Nigeria says 75 abducted children released amid army crackdown
		
		 
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		 [September 13, 2021] 
		MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) - 
		Seventy-five children who were kidnapped from their school in Nigeria's 
		northwestern Zamfara State have been released after their abductors came 
		under pressure from a military crackdown, a state official said on 
		Monday. 
		 
		Gunmen took the students from the village of Kaya on Sept. 1, the latest 
		in a spate of mass kidnappings from schools across the region. 
		 
		More than 1,100 children have been seized since December last year. 
		Authorities say they were abducted by heavily armed gangs of bandits 
		seeking ransoms. 
		 
		A spokesman for the Zamfara State governor said no ransom had been paid 
		for the 75 children, who had been received by the governor at his 
		headquarters. The spokesman sent reporters images of boys and girls in 
		uniform, seated inside what looked like a meeting room. He did not say 
		when they were freed. 
		
		
		  
		
		Zamfara has been one of the states worst-hit in the abduction crisis. On 
		Sept. 3, authorities ordered a phone and internet blackout there while 
		security forces cracked down on the gangs. 
		 
		Since then, the state has been largely cut off from the outside world 
		and while rumours have circulated about what is going on, the military 
		have given little information. 
		
            Since Sunday night, several Nigerian media outlets 
		have reported that bandits in Zamfara had attacked a military base and 
		killed 12 soldiers. Asked to comment, defence spokesman Major General 
		Benjamin Sawyerr neither denied nor confirmed the reports. 
		 
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			Security forces patrol as people wait for the arrival of the rescued 
			schoolgirls in Jangebe, Zamfara, Nigeria March 3, 2021. REUTERS/Afolabi 
			Sotunde/File Photo 
            
			
			  
            "Operations are ongoing in that area and there is total shutdown of 
			communications. Our troops are consolidating on successes recorded 
			so far. Information on ongoing operations will be premature at this 
			stage," he said. 
			 
			In a separate statement on Sunday, Sawyerr said the military were 
			aware of pictures and videos circulating online, purportedly showing 
			the dumping in mass graves of bodies of people killed in the Zamfara 
			crackdown. He said the images were not genuine. 
			 
			"The viral pictures being circulated have nothing in common with the 
			ongoing operations," he said, adding that the armed forces were 
			acting "in strict compliance with the rules of armed conflicts". 
			 
			(Reporting by Maiduguri Newsroom and Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Writing 
			by Estelle Shirbon; Editing by Andrew Heavens) 
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