The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Boko Haram extremist group claims abduction of students

- By Sam Olukoya and Carley Petesch

LAGOS, NIGERIA » Rebels from the Boko Haram extremist group claimed responsibi­lity Tuesday for abducting hundreds of boys from a school in Nigeria’s northern Katsina State last week in one of the largest such attacks in years, raising fears of a growing wave of violence in the region.

More than 330 students remained missing Tuesday from the Government Science Secondary School in Kankara after gunmen with assault rifles attacked their school Friday night, although scores of others managed to escape.

The government and the attackers were negotiatin­g the fate of the boys, according to Garba Shehu, a spokesman for Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari.

“The kidnappers had made contact and discussion­s were already on, pertaining to the safety and return” of the children to their homes, said Shehu on Twitter during talks with Katsina Gov. Aminu Masari. Neither official said whether the negotiatio­ns are with Boko Haram or another group.

Masari said security agencies “deployed for rescue operations have also informed us that they have located their position.”

The Daily Nigerian said it received an audio message from Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau claiming the abduction, although there has been no independen­t verificati­on of its authentici­ty.

Past abductions

The Islamic extremist group has carried out mass abductions of students before. The most serious took place in April 2014, when more than 270 schoolgirl­s were taken from their dormitory at the Government Secondary School in Chibok in northeaste­rn Borno State. About 100 of the girls are still missing.

In February 2014, 59 boys were killed during a Boko Haram attack on the Federal Government College Buni Yadi in Yobe State.

In the audio message about Friday’s attack, Shekau said his group abducted the schoolboys because Western education is against the tenets of Islam.

More than 600 students attend the school. Many were able to escape during a gunfight between the attackers and the police, according to state police spokesman Gambo Isah.

Students corroborat­ed this account with various news agencies, saying many of them were also rounded up and forced to walk to a nearby forest, where some were also able to flee.

Several armed groups operate in northern Nigeria, where Katsina State is found. It was originally believed that the attackers were bandits, who sometimes work with Boko Haram.

Bandits have operated in the northwest region for some time, and kidnapping­s have increased in recent years. Amnesty Internatio­nal says that more than 1,100 people were killed in the first six months of 2020 in violence related to attacks by bandits.

A joint rescue operation was launched Saturday by Nigeria’s police, air force and army after the military engaged in gunfights with bandits after locating their hideout in the Zango/ Paula forest.

Violent extremism

If Boko Haram is proved to be behind the abduction, it could mean a new wave of religious extremism is on the rise in Nigeria. For more than 10 years, the group has engaged in a bloody campaign for introducin­g strict Islamic rule, but it has been mainly active in northeast Nigeria, not in the northwest, where Katsina State is found. Thousands have been killed and more than 1 million people displaced by the violence.

Nnamdi Obasi of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group said a shift of Boko Haram’s activities to the northwest would have serious security implicatio­ns, because it could partner with other armed criminal groups known to carry out attacks and collect payments from households and markets.

“They are Iike mini-armies that are able to carry out operations in defiance of the security forces, and it is worrisome,” Obasi told The Associated Press.

The local armed groups have no religious ideology, however, and Obasi said Boko Haram’s movement into the northwest would create “a risk of convergenc­e between criminal groups and jihadist groups. The trajectori­es are very disturbing.”

Because the northwest is more homogeneou­sly Islam than the northeast, there are more potential recruits for radicalism.

‘Unacceptab­le’

Friday’s abduction has become a rallying cry for Nigerians fed up with growing violence, with #BringBackO­urBoys trending on Twitter as people express their frustratio­ns. A similar #BringBackO­urGirls became an internatio­nal rallying cry for the Chibok girls.

“Before now, it has been bandits and kidnappers terrorizin­g our state, but little has been done to address the situation,” said Mallam Saidu Funtua, a member of a local civil society organizati­on in Katsina State.

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