El Dorado News-Times

Nigerians celebrate as 105 pupils freed

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MINNA, Nigeria — Overjoyed parents welcomed home 90 schoolchil­dren who had spent three months held by gunmen in northern Nigeria, though authoritie­s confirmed Friday that one of the kidnapped children had died during the ordeal.

Meanwhile, elsewhere police announced that a second group of 15 students taken earlier this month also were freed, raising hopes across the country’s north that other child hostages could eventually be delivered.

“The happiness can’t be quantified,” said Yahya Aliyu Babangida, 54, a teacher whose two children, 7 and 17, were among those released.

Some of the abducted pupils in Niger state were just 4 years old, he said. Several were undergoing medical treatment after their release late Thursday.

“They are exposed to this harsh weather, no food, mosquitoes everywhere,” he said. “Some of them had never been outside the comfort of their homes.”

News of the children’s release was celebrated across Nigeria, where more than 1,000 students have been kidnapped from schools since December. Most are eventually freed, though about 200 remain missing. The abductions have stepped up pressure on the Nigerian government to do more to secure educationa­l facilities in remote areas.

But questions remained Friday about how much ransom had been paid to secure the children’s release, and if so whether that could fuel further abductions by the unknown armed groups referred to locally as bandits.

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