ISWAP).

The area is believed to be under the control of a Boko Haram commander named Ali Ngulde, according to AFP, which quoted a security source as saying he led the attack.

Resident Babagana Mala, who fled with soldiers to Bama town, 46km (29 miles) away, said the military had been warned for three days about Boko Haram gathering near the village but no reinforcements were sent.

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“They overwhelmed the soldiers, who fled with us to Bama,” he said.

Many of the victims were known to be families recently relocated from the Government Secondary School displacement camp in Bama, which authorities shut down this year.

“The government told us we would be safe here,” said Hajja Fati, a mother of five who lost her brother in the attack. “Now we are burying our people again.”

The attack raises questions about Nigeria’s push in recent years to close down camps for displaced people and return them to the countryside.

Boko Haram has been waging a bloody fight to establish a caliphate in northeastern Nigeria since 2009, killing about 40,000 people and forcing more than two million people to flee their homes.

ISWAP split from the group in 2016.

According to a tally by Good Governance Africa, a nonprofit, the first six months of 2025 saw a resurgence in activity from armed groups. It charted about 300 attacks – mainly from ISWAP – that killed about 500 civilians.

 

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Kentucky Air Guard Completes Grueling Caribbean Training in Emerald Warrior Exercise

A squadron of special tactics Airmen from the Kentucky Air National Guard wrapped up a grueling five-day training exercise on St. Croix, testing their ability to operate across land, sea and air in a maritime environment while responding to simulated enemy threats, a press release announced.
The training on St. Croix was part of Emerald Warrior 25.2, a large-scale special operations exercise staged in multiple locations by Air Force Special Operations Command. The Kentucky Airmen — including combat controllers, pararescuemen and special reconnaissance troops — conducted missions using both fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft, according to the press release.

“Our Airmen exercised their unique skillsets to parachute into contested territory, establish airfield operations, control aircraft, respond to search-and-rescue scenarios, manage notional medical evacuations, and conduct reconnaissance and targeting operations on a very tight timeline,” said the special tactics officer who served as lead planner.

He noted that St. Croix and its neighboring islands offered an ideal training environment. “Operations in the Caribbean simulate many of the geographical features our forces may encounter when deployed around the globe. Having to overcome the kinds of challenges presented here will make us a more lethal and effective force the next time we conduct littoral operations anywhere in the world.”

High-Stakes Scenarios
The exercise began Aug. 26 when six Airmen parachuted into the Caribbean Sea with an inflatable boat, three miles off the coast of St. Croix, from a Kentucky Air Guard C-130J Super Hercules. Eleven more combat controllers and pararescuemen then jumped directly into Henry E. Rohlsen Airport. Within minutes, both groups had secured the airfield, established perimeter security and implemented air traffic control, allowing the C-130 to land and offload crucial assets, the press release stated.

Over the following days, Airmen traveled 75 nautical miles by boat to conduct reconnaissance and targeting operations on a nearby island held by simulated enemy forces. In another test of endurance, pararescuemen and combat controllers carried out a 32-hour search-and-rescue mission. The scenario required them to locate survivors of a simulated plane crash at sea, parachute into the ocean with inflatable boats, provide medical care on the open water and coordinate helicopter hoist evacuations, the release stated.
Additional training included insertion and extraction by UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from the Mississippi Army National Guard’s 185th Aviation Brigade, as well as a mass-casualty exercise that called on Airmen to triage patients, deliver battlefield medical care and oversee medical evacuations from the Virgin Islands Air National Guard Station, the release stated.

Partnership and Planning
The complexity of the missions required extensive coordination with the U.S. Coast Guard; the U.S. Virgin Islands Governor’s Office, Police Department and Air National Guard; airport officials; local marinas; and dozens of businesses. The squadron’s combat mission support team — including radio technicians, parachute riggers, vehicle maintenance crews and diving specialists — was also essential to the effort, the release stated.

“An exercise of this scope, which has been in the planning stage for over a year, would not have been successful without the combined efforts of everyone involved, from our combat support troops to the governor’s office to local citizens who were so supportive of our efforts to ensure our nation’s security,” the planner said.

Long Record of Response
Kentucky Air Guard special tactics Airmen are among the most highly trained military operators in the world, capable of deploying by land, sea or air into almost any environment for combat or humanitarian operations. Their mission sets range from establishing airfields in contested territory to reconnaissance, tactical weather forecasting, battlefield trauma care and personnel recovery, the release stated.

The unit is also known for its humanitarian-response missions. After Haiti’s 2010 earthquake, the Airmen directed C-17 airdrops of aid and controlled a massive resupply operation. In 2005, they established a helicopter landing zone on a New Orleans overpass following Hurricane Katrina, helping evacuate nearly 12,000 residents. And in 2017, after Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria, they rescued more than 300 flood victims in Houston and provided air traffic control in the Virgin Islands to support the evacuation of more than 1,200 people from St. Maarten, the release stated.

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