Nigerian army rescues abducted Kaduna students
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[March 25, 2024]
By Ahmed Kingimi
MAIDUGURI, Nigeria (Reuters) -The Nigerian army on Sunday rescued
students and staff who were abducted by gunmen from a school in the
country's north earlier this month, the military said, days before the
deadline for a ransom payment.
School officials and residents had said 287 students were taken on March
7 in the town of Kuriga in the northwestern state of Kaduna. A military
spokesperson said 137 hostages - 76 of them female and 61 male - were
rescued in the early hours of Sunday in neighboring state of Zamfara.
"In the early hours of 24 March 2024, the military working with local
authorities and government agencies across the country in a coordinated
search and rescue operation rescued the hostages," Major General Edward
Buba said in a statement. |
A boy holds a sign to protest against, what a teacher, local councilor
and parents said, the kidnapping of hundreds school pupils by gunmen
after the Friday prayer in Kaduna, Nigeria March 8, 2024.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo |
A security source said the students had been freed in a forest
and were being escorted to Kaduna's capital for medical tests
before being reunited with their families.
Kaduna Governor Uba Sani earlier put the number of kidnapped at
over 200. Given the discrepancies in numbers reported, it was
unclear if any hostages remained captured. Some Kuriga elders
said Sani had told them all hostages had been freed.
Jibrin Aminu, a spokesperson for the Kuriga parents, said he
would clarify numbers on Monday when families had been given the
chance to "take account of their kidnapped children."
The rescue took place just days before a deadline to pay a 1
billion naira ($690,000) ransom for their release.
Abductions at Nigerian schools were first carried out by
jihadist group Boko Haram, which seized 276 students from a
girls' school in Chibok in northeastern Borno State a decade
ago. Some of the girls have never been released.
But since then the tactic has been adopted by criminal gangs
without ideological affiliation.
Kidnappings by criminal gangs demanding ransoms have become an
almost daily occurrence, especially in northern Nigeria, tearing
apart families and communities that must pool savings to pay
ransoms, often forcing them to sell land, cattle and grain to
secure the release of their loved ones.
(Reporting by Ahmed Kingimi in Maiduguri with additional
reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja and Garba Muhammad in
Kaduna; writing by MacDonald Dzirutwe; editing by David Goodman,
Mark Heinrich and Ros Russell)
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