Niamey – A burst of heavy gunfire and explosions erupted early Thursday near the international airport in Niger’s capital Niamey before halting within hours, residents told AFP.
The shooting began shortly after midnight, according to residents of a neighbourhood near the airport.
Calm returned two hours later, they told AFP.
🔴 #Niger 🇳🇪 | Face aux informations jugées fausses diffusées par certains médias étrangers sur une prétendue attaque de l’aéroport de Niamey, le gouverneur de la région d’Agadez, le Général de Division Ibrah Boulama Issa, a formellement démenti ces allégations.
📷 RTN pic.twitter.com/WhT0taMSbl— AES Alerte (@Aesalerte) January 29, 2026
It was not immediately clear what had caused the gunfire and whether there were any casualties.
The sound of sirens from fire trucks heading towards the airport could also be heard in the early hours of the morning, according to local residents.
An online activist who supports the military rule, Ibrahim Bana, posted a video on Facebook in which he called on people to turn out on the streets of the capital to “defend the country.”
Jihadist violence
The country’s largest international airport is also the headquarters of a joint force created by Niger, Burkina Faso and Mali to combat jihadist groups waging deadly violence in the region.
Since taking over the country, Niger’s military leadership has forced out French and US forces who had been helping to combat the jihadists.
Niger and its neighbours, also led by military juntas, have teamed up to create their own confederation, the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), and have announced the creation of a 5,000-strong force for joint military operations.
#Breaking
A passenger flight from Algiers to Niamey has been diverted to #Burkina_Faso, amid heavy gunfire and explosions at the international airport of the Nigerien capital – @BrantPhilip_ #Niamey #Niger https://t.co/pVIh4RVRr3 pic.twitter.com/MYWFOnmKJp— ⚡️🌎 World News 🌐⚡️ (@ferozwala) January 29, 2026
According to ACLED, an NGO that tracks conflict casualties globally, jihadist violence killed nearly 2,000 people in 2025 in Niger.
A huge uranium shipment with an unknown buyer, that left the country’s north in late November, has also been stuck at the airport for weeks.
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Source: AFP

