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Insurgents and bandits in Nigeria kill more people in the first half of 2025 compared to all of 2018.

According to figures released by Nigeria's Human Rights Agency on Tuesday, more people were killed in Nigeria by bandits and insurgents during the first half of 2018 than they will be in 2024.

According to these figures, there were at least 2,266 deaths in the first six months of 2025. This compares to 1,083 deaths in the same period of 2024, and 2,194 in the entire year of last year.

Nigeria's military is stretched thin as it fights a multi-fronted war against Boko Haram, other insurgents and banditry in the north, herder attacks and kidnappings throughout the central states, and secessionists and separatists in southeast.

In the last few months, the situation has gotten worse. 606 people have been killed, including around 200 in an attack by gunmen against the Yelewata community and the Dauda community in central Benue.

Tony Ojukwu - the Executive Secretary of Nigeria's National Human Rights Commission - revealed the statistics during a presentation held in Abuja and called on the government to take urgent, decisive actions.

Ojukwu stated, "These were not just figures in a report. They were fathers and mothers, children and breadwinners. Families were torn apart; livelihoods were destroyed; and futures were extinguished by moments of senseless violence."

The agency reported that 857 people were abducted during the first half 2025. This was down from 1,461 for the same period in 2018.

The report noted that attacks on law enforcement and security forces were increasing. More than 17 soldiers died in Kaduna State and Niger State, and more than 40 members of Civilian Joint Task Force in Zamfara in the northwest.

(source: Reuters)