“It is a day of joy”, welcomed the governor of Kaduna State, Uba Sani, in a press release. Nearly 140 students, victims of one of the largest mass kidnappings recorded in recent years in Nigeria in early March, were released, the army and local authorities announced on Sunday March 24.

“The 137 hostages – 76 girls and 61 boys – were rescued in Zamfara State and will be handed over to the Kaduna State government,” where they were abducted, the army spokesperson said. General Edward Buba.

All students found “safe and sound”

According to Uba Sani, the governor of Kaduna State, "the kidnapped Kuriga school students" have been found "safe and sound".

General Buba told AFP that all the little captives had been rescued.

The number of victims had previously been estimated at around 250 by teachers and villagers. However, the figures are often revised downwards in Nigeria with the return home of villagers who had fled the attacks, but had not been victims.

The children, aged 8 to 15 according to press reports, were taken on March 7 by armed men who attacked their school in the village of Kuriga, in the northwest of the country, scene of kidnappings in on a large scale in recent years.

The tragedy had provoked a national controversy over insecurity in this country, the most populous in Africa – and massive searches by the army, particularly in the country's forests, according to official officials.

Without specifying the circumstances of the release, Governor Uba Sani thanked the military, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, the National Security Advisor and “all Nigerians who prayed fervently for the safe return of the students.”

Kidnapping industry

Gangs, locally called "bandits", are behind these mass kidnappings in the northwest and north-central Nigeria. They target schools, villages and highways, where they can quickly kidnap large numbers of people for ransom.

Officially, the payment of ransom has been prohibited since a law adopted in 2022 and the authorities deny any payment when the hostages are released following negotiations with the kidnappers.

See alsoNigeria: the government excludes paying a ransom to the perpetrators of recent kidnappings

Last weekend, kidnappers kidnapped more than 100 people in two attacks in Kaduna state.

On Saturday, the army announced that it had rescued 16 students kidnapped just two days after the Kuriga attack, from a school in Sokoto, also in the northwest of the country.

In the early 2000s, kidnappers targeted oil workers in the Niger Delta, but hostage-taking has since become a domestic industry for criminal gangs and jihadists.

According to Nigerian risk consultancy SBM Intelligence, 4,777 people have been kidnapped since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu took office in May 2023. Many victims of mass kidnappings remain missing.

With AFP

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