“Niger’s army failed to adequately respond to local residents’ warnings and requests for protection.”
Here yet again we see a jihad force that appears to be stronger and better equipped than a national army. Who is funding ISIS? Is anyone investigating that at all?

ISIS attacks leave 127 dead in western Niger
ANHA Hawar News Agency, September 10, 2025 (thanks to The Religion of Peace):
HRW stated on Wednesday that ISIS mercenaries have intensified their attacks in the Tillabéri region of western Niger since March, leaving more than 127 people dead in five separate assaults.
According to the report, the attacks took place in the Tillabéri region near the borders with Burkina Faso and Mali; an area long known for the presence of mercenaries linked to ISIS and al-Qaeda.
“Witnesses identified the assailants as members of the terrorist group based on their clothing and prior threats, while Niger’s army failed to adequately respond to local residents’ warnings and requests for protection,” the report noted….
By Robert Spencer on Sep 14, 2025 |
Their objective is to terrorize the Christians into leaving the area, and thereby expand the domains of Islam. This is a pattern that has been repeated throughout Islamic history. 
Fulani Militias Kill 9 Christians in Early Morning Raid on Southern Kaduna Village International Christian Concern, September 10, 2025: Nigeria (International Christian Concern) — At about 5:30 a.m. on Sunday, Sept. 7, armed men stormed Wakeh, a farming community in Agunu Ward, Kachia County of Southern Kaduna, Nigeria. The early morning attack left at least nine Christians dead and eight others wounded. Survivors said the attackers, whom they identified as armed Fulani militants, arrived by motorcycle and on foot, opening fire and setting homes ablaze. “They came from the forest near Danin Maro, shouting ‘Allahu Akbar,’” said Douglas Fogo, a survivor who spoke to International Christian Concern (ICC) in Kachia town. “Some came on motorbikes, some on foot from different directions. They fired indiscriminately, torching homes and forcing women and children to flee into the bushes. It lasted more than two hours. We could do nothing but run.” After more than two hours of violence, the shooting ceased, revealing the bodies of seven villagers on farmland and nearby paths. Two more later died from their injuries.... Wakeh, a Christian Adara farming village, has endured repeated Fulani militant attacks. Residents said recent violence also displaced families from nearby communities sheltering in the village.
 Wakeh, Nigeria |
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