Tag: bandits

  • Sheikh Ahmad Gumi for beginners – Owei Lakemfa

    By Owei Lakemfa.

     

    The abduction of 317 school girls of the Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe, Zamfara State, last Friday, February 26 is even more tragic because we as parents and adults once again failed to protect the Nigerian child. It is distressing that this is the fourth mass abduction of children in their schools within three months: Katsina, Kankara, Kagara, and now Jangebe.

     

    All these children have done is to be caught in their dilapidated and rundown schools in their pursuit of priceless education which after 60 years of independence we have deprived most of our citizens.

     

    The frustration expressed by members of the Jangebe community who attacked police, security and even media vehicles to stop them from accessing the community in the wake of the abduction, is an indication of the loss of faith in the Nigerian state and system. How can they have faith when they knew that 42 persons, including students, staff and their families from the Government Science College, Kagara, Niger State abduction 10 days earlier, were at the time, despite vows by the federal and state governments and duplicitous ‘negotiators’, still in the hands of their abductors?

     

    How dare we blame these hapless people whose state governor, Bello Matawalle, eight days before the abductions, had lectured Nigerians during his visit to President Muhammadu Buhari that these terrorists who have murdered thousands of people are not criminals? Governor Matawalle had told he world: “Not all of them are criminals… some of them, sometimes were cheated by so- called vigilante groups. They normally go to their settlements and destroy property and take their animals. They did not have anyone to speak with, so sometimes they go for revenge. When the vigilante group attacks them, they go for reprisals. That is exactly what happened.” So if the killers are engaged in “revenge” and “reprisals”, why would the victim-communities trust the same state to protect them and their children?

     

    Yet, these terrorists are not without their strong advocates like Sheikh Ahmad Gumi who presents the murderous bandits – who kidnap, steal, rape, maim and kill – as the victims, and the ordinary Nigerians who are kidnapped in villages and towns, footpaths and highways, as the predators. Gumi argues: “I think it is a population that is pushed by circumstances into criminality…They are peaceful people. But something happened that led them to this.”

     

    Gumi, who campaigns for amnesty for the terrorists and their empowerment with state funds, is so passionate that he even advises the criminals on how to present a better public image by avoiding the kidnapping of women wearing hijab. So the bandits can either release such women or yank their hijab off before video-taping them. In other words, as far as Gumi is concerned, it is in order to kidnap non-Muslim women.

     

    He made wild, unsubstantiated claims that the Nigerian Army has been carrying out genocide against the bandits and tops it with wilder claims that only non-Muslim soldiers kill them. When Gumi met the abductors of the Kagara school children, he told them: “What I want you people to understand is, soldiers that are involved in most of the criminalities (fighting them) are not Muslims. You know, soldiers have Muslims and non- Muslims. The non-Muslims are the ones causing confusion just to ignite a crisis.” The implication of his claims is that Muslim soldiers spare the killer-bandits. If this were so, it would be manifest treason because he is accusing such soldiers of colluding with the bandits to attack innocent Nigerians.

     

     

    When Gumi, a former Captain in the Nigerian Army, was asked on AIT if, in his knowledge, soldiers are deployed on operations based on their religious faith, he could provide no answer as this would defeat his claims that in combat, only non-Muslim soldiers fight bandits. If Gumi, an Ahmadu Bello University-trained medical doctor, can advocate that the bandits should attack or kidnap only non-Muslims and kill only non-Muslim soldiers, I have no doubt that despite his Hippocratic oath, non-Muslim patients would be dead meat under his scalpel.

     

     

    Gumi’s vile narrations try to side-track the fact that the victims of the bandits are not selected based on their religion. In fact, that the bandits are interested in ransom payment not the religion of their victims. Sadly, most of the victims of the bandits, especially in the hotbeds of Katsina, Zamfara and Niger states, are Muslims. The innocent children they are kidnapping en-masse whether in Jangebe, Katsina, Kankara or Kagara, are predominantly Muslim. How is it difficult for a Sheikh to understand that a criminal is a criminal irrespective of his religion? How can Gumi claim to be a peacemaker when he is the chief spokesperson and negotiator-in-chief of the bandits?

     

    He also makes a laughable claim that the bandits are actually some liberation fighters engaged in an “ethnic” war. He said: “When I listened to them, I found out that it is a simple case of criminality which turned into banditry, which turned into ethnic war, and some genocide too behind the scene; people don’t know.” Who told him the Fulani are engaged in an ethnic war against the rest of the country?

     

    I am not taken in by Gumi flaunting his Sheikh regalia about forests claiming to seek freedom for the masses being ceaselessly abducted; when a cat is claiming piety, he is simply looking for food. Also, I do not begrudge him selling himself to state and federal governments as an experienced freelance negotiator. But the governments should properly assess him. It is not just the huge holes in Gumi’s narratives and child-like claims that are glaring, some bolts also appear to be missing.

     

     

    In this matter of banditry and mass kidnapping in the North, it is quite in order for the state governors to privatize their responsibility as chief security officers of their states and award the contract to Gumi as ambassador plenipotentiary to traverse bandit hideouts and negotiate the release of the victims. The only thing is that in picking a chief negotiator, they need to subject him to some test.

     

    Gumi is like a fat cat advocating for the rat race; claiming humans are inhuman towards them, intent to wipe them out and that rats have the fundamental right to roam around, especially in the kitchen and eat whatever they find without fear of being poisoned.

     

    The agenda of Gumi is clear, therefore, he cannot be speaking in the interests of the victims of kidnapping and banditry. Even if the wolf claims to be the spokesperson of the sheep, its interests and those of the sheep are not the same; for the wolf, both the sheep and other animals it can pounce on, are game. So, it is not difficult to decipher Gumi.

     

  • Bandits kill 12 vigilantes, community members in Sokoto

    Bandits kill 12 vigilantes, community members in Sokoto

    Suspected bandits have killed 12 people in Illella Amarawa in the Illela Local Government Area of Sokoto State.

    A resident of the area who confirmed the killings said the gunmen came to the area around 2:00 am and kidnapped a popular businessman in the community, Rabi’u Amarawa.

    Following the attacks, community members were said to have alerted the vigilantes who mobilised and chased the bandits in a bid to rescue the abductee.

    The bandits with superior firepower open fire at the vigilantes and members of the community and in the process killed twelve persons.

    The Sokoto State Police Command confirmed the killing to on Monday.

    Spokesman of the command, Sanusi Abubakar, said members of the affected community resorted to self-help without calling on police, adding that it led to heavy casualties.

    He explained that the police authorities have commenced investigation and also deployed five units, each comprising 63 well-armed policemen to areas prone to banditry in the state.

  • Bandits kill ten in fresh Kaduna attacks

    Bandits kill ten in fresh Kaduna attacks

    No fewer than ten people have been killed after bandits attacked three villages in Zango Kataf and Chikun local government areas of Kaduna state.

    The latest incident comes barely 24 hours after seven people were killed by bandits in Igabi and Kajuru local government areas of the state.

    The bandits according to the Kaduna State Commissioner for internal Security and Home Affairs, Samuel Aruwan, attacked
    Kurmin Gandu village in Zango Kataf local government and killed five people.

    In addition, they also burnt down ten houses, two motorcycles, and 50 bags of ginger, while some dry season farmers lost water pumping machines and other valuables around the Zango Urban general area.

    Aruwan explains that some survivors of the attack are recuperating in the hospital. Meanwhile, while search and rescue operations are in progress.

    Similarly, security agencies reported that armed bandits attacked Sabon Gayan and Ungwan Turai villages in Chikun local government area and killed five persons.

    Following the attack, troops of Operation Thunder Strike are combing identified criminal hideouts in the Sabon Gayan area, following reports that several bandits sustained bullet wounds.

  • TRENDING VIDEO: Kidnapping of school students by bandits is a lesser evil – Sheikh Gumi

    TRENDING VIDEO: Kidnapping of school students by bandits is a lesser evil – Sheikh Gumi

    Islamic Scholar, Ahmad Gumi on Monday described the kidnapping of school children by bandits as lesser evil.

    Gumi said kidnapping school students was a lesser evil when compared to the ransacking of towns and killing of its residents.

    He made the remark while featuring on BBC Pidgin.

    Watch Video:

     

     

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    The cleric also stated that his meetings was yielding positive results as bandits are now careful about human lives.

    According to Gumi: “Kidnapping children from school is a lesser evil because in the end, you can negotiate and now bandits are very careful about human lives.

    “Before, the mission of bandits was to go into a town, ransack it and kill people. By this, I can say our preaching is working and hopefully, we are coming to an end of banditry in Zamfara and other states.

    “Bandits are more careful about lives now and just want to do sensational attacks which would bring attention to themselves.”

    Lately, the activities of banditry has been on the rise in the Northern part of Nigeria.

    Recall that Gumi had appealed to the federal government to grant amnesty to bandits.

    The Islamic Scholar had said amnesty to bandits would help calm down the tensed insecurity situation in the North.

  • Bandits strike again in Kaduna, kill seven

    Bandits strike again in Kaduna, kill seven

    The Kaduna State Government said on Sunday that bandits killed seven persons in different parts of the state.
    Mr Samuel Aruwan, the Commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, confirmed the incident in a press statement on Sunday in Kaduna.
    Aruwan said, “on a sad note, security agencies reported that bandits attacked some people in Kajinjiri village, Igabi local government area, and killed two residents”.
    He said one person sustained gunshot injuries and was receiving treatment at a nearby health facility.
    “Similarly, in Rago village, also in Igabi local government area, bandits killed two locals,” he said.
    He explained that in a separate incident, gunmen invaded Kutura station, Kajuru local government area, and killed three residents.
    The Commissioner said Governor Nasir El-Rufai has noted the reports with sadness, and condoled the families of those killed in both attacks, while offering prayers for the repose of their souls.
    He also wished the injured victims from Kajinjiri village a quick recovery.
  • Bandit terrorism: Gumi’s unsettling revelations, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    Bandit terrorism: Gumi’s unsettling revelations, By Ehichioya Ezomon

    By Ehichioya Ezomon
    Nigeria has become a land of the absurd. Foreign non-state actors, parading as herdsmen-turned-bandits-kidnappers, have taken over the country, roaming freely from North to South.
    They leave in their wake an orgy of violence: Rape, maim and kill indiscriminately. Destroy farmlands and communities. Seize and rename ancestral and communal lands and forest reserves.
    The bandits use the woodlands as staging posts to kidnap and hide victims, including hundreds of school children seized in the past weeks in Katsina, Niger and Zamfara. Survivors speak of forests littered with decomposing bodies of victims of kidnapping.
    What have we done in the face of these assaults by bandits from neighbouring countries that depend on Nigeria’s “Father Christmas” generosity for their economic survival and sustenance?
    Our leaders, rather than meet the bandits, force with force, tell us: “Let’s dialogue, appease and forgive the marauders so they lay down their arms and be ‘reintegrated’ into the society.”
    Do the bandits belong in Nigeria to be “reintegrated”? Even if they do, should we negotiate with the criminals for terrorising a sovereign State, so they’d not take over the entire country?
    Curiouser is that the purported initiative of a Kaduna-based Islamic scholar, Sheikh Ahmad Gumi, who has lately frequented the bandits’ hideouts in the North, has a tacit official blessing.
    Series of photographs have emerged in the media, showing Sheikh Gumi, in consultation with the bandits. In the first photograph, he’s seated, and flanked on both sides and behind by armed bandits.
    In some of the latest photographs, Sheikh Gumi is handing over leather pouches (said to contain money) to a bandit leader; he’s chatting with some bandits; and one’s paying obeisance to him.
    Is this for real? A deadly bandit leader kowtowing to Sheikh Gumi? Is that genuine reverence or there’s more than meets the eye in the scenes playing out between the cleric and bandits?
    Due to his antecedent of stoking religious embers with his preachings, Sheikh Gumi, posing as an “ambassador of peace,” may have some scratching their heads in disbelief.
    And owing to the lucrativeness of kidnapping, labels as the “new oil well” for criminals, it’s easy to conjecture that Sheikh Gumi, a “go-between,” has some pecuniary interest in these negotiations.
    But who wouldn’t exploit such a unique position of having the eye and ear of the bandits, who’ve turned kidnapping into an ATM to siphon millions, if not billions from the government coffer?
    Surely, Sheikh Gumi is playing a dual role in his negotiations with the bandits to lay down their arms for amnesty: A voice for the deviants and an unofficial representative of the authorities.
    Yet, more worrisome are Sheikh Gumi’s revelations and utterances on the go. First: That contrary to public perception, the government, and security agencies know the bandits’ hideouts.
    Second: That the Fulani herdsmen are fighting for existence, as they’ve been killed in hundreds. Hence, “they cross borders (into Nigeria) to defend their kinsmen each time they are attacked.”
    Third: That Muslim soldiers, deployed to combat the bandits, don’t shoot at the criminals. Thus, inferring that only non-Muslim (read Christian) soldiers shoot and kill Fulani herdsmen.
    Fourth: That in revenge, the bandits shouldn’t randomly kill people – both Muslim and non-Muslim – but target the non-Muslims, particularly among the security operatives.
    Fifth: That the herdsmen are “militants” comparable with the Niger Delta militants, who, for years, kidnapped oil workers for ransom and attacked and destroyed oil installations in the zone.
    Six: That the bandits should be treated like the Niger Delta militants, and granted amnesty in order to lay down their arms, for peace to return to the North-West and elsewhere.
    Seven: That only appeasement (for instance, paying out millions in ransom and/or buying off the bandits) and amnesty could stop the bandits from their kidnapping enterprise.
    Polity watchers have repeatedly asked: How come Sheikh Gumi knows the bandits’ enclaves in the forests spanning many states that the government and security operatives do not know?
    Sheikh Gumi has told us the truth: The authorities know the bandits’ hideouts, but are afraid to make the past mistake of attacking them. This time, they prefer to negotiate with the bandits.
    That the Fulani are fighting for existence is baloney. Nobody threatens Fulani’s existence. Are school children threatening their existence? Concerned citizens only want to stop herdsmen from banditry, kidnapping, destruction, killing, and seizure of lands.
    Sheikh Gumi’s claim that only non-Muslim soldiers kill bandits is better left for the Military to handle, but his advice for bandits to target non-Muslims in their revenge has exposed him as a religious fundamentalist, using the bandits to advance selfish agenda.
    Sheikh Gumi’s off-the-cuff assertion that the bandits are “militants” is fallacious. How could the bandits, killing Nigerians without provocation, be compared with the Niger Delta militants?
    The Niger Delta militants, whose operations were virtually limited to the South-South, didn’t needlessly and recklessly kill Nigerians, but attacked economic interests, such as oil installations, in the zone.
    The militants kidnapped some expatriate and Nigerian oil workers, to draw attention to the plight of the Niger Delta, the cash-cow of Nigeria, and yet neglected in all facets of development index.
    So, the Niger Delta militants were fighting for a cause, and that’s why they’re styled “Freedom Fighters.” What cause are the herdsmen-bandits-kidnappers fighting for?
    Is it to be allowed to cattle-graze Nigeria from North to South, or to rape, kill and kidnap for ransoms, and seize and rename indigenous communal lands and forest reserves as their own?
    No wonder Sheikh Gumi’s misconception of the bandits as deserving of amnesty, which he’s sold to state governors and federal authorities that’ve fallen for the gambit!
    What the authorities don’t admit openly is that negotiating with bandits or terrorists entails spending millions/billions in the hope of buying off future criminal operations by the bad guys.
    But as Governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State has counselled in an interview on the Hausa Service of the BBC, it’s impossible to reform a Fulani man, who has tasted millions from kidnapping.
    “Whoever tells me that the Fulani man that started kidnapping, and receiving millions will go back to his old ways (to earn N100,000 a year after selling his cow), is only deceiving himself,” el-Rufai said.
    El-Rufai, who dismissed appeasement of bandits, which Sheikh Gumi had sold to him, wants a “hold-no-prisoner” approach to dealing with the issue of herdsmen’s banditry and kidnapping.
    “I want a situation where security outfits will launch a coordinated war against them by going into the forests to bomb their hideouts once and for all. Anything short of that will not end the current security situation,” el-Rufai said.
    “Why should they (bandits) be compensated after killing people (and) they destroyed their houses? Who offended them? Therefore, I don’t believe in what he (Gumi) is doing: that they should be forgiven and compensated.
    “In fact, if any bandit is arrested in Kaduna State, he will be killed because Kaduna is at war with bandits. They kill without mercy; they don’t believe in the (Islam) religion.”
    El-Rufai’s radical proposal is borne out of experience, having paid out millions to appease cross-border bandits that attacked Kaduna State. The monetary appeasement didn’t stop the bandits’ menace.
    But Sheikh Gumi says appeasement is the cure-all for bandit-terrorism, and the federal and state authorities are falling over themselves to follow his counsel. Why?
    Perhaps because of Sheikh Gumi’s dire warning: “Fulani bandits are not Boko Haram, but we have to be very careful. If the pressure is too much, I am afraid they can be influenced by Boko Ham. We have seen the signs that Boko Haram is going to infiltrate them.”
    Is this the game Nigeria wants to play with criminals spreading death and destruction from cattle herding to kidnapping and to seizure of lands of indigenous peoples? What absurdity!
    * Mr. Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
  • Why bandits kidnap students in Northern Nigeria – CNG

    Why bandits kidnap students in Northern Nigeria – CNG

    The Coalition of Northern Groups (CNG) has said the recent spate of kidnapping of students in the Northern part of Nigeria is a ploy designed to cripple education in the region.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports CNG made this known in a statement signed and released on Sunday by its spokesman, Abdul-Azeez Suleiman.

    “We call on northern leaders to interrogate the extent of levity of the federal authorities in not being able to anticipate and checkmate the manoeuvres of marauding bands of criminals that roam northern communities and operate at will targeting such soft spots as schools.

    “We see the recent escalation of kidnaps of school children as a grand design to cripple the educational viability of the northern region after having messed up its economy and mutual cohesion,” Suleiman stated.

    While saying it is excited over the return of staff and students of Government Science College Kagara, Niger State, the group warned that it is not yet celebration time, stating that President Muhammadu Buhari owes it a duty to explain why there is a high level of insecurity in the northern part of Nigeria.

    It noted that the past few days would have been difficult for the kidnap victims, their families and the people of Niger State.

    “The situation is also difficult for absolutely everyone as we wonder about the future and worry about each other, our neighbours, our friends, our families and ourselves,” the statement added.

    “The CNG, which has been on the ground in Minna and addressed a press conference Friday afternoon calling for urgent action to rescue the captives, feels proud today that it has once again played a major role in getting authorities to act. While we’re still on the ground waiting to verify the release and the condition of the captives, we share in the joy of the parents and the Kagara community and Niger State generally.”

  • Northern Elders to Governors: FG has failed, secure your states from violent criminals

    Northern Elders to Governors: FG has failed, secure your states from violent criminals

    The Northern Elders Forum on Saturday said Nigerians have lost faith in the power and will of the government to protect them from incessant bandit attacks after more than 300 schoolgirls were kidnapped at a school in Zamfara on Friday.

    According to a statement signed by the Forum’s spokesman, Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, the life of the average is becoming increasingly endangered by the day.

    The Forum advised Governors, especially those from the Northern region, to explore all lawful avenues to improve the security of citizens.

    Governors should also ramp up their support to the security services, the Forum added.

    They advised citizens to organise and raise their levels of vigilance but not to take laws into their hands.

    “Parents should not be discouraged from sending children to schools, and all governments must take firmer measures to secure learning institutions,” the Forum’s statement said.

     

    Read the Forum’s full statement below:

     

    27th February, 2021
    STATEMENT OF NORTHERN ELEDERS FORUM FOLLOWING KIDNAPPINGS OF STUDENTS IN NORTHERN SCHOOLS

    Northern Elders Forum shares the profound shock and outrage of Nigerians at the spate of kidnappings of boarding school children in different parts of the North. The latest reported kidnapping of more than hundreds of female students in Zamfara State follows the abduction of student of GSC, Kagara, Niger State. Apart from the likelihood of similar abductions re-occurring as bandits engage in copy cat crimes in a region that is basically unprotected, these abductions will severely damage the poor state of education in the North, particularly girl-child education.

    It has become painfully obvious that the Federal Government is unable to muster the will or the capacity to limit exposure of Nigerians to violent criminals. Governors have been left to quarrel over causes and strategies. Many are taking steps that have dubious legal foundations, most of which merely compound the State of Security of the citizen in the country. In spite of assurances from the Federal Government that it will end banditry and kidnappings, the life of the Nigerian is becoming more endangered by the day, and citizens have lost faith that Governments will reverse the successes of the criminal against defenceless citizens.

    The Forum advises particularly Northern Governors to explore all lawful avenues to improve the Security of citizens. While they should improve their support to the Military, the Police and Security Agencies, they should also explore avenues which give them more powers to secure citizens. of the constitution which gives states powers to establish policing structures, including those with specialization such as forest rangers should now be pursued as a matter of national priority.

    Governors should explore issues which aid the spread of banditry at local and community levels and resolve them. They should also intensify multi-pronged approaches to ending banditry and kidnappings, including measures which prevent the continuation of these criminal activities by those who show a genuine willingness to stop. Bandits who refuse to submit to mediation and cessation of criminal activities should be treated in accordance with the laws of the country.

    Citizens should organize and raise their levels of vigilance. They should resist the temptation to take laws into their hands, and improve the manner they work with Security Agencies. Parents should not be discouraged from sending children to schools, and all governments must take firmer measures to secure learning institutions.

    Dr Hakeem Baba-Ahmed
    Director, Publicity and Advocacy
    Northern Elders Forum
    Abuja.

  • Why we fear to deploy massive force against bandits -Buhari

    Why we fear to deploy massive force against bandits -Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari has sent out a strong warning to bandits and their sponsors, as he condemned the latest abduction of Jangebe schoolgirls, as inhumane and totally unacceptable.

    Sending out a strong warning to bandits and their sponsors, he said that the only reason his government had not deployed soldiers against the bandits “is the fear of heavy casualties of innocent villagers and hostages who might be used as human shields by the bandits.”

    He urged the states “to review their policy of rewarding bandits with money and vehicles, warning that the policy might boomerang disastrously.”

    He also advised states and local governments to be more proactive by improving security around schools and their surroundings.

    Reacting to the kidnapping of 317 schoolgirls in Government Girls Secondary School, Jangebe in Zamfara State, Buhari said that his administration will not succumb to blackmail by bandits who target innocent school students in the expectations of huge ransom payments.”

    “No criminal group can be too strong to be defeated by the government,” he said.

    “The only thing standing between our security forces and the bandits are the rules of engagement.”

    “We have the capacity to deploy massive force against the bandits in the villages where they operate, but our limitation is the fear of heavy casualties of innocent villagers and hostages who might be used as human shields by the bandits,” he said.

    The President said: “our primary objective is to get the hostages safe, alive and unharmed.”

    President Buhari noted that “a hostage crisis is a complex situation that requires maximum patience in order to protect the victims from physical harm or even brutal death at the hands of their captors.”

    He warned the bandits: “Let them not entertain any illusions that they are more powerful than the government. They shouldn’t mistake our restraint for the humanitarian goals of protecting innocent lives as a weakness or a sign of fear or irresolution.”

  • [2014 – 2021] Timeline of mass school kidnappings in Nigeria

    [2014 – 2021] Timeline of mass school kidnappings in Nigeria

    Gun wielding daredevils have for a couple of years launched coordinated attacks on educational institutions in Nigeria particularly in the northern part.

    Unfortunately, school children have become the latest high-profile kidnapping targets in these attacks.

    What stated as a strange occurrence in Chibok, Borno State in 2014 is fast becoming the norm seven years after, with the latest happening on Friday (today).

    Suspected gunmen attacked a school in Zamfara State, abducting scores of students in the third mass abduction in the past three months.

    The attackers stormed the Government Girls Secondary School in Jangebe in the wee hours of the day.

    Hours later, the Zamfara State Police Command confirmed that three hundred and seventeen students (317) were abducted in the latest kidnapping, a development which Amnesty International described as an “attack on education in Northern Nigeria.”

    TheNewsGuru.com, TNG listed below a compilation of the attacks by suspected gunmen from 2014 to date:

    14th April 2014: Boko Haram terrorists invade Chibok School

    The first of these school abductions dated back to April 14th, 2014 when terrorist group Boko Haram attacked the Girls Secondary School in Chibok, a town on the border between Borno and Adamawa states.

    About two hundred students were said to have been kidnapped during the attack in the northeast, a region ravaged by incessant assaults by the terror group.

    The country’s security agencies in the wake of the abduction moved to rescue the schoolchildren. The efforts have yielded some results as 107 of them have been reunited with their families.

    19th Feb. 2018: Boko Haram terrorists abduct Dapchi School Girls in Yobe State

    Barely four years after the attack on Chibok, the insurgents took their onslaught to Yobe, another state in the troubled northwest region. The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed confirmed that 110 students were kidnapped after Boko Haram invaded the Government Girls Science Technical College (GGSTC) in Dapchi, on Monday, February 19, 2018.

    When the gunmen attacked the all-girls boarding school, many residents of the town had thought they were security forces as they came in camouflaged vehicles.

    Although most of the students have reunited with their families after they were released (on March 21, 2018) by their abductors, Leah Sharibu, is yet to be freed by the gunmen. Reports suggest the 14-year-old, a Christian, wasn’t freed with the others because she refused to convert to Islam.

    Her continued stay in the terrorists’ den has become a subject of national and global interests. But the Nigerian government says it is committed to getting her out of captivity

    11th Dec. 2020: Gunmen Kidnap Kankara Boys

    While the country battles to eradicate terror attacks from Boko Haram, mass kidnapping of schoolchildren spread to the northwestern region. On Friday, December 11th, bandits took three hundred and three students of Government Science Secondary School, Kankara, Katsina into captivity.

    The incident which happened just as President Buhari embarked on a week-long vacation in his home state of Katsina, security experts believe, further underscored the porous nature of Nigerian schools.

    But, a week after the students were taken into captivity, their abductors released them. The government denied paying a ransom to secure the students from the all-boys educational institution.

    The presidency had said the release of the students is a pointer to the administration’s resolve to ensure the safety of Nigerians, thanking security agencies for their swiftness.

    Feb. 17th 2021: Bandits abduct another 41 In Kagara, Niger State

    Gunmen invaded a school in Niger State on Wednesday, February 17th, 2021 kidnapping 41 persons.

    The gunmen raided the Government Science College Kagara, Shiroro Local Government Area of Niger State, capturing students, teachers, and their family members from the school. Twenty-seven students were among the abductees.

    Buhari had, following the incident, given a marching order to security agents to rescue the students and ensure they return and are reunited with their parents unhurt.

    The State governor, Abubakar Sani Bello had also ordered the closure of all boarding schools in the northcentral state, a move he said, was to forestall similar mass abduction.

    26th Feb. 2021: 317 Female Students Abducted In Jangebe, Zamfara State

    Less than ten days after the bandits raided Kagara, gunmen kidnapped 317 schoolgirls from the Government Girls Science Secondary School Jangebe in Jangebe, Zamfara State. The incident happened on Friday, February 26th, 2021

    The all-female school located in Talata-Mafara Local Government Area of the state was attacked past midnight. Police authorities in Zamfara say rescue efforts are in top gear, calling for calm among residents of the state.