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		'They said they'll shoot': Nigerian schoolgirls recount kidnap ordeal
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		 [March 02, 2021] 
		By Afolabi Sotunde and Seun Sanni 
 GUSAU, Nigeria (Reuters) - Gunmen have 
		freed all 279 girls kidnapped from a boarding school in northwest 
		Nigeria, officials said on Tuesday, as victims described how their 
		abductors had beaten and threatened to shoot them.
 
 The pupils from Jangebe, a town in Zamfara state, were abducted just 
		after midnight on Friday. All had now been freed, Zamfara Governor Bello 
		Matawalle said.
 
 Umma Abubakar, among those released, described their ordeal.
 
 "Most of us got injured on our feet and we could not continue trekking, 
		so they said they will shoot anybody who did not continue to walk," she 
		told Reuters.
 
 Boarding schools in northern Nigeria have become targets for mass 
		kidnappings for ransom by armed criminal gangs, a trend started by the 
		jihadist group Boko Haram and continued by its offshoot, Islamic State 
		West Africa Province.
 
 Friday's raid on the Government Girls Science Secondary School was the 
		second such abduction in little over a week in the northwest, a region 
		increasingly targeted by gangs.
 
		
		 
		
 Governor Matawalle said "repentant bandits" working with the government 
		under an amnesty programme had helped secure the Jangebe girls' release.
 
 "Those repentant ones are working for us, and they are working for the 
		government and they are working for security," he said.
 
 Initial reports put the number kidnapped at 317, but Zamfara government 
		spokesman Sulaiman Tanau Anka said the total was 279, as some of the 
		girls had run into the bush at the time of the raid.
 
 'THEY HIT US WITH GUNS'
 
 Reuters journalists in Zamfara's state capital, Gusau, saw dozens of 
		girls in Muslim veils sitting in a hall in a state government building. 
		A few parents arrived, and one father wept with joy after seeing his 
		daughter.
 
 Most of the girls appeared unharmed, but at least a dozen were sent to 
		hospital.
 
 Farida Lawali, 15, told how she and the other girls had been taken to a 
		forest by the kidnappers.
 
 "They carried the sick ones that cannot move. We were walking in the 
		stones and thorns," she said, sitting in the government house building, 
		covered in a light blue veil.
 
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			Girls who were kidnapped from a boarding school in the northwest 
			Nigerian state of Zamfara, are seen after their release in Zamfara , 
			Nigeria March 2, 2021. REUTERS/Afolabi Sotunde 
            
			 
            "They started hitting us with guns so that we could move," she 
			added. "While they were beating them with guns, some of them were 
			crying and moving at the same time."
 President Muhammadu Buhari, who met his top security officials on 
			Tuesday, said news of the girls' release brought "overwhelming joy".
 
 He warned against paying ransoms to kidnappers, which the national 
			government has denied doing.
 
 "Ransom payments will continue to prosper kidnapping," Buhari said, 
			urging the police and the military to bring the kidnappers to 
			justice.
 
 One father, whose seven daughters were among those kidnapped and 
			freed, said the incident would not deter him from schooling his 
			children.
 
 "It's a ploy to deny our girls ... from getting the Western 
			education in which we are far behind," Lawal Abdullahi told Reuters. 
			"We should not succumb to blackmail. My advice to government is that 
			they should take immediate precautions to stop further abductions."
 
 The U.N. children's agency UNICEF urged the Nigerian government to 
			protect schools so children will not be fearful of going to school, 
			and parents afraid of sending their children to school.
 
 As recently as Saturday, gunmen released 27 teenage boys who had 
			been kidnapped from their school on Feb. 17 in Niger state.
 
 In 2014, Boko Haram abducted more than 270 schoolgirls from the 
			northeasterly town of Chibok, in Nigeria's most high-profile school 
			kidnapping. Around 100 remain missing.
 
            
			 
			(Reporting by Afolabi Sotunde in Gusaur and Alexis Akwagyiram in 
			Lagos; Additional reporting by Ardo Hazzad in Bauchi, Seun Sanni in 
			Gusau, Hamza Ibrahim in Kano, Felix Onuah in Abuja and Maiduguri 
			Newsroom; Writing by Alexis Akwagyiram, Raju Gopalakrishnan and 
			Giles Elgood; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Philippa Fletcher and 
			John Stonestreet) 
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