Mon 22 December 2025:
In late November, hundreds of students and staff were kidnapped from St Mary’s co-educational boarding school in north-central Niger State.
It has not been made public who seized the children from their boarding school, or how the government secured their release.
Kidnappings for ransom are a common way for criminals and armed groups to make quick cash in Nigeria.
But a spate of mass abductions in November put an uncomfortable spotlight on the country’s already grim security situation.
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Assailants kidnapped two dozen Muslim schoolgirls, 38 church worshippers, and a bride and her bridesmaids, with farmers, women and children also taken hostage.
The kidnappings also come as Nigeria faces a diplomatic offensive from the United States, where President Donald Trump has alleged that there have been mass killings of Christians in Nigeria that amounted to a “genocide”, and he threatened military intervention.
Nigeria’s government and independent analysts reject that framing, which has long been used by the Christian right in the US and Europe.
The attack came amid a wave of mass abductions reminiscent of the 2014 Boko Haram kidnapping of schoolgirls in the town of Chibok.
The West African country suffers from multiple interlinked security concerns, from armed groups in the northeast to armed “bandit” gangs in the northwest.
The exact number of children taken from St Mary’s has been unclear throughout the ordeal.
Initially, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) said that 315 students and staff were unaccounted for after the attack in the rural hamlet of Papiri.
About 50 of them escaped immediately afterwards, and on December 7, the government secured the release of about 100 people.
That would leave about 165 thought to be still in captivity before Sunday’s announcement that 130 were rescued.
However, a UN source told the AFP news agency that all those taken appeared to have been released, as dozens thought to have been kidnapped had managed to run off during the attack and make their way home.
The accounting has been complicated because the children’s homes are scattered across swaths of rural Nigeria, sometimes requiring three or four hours of travel by motorbike to reach their remote villages, the source said.
The source told the AFP that “the remaining set of girls/secondary school students will be taken to Minna”, the capital of Niger State, on Monday.
“We’ll have to still do final verification,” Daniel Atori, a spokesman for CAN in Niger State, told the AFP.
SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES
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