El Dorado News-Times

School abductions said to threaten Nigeria’s future

- CHINEDU ASADU

LAGOS, Nigeria — Mounting school abductions in Nigeria have disrupted the educations of more than 1.3 million children in Africa’s most populous country, where 10 million children are not attending school, the United Nations says.

“Children are traumatize­d. Parents are scared. Teachers and school administra­tors are afraid. Attacks on schools are gradually spreading to areas not known to insurgenci­es. With education under attack, the collective future of Nigeria is under threat,” said Edward Kallon, U.N. resident coordinato­r in Nigeria.

The West African nation has seen at least 10 abductions in the past 12 months in which 1,436 students have been taken, according to U.N. Children’s Agency Nigeria Representa­tive Peter Hawkins.

About 200 students are still being held and 16 have died in the attacks, he said.

“From September 2020 to

June/July 2021, up to 1.3 million children in total have been affected at some point during the academic year or learning interrupte­d at some point,” Hawkins said.

School kidnapping­s by gunmen — whom analysts identify as mostly young, former nomadic cattle herders — have taken place in nine states, and targets have included everyone from preschoole­rs to university students.

The military is now carrying out special operations in Zamfara state to root out the attackers, known as bandits, from their hideouts.

Schools are set to open and begin the academic year this month, but many educationa­l facilities have been shut by governors in the northwest and central parts of Nigeria amid efforts to contain the security challenge.

Last week, as news broke of the abduction of 73 students in Zamfara, authoritie­s closed all primary and secondary schools across the state, and three days later local media reported that telecommun­ications access in the state has been blocked.

Some of the freed schoolchil­dren said they were warned not to return to school or they would face further violence.

“They asked us not to go back to school, that they will make sure they shut down all the schools in Kaduna state,” said 20-year-old Victory Sani, who was one of the nearly 40 students who were held in a forest for seven weeks after they were kidnapped in Kaduna State.

Loveth Daniel, 19, who was also abducted in that attack in March, said she does not plan to return to school in Nigeria. “If God opens the way for me, seriously, I don’t wish to go to any school as far as it is (in) Nigeria,” she said. “I am not going to any school in Nigeria again.”

The health of the freed students is also a source of concern. Some of those who have been seized are as young as 4, and parents have said that after selling off most of what they have to pay ransoms, they don’t have enough to pay their children’s medical bills.

“We struggled in prayer to rescue them (and) we have to struggle hard to improve their health,” said Saidu Tegina, whose two children were among the 91 kidnapped in Niger State.

Nigeria’s federal and state government­s should “do more” to protect schools from attacks, said U.N. coordinato­r Kallon. That’s a challengin­g task for Nigerian security forces who have multiple security challenges in various parts of the country.

In Kankara, in Katsina state where more than 300 schoolchil­dren were kidnapped from a boarding school in December and later released, the government closed the facility and transferre­d the remaining students to another school.

Musbau Murnai, whose 12-year-old son was among those kidnapped, said his son will remain at home until the security situation improves.

“You cannot go anywhere (in the community) because of fear of attack,” he said.

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