The Jerusalem Post

Nigerian army rescues abducted Kaduna students

- • By AHMED KINGIMI

MAIDUGU5RI, 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 a deadline to pay a $690,000 ransom went into effect.

The kidnapping of 287 students on March 7 in Kuriga, a dusty town in the northweste­rn state of Kaduna, was the first mass abduction in Africa’s most populous nation since 2021, when more than 150 students were taken from a high school in Kaduna.

Military Spokespers­on Maj.-Gen. Edward Buba said 137 hostages – 76 females and 61 males – were rescued in the early hours of Sunday in the neighborin­g state of Zamfara.

“In the early hours of March 24, 2024, the military, working with local authoritie­s and government agencies across the country in a coordinate­d search and rescue operation, rescued the hostages,” Buba said in a statement.

A security source said earlier 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.

It was not immediatel­y known whether security forces had to extract the hostages from the hands of their captors or whether there had been any clash in the process.

Kaduna Governor Uba Sani had earlier put the total number of hostages at over 200. Officials were not immediatel­y available for comment on the discrepanc­y in reported hostage numbers.

Abductions at Nigerian schools were first carried out by the 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.

Since then, the tactic has been widely adopted by criminal gangs without ideologica­l affiliatio­n.

Last week, the gunmen demanded $690,000 for the release of the missing children and staff. The government had said it would not pay that or any other ransom. The practice was outlawed in 2022.

But 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.

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