Jamaica Gleaner

They went to school but ended up as hostages

287 children are missing in Nigeria’s forests

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SECURITY FORCES swept through large forests in Nigeria’s northwest region on Friday in search of nearly 300 children abducted from their school by motorcycle-riding gunmen in the latest mass kidnapping, which analysts and activists blamed on the failure of intelligen­ce and a slow security response.

The abduction of the 287 children in Kaduna state, near the West African nation’s capital, is one of the largest school kidnapping­s in the decade since the kidnapping of schoolgirl­s in Borno state’s Chibok village in 2014 stunned the world. Analysts and activists say the security lapses that allowed that mass abduction remain.

The victims of the latest attack – among them at l east 100 children aged 12 or under – were surrounded and marched into a forest just as they were starting the school day, said locals in Kuriga town, located 55 miles (89 kilometres) from the city of Kaduna. One man was shot dead as he tried to save the students, school authoritie­s said.

As Kaduna Governor Uba Sani and security officials met with aggrieved villagers on Thursday, they pleaded with the governor to ensure the release of the students and secure their town – like many in the area, once a bustling agrarian community but now sparsely populated and where roads are often avoided because of rampant kidnapping­s.

“Please stay and help us, please don’t leave us,” one woman cried as the governor’s convoy sped off.

Kaduna police spokesman Mansur Hassan told The Associated Press that a search operation is taking place in the nearby forests, which often serve as enclaves for armed gangs. “All the security agencies are trying their best to ensure the rescue of the children,” Hassan said.

The school, which had no fencing, was “surrounded from all angles” by the gunmen who arrived on motorcycle­s just after 8 a.m., said Joshua Madami, a youth leader in the area.

Security forces did not arrive at the scene until several hours later, locals said, prompting concerns from families and analysts that the gunmen might have gone deep into the forest with the children.

Confidence MacHarry, a security analyst with the Lagos-based SBM Intelligen­ce firm, said such delayed response is common and worsens the situation in hotspots, in addition to the failure to act on intelligen­ce.

“I am confident that the victims will be rescued,” said Nigerian President Bola Tinubu, who was elected last year after promising to end the country’s kidnapping crisis. “Nothing else is acceptable to me and the waiting family members.”

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks, but locals blamed it on the bandits who carry out frequent mass killings and abductions for huge ransoms in remote villages across Nigeria’s northwest and central regions.

The bandits are mostly herders who had been in conflict with host communitie­s. They are different from the Islamic extremist rebels who had abducted more than 200 people, mostly women and children, in recent days.

School abductions across northern Nigeria have reduced since early last year, but the structural conditions enabling them have remained, said James Barnett, a researcher specialisi­ng in West Africa at the US-based Hudson Institute. The bandits, he said, have focused on consolidat­ing their influence over rural communitie­s, often in the form of levies.

“Since the start of the year, we’ve seen the bandits being more aggressive,” said Barnett. “This attack may be an attempt by some of the gangs to signal to the government that they can turn back the clock to 2021, when mass kidnapping­s led to a wave of school closures across the northwest.”

 ?? AP ?? A woman cries as she calls out to the government to help and rescue school children that were kidnapped by gunmen in Chikun, Nigeria on Thursday.
AP A woman cries as she calls out to the government to help and rescue school children that were kidnapped by gunmen in Chikun, Nigeria on Thursday.

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