Daily Nation Newspaper

15 victims escape sleeping guards

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ABUJA - Fifteen Nigerian hostages have escaped from their abductors as they slept, weeks after they were among more than 130 pupils and teachers snatched by gunmen from an Islamic seminary, the school's headteache­r said yesterday.

On May 30 around 200 motorcycle-riding gunmen from one of the gangs known locally as bandits stormed Tegina town in Niger state, abducting 136 pupils and some teachers, according to authoritie­s.

Late on Saturday, 15 of the hostages slipped past the bandits guarding them in a house in a remote village in neighbouri­ng Zamfara state while they were asleep, said Abubakar Alhassan, the headteache­r of Salihu Tanko Islamic school where the hostages were taken.

"I can confirm that 15 of the hostages escaped from their captors," Alhassan said.

"They escaped by sneaking out of the house where they were kept after the guards forgot to lock the door from outside," he said.

The escapees, nine boys and six girls, including a seven-year old girl, trekked through the night to Birnin Gwari district in Kaduna state.

The 15 had been separated from the other hostages and taken across the border into Zamfara state where they were beaten.

"We believe their escape was a divine response to their abductors who told them to ask God to come and rescue them whenever they pleaded to be spared from the beatings and insults," he added.

On Monday, Niger state governor Sani Bello met with parents of the abducted pupils and the seminary officials in his office where he promised to rescue their kidnapped children.

Northwest and central Nigeria are a hub of criminal gangs who raid villages, steal cattle and kill or abduct residents for ransom.

The criminals are driven by financial motives and have no ideologica­l leanings, but there is growing concern they are being infiltrate­d by jihadists from the northeast who are waging a 12- year old insurrecti­on. – AFP.

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