Daily Press

More kidnapping­s haunt Nigerians

Armed groups gain funding for crimes through ransoms

- By Chinedu Asadu

KADUNA, Nigeria — His weak body stood in the doorway, exhausted and covered in dirt. For two years, the boy had been among Nigeria’s ghosts, one of at least 1,500 schoolchil­dren and others seized by armed groups and held for ransom.

But paying a ransom didn’t work for 12-year-old Treasure, the only captive held back from the more than 100 schoolchil­dren kidnapped from their school in July 2021 in the northweste­rn Kaduna state.

Instead, his captors hung on, and he had to escape the forests on his own in November.

Treasure’s ordeal is part of a worrying new developmen­t in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country, where the mass abduction of 276 Chibok schoolgirl­s a decade ago marked a new era of fear —with nearly 100 of the girls still in captivity. Since the Chibok abductions, at least 1,500 students have been kidnapped, as armed groups increasing­ly find in them a lucrative way to fund other crimes and control villages in the nation’s mineral-rich but poorly policed northweste­rn region.

The Associated Press spoke with five families whose children have been taken hostage in recent years and witnessed a pattern of trauma and struggle with education among the children. Parents are becoming more reluctant to send their children to school in parts of northern Nigeria, worsening the education crisis in a country of over 200 million where at least 10 million children are out of school — one of the world’s highest rates.

The AP could not speak with Treasure, who is undergoing

therapy after escaping captivity in November. His relatives, however, were interviewe­d at their home in Kaduna state, including Jennifer, his cousin, also kidnapped when her boarding school was attacked in March 2021.

“I have not recovered, my family has not recovered, (and) Treasure barely talks about it,” said Jennifer, 26, as her mother sobbed beside her. “I don’t think life will ever be the same after all the experience.”

Unlike the Islamic extremists that staged the Chibok kidnapping­s, the deadly criminal gangs terrorizin­g villages in northweste­rn Nigeria are mostly former herdsmen who were in conflict with farming host communitie­s, according to authoritie­s. Aided by arms smuggled through Nigeria’s porous borders, they operate with no centralize­d leadership

structure and launch attacks driven mostly by economic motive.

Some analysts see school kidnapping­s as a symptom of Nigeria’s worsening security crisis.

According to Nigerian research firm SBM Intelligen­ce, nearly 2,000 people have been abducted in exchange for ransoms this year. However, armed gangs find the kidnapping of schoolchil­dren a “more lucrative way of getting attention and collecting bigger ransoms,” said the Rev. John Hayab, a former chairman of the local Christian associatio­n in Kaduna who has often helped to secure the release of abducted schoolchil­dren like Treasure.

The security lapses that resulted in the Chibok kidnapping­s 10 years ago remain in place in many schools, according to a

recent survey by the United Nations children’s agency’s Nigeria office, which found that only 43% of minimum safety standards such as perimeter fencing and guards are met in over 6,000 surveyed schools.

Bola Tinubu, who was elected president in March 2023, had promised to end the kidnapping­s while on the campaign trail. Nearly a year into his tenure there is still “a lack of will and urgency and a failure to realize the gravity of the situation, or to respond to it,” said Nnamdi Obasi, senior adviser for Nigeria at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“There is no focused attention or commitment of resources on this emergency,” he added.

Treasure was the youngest of more than 100 children seized from the Bethel Baptist High School in the Chikun area of Kaduna

in 2021. After receiving ransoms and freeing the other children in batches, his captors vowed to keep him, Hayab said.

That didn’t stop his family from clinging to hope that he would one day return home alive. His grandmothe­r, Mary Peter, remembers the night he returned home, agitated and hungry.

“He told us he was hungry and wanted to eat,” she said of Treasure’s first words that night after two years and three months in captivity.

Nigerian lawmakers in 2022 outlawed ransom payments, but desperate families continue to pay, knowing kidnappers can be ruthless, sometimes killing their victims when their relatives delay ransom payments often delivered in cash at designated locations.

And sometimes, even paying a ransom does not guarantee freedom. Some victims have accused security forces of not doing anything to arrest the kidnappers even after providing informatio­n about their calls and where their hostages were held.

No one in the Peter family recovered after their experience with kidnapping.

Jennifer says she rarely sleeps well even though it’s been almost three years since she was freed by her captors. Her mother, a food trader, is finding it hard to raise capital again for her business after using most of her savings and assets inherited from her late husband to pay for ransoms.

“Sometimes, when I think about what happened, I wish I did not go to school,” said Jennifer with a rueful grin. “I just feel sorry for the children that are still in boarding school because it is not safe. They are the main target.”

 ?? ??
 ?? CHINEDU ASADU/AP ?? Freed students from the LEA Primary and Secondary School Kuriga arrive March 25 at the government house in Kaduna, Nigeria.
CHINEDU ASADU/AP Freed students from the LEA Primary and Secondary School Kuriga arrive March 25 at the government house in Kaduna, Nigeria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States