Police in Nigeria secure release of 100 kidnapping victims
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[July 21, 2021]
LAGOS (Reuters) - Police and
government authorities have secured the release of 100 people, including
women, children and nursing mothers, who were kidnapped from their
village in northwestern Nigeria over a month ago, a local police
spokesperson said.
Nigeria is battling an increase in armed robberies and kidnappings for
ransom, mainly in northwestern states, where thinly deployed security
forces have struggled to contain the rise of armed gangs, commonly
referred to as bandits.
The released captives had been abducted on June 8 from Manawa village in
Zamfara state, Mohammed Shehu, the state's police spokesperson, said in
a statement sent to Reuters on Wednesday.
He said their release had been secured "without giving any financial or
material gain."
"They will be medically checked and debriefed before (being) reunited
with their respective families," the statement added.
While northeastern Nigeria has faced a decade of insecurity, including
attacks by Islamist militants including Islamic State-allied Boko Haram,
the current wave of kidnappings is primarily financially motivated.
Lagos-based consultancy SBM Intelligence estimates that kidnappers took
2,371 people across Nigeria in the first half of this year, demanding
ransoms totalling 10 billion naira ($24.33 million).
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A flag of the Nigeria Police Force flies next to the Nigerian
national flag at the Louis Edet House, headquarters of the police in
Abuja, Nigeria December 5, 2017. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde -
RC1748F58D00
The bulk of those were abducted in the northern
states of Zamfara, Kaduna and Niger. SBM said it could not
accurately assess how much has been paid in ransoms.
Over 200 students as well as scores of others taken in kidnapping
raids are still being held captive.
($1 = 411.0000 naira)
(Reporting By Libby George, additional reporting by Maiduguri
newsroom and Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Editing by Joe Bavier)
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