Ninety children abducted from a school in Nigeria were reunited yesterday with their parents after being held captive for nearly three months, part of a wave of mass kidnappings by armed gangs that have spread fear across the north of the country. “Today is the happiest and most joyful day for me and my family,” said Ali Gimi, whose five children were among those kidnapped from an Islamic school in Niger state on May 30.
“We had lost our joy and happiness. This is like a dream, after I had started losing hope,” he said. “As I am speaking to you, the whole of our family has gathered at my house to celebrate their safe return.”
Authorities say 136 children were initially seized at the school, though some later escaped. One, a five year old boy, died during captivity. The kidnappers had initially said six had died, but this proved to be a lie to scare parents into paying the ransom.
“We suffered terribly in their hands,” one child, Ahmed Mohamed, told journalists. “They tied us up from morning till evening.” Mass kidnappings of schoolchildren, once a notorious tactic by militants to intimidate the population, have become a money-spinning industry for armed gangs demanding ransom payments. Authorities say 1,000 children have been abducted since December in northwestern Nigeria.
The 90 schoolchildren, along with two other abductees who were not identified, were released late on Thursday. Parents had sent a total of 65mn naira ($160,000) and six motorbikes as ransom, three parents told Reuters. In a separate incident yesterday, kidnappers also released 15 students and four staff members who were taken earlier this month from an agricultural college in Zamfara state, a school source told Reuters.
The government has implored states not to pay ransoms, but desperate parents and communities often raise the funds themselves.
“We will do whatever it takes to bring them to justice,” Niger state Governor Abubakar Sani Bello said of the kidnappers. “We have put in place all necessary measures to hunt down and prosecute those involved in this heinous act.”
Schoolchildren kidnapped from a seminary three months ago walk from a van as they are reunited with their parents in Minna after their gunmen captors freed them from forest hideouts.