Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

317 girls abducted from Nigerian school

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LAGOS, Nigeria — Police on Friday confirmed the abduction of 317 girls from their school in northweste­rn Nigeria, the second case of a mass school kidnapping in less than 10 days.

The children were kidnapped by unidentifi­ed gunmen from their secondary school in the town of Jangebe, in Zamfara State, early Friday, the state’s police spokespers­on Mohammed Shehu said.

Police and the military have launched a joint search and rescue operation and sent “a heavily armed reinforcem­ent team” to Jangebe, according to Mr. Shehu.

Aid organizati­on Save the Children said it had received reports of up to 450 kidnapped schoolgirl­s, saying it was “horrified” about the incident.

“Sadly, this is only the latest in a series of abductions in the region. Over the past months, hundreds of children in Nigeria have gone through the trauma of being abducted by armed groups,” the organizati­on said in a statement.

Initial estimates had placed the number of abducted girls at 300.

“Two of my daughters aged 10 and 13 are among the about 300 girls the school authoritie­s told us are missing,” parent Nasiru Abdullahi told dpa via telephone.

Over the course of several hours, the gunmen invaded the school, “gathered the girls together and marched them into the forest,” Jangebe resident Musa Mustapha told dpa.

The armed group also attacked a nearby military camp and checkpoint, located about a quarter mile from the school, said Mr. Mustapha, adding that the gunmen had operated in two groups, with one ambushing the army and the other invading the school.

This month, there has been a sharp increase in kidnapping­s by armed gangs in Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation.

On Feb. 16, at least 44 people, most of them children, were abducted from a school near the community of Kagara in west-central Niger State.

Three days earlier, unknown gunmen kidnapped 20 people on their way home from a wedding in the same state.

In December, 300 schoolboys were abducted in northweste­rn Katsina State.

While the whereabout­s of the abductees from Kagara and Katsina State remain unknown, 53 people, mostly women and children, were released in west-central Nigeria earlier this week, after being detained by a criminal gang.

Those released included the abducted wedding guests. But some of the others had been detained by the unnamed armed group for even longer, according to government officials.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity for any of the abductions. It is not known whether the government paid a ransom for the release.

Mass abductions are common in the West African nation. They are sometimes carried out by Islamist terrorists, who force girls and women into marrying their fighters or becoming suicide bombers, and use other abductees as laborers.

Other kidnapping­s are carried out by criminal gangs for ransom.

 ?? Ibrahim Mansur/Associated Press ?? A student reacts after gunmen abducted 317 girls from a boarding school in northern Nigeria on Friday. It was the latest in a series of mass kidnapping­s of students.
Ibrahim Mansur/Associated Press A student reacts after gunmen abducted 317 girls from a boarding school in northern Nigeria on Friday. It was the latest in a series of mass kidnapping­s of students.

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