The Jerusalem Post

Parents alarmed as Nigeria hunts for kidnapped children

- • By GARBA MUHAMMAD and HAMZA IBRAHIM

KADUNA, Nigeria (Reuters) – Nigerian soldiers were hunting on Monday for armed kidnappers who seized nearly 300 school pupils in Kaduna state last week, a security source said, as distraught parents sought answers on when they would be reunited with their children.

The source said the army’s Kaduna-based One Division was leading the operation and “will soon have the bandits in their sights.”

The soldiers were backed by the local police, intelligen­ce agency and air force, as well as the Kaduna state vigilance service, a vigilante group that knows the local terrain, the source added.

“The security agencies and the state government are working tirelessly to ensure the freedom of all the abducted students and pupils,” said Muhammad Shehu Lawal, a spokespers­on for Kaduna state governor, without giving details. The Nigerian army did not respond to requests for comment.

The mass kidnapping last Thursday, the first since July 2021, shattered the dusty town of Kuriga, 90 km. from Kaduna state capital, with parents waiting for answers from authoritie­s.

Kidnapping­s at schools in Nigeria were first carried out by jihadist group Boko Haram, who seized more than 200 students from a girls’ school in Chibok in Borno state a decade ago. Some of the girls have never been released.

But the tactic has since been adopted by criminal gangs without any ideologica­l affiliatio­n seeking ransom payments, with authoritie­s seemingly powerless to stop them.

The kidnapping­s are tearing apart families and communitie­s who have to pool their meager savings to pay the ransoms, often forcing parents to sell their most prized possession­s like land, cattle and grains to secure their children’s release.

In Nigeria, news of kidnapping­s often fades quickly as abductions have become an almost daily occurrence.

But in Kuriga, anxious parents were growing weary.

Bala Ibrahim, whose son is among the missing children, said there was no update from local authoritie­s on the whereabout­s of the pupils.

“The only thing we know for sure has happened since the abduction is that soldiers have been deployed and have blocked all routes linking Birnin-Gwari and Zamfara (state) forest,” Ibrahim told Reuters by phone.

“The soldiers are in the bush going after the kidnappers.”

 ?? (Reuters) ?? A BOY holds a sign to protest the kidnapping of hundreds of school pupils by gunmen after a Friday prayer, in Kaduna, Nigeria, last week.
(Reuters) A BOY holds a sign to protest the kidnapping of hundreds of school pupils by gunmen after a Friday prayer, in Kaduna, Nigeria, last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel