Two dozen Nigerian Female Students Freed After Eight Days After Kidnapping

A group of two dozen West African female students captured from a boarding school more than seven days back were liberated, government officials announced.

Attackers raided a learning facility located in northwestern region recently, killing one staff member and seizing two dozen plus one scholars.

Head of state Bola Tinubu praised law enforcement concerning the "immediate reaction" to the incident - while the circumstances surrounding their freedom remained unclear.

West Africa's dominant power has experienced multiple incidents of kidnappings during current times - amounting to two hundred fifty youths captured at religious educational institution last Friday yet to be located.

Through an announcement, a special adviser to the president asserted that each young woman captured at the school within the region were now safe, noting that the incident triggered imitation captures across further local territories.

National leadership stated that more personnel are being positioned to "vulnerable areas to avert more cases related to captures".

Via additional communication through social media, government leadership commented: "The Air Force is to maintain ongoing monitoring over the most remote areas, aligning missions alongside land forces to accurately locate, isolate, interfere with, and eliminate every threatening factor."

Exceeding 1,500 children have been abducted from Nigerian schools over the past decade, when two hundred seventy-six students got captured in the notorious Chibok mass abduction.

Recently, at least three hundred students and employees were abducted from a learning facility, a Catholic boarding school, located within Niger state.

Several dozen people abducted from educational facility managed to get away according to religious organizations - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.

The leading religious leader in the region has stated that the administration is undertaking "no meaningful effort" to rescue those still missing.

This kidnapping at the school was the third to hit Nigeria in a week, compelling national leadership to cancel journey international conference taking place in the African country days ago to manage the crisis.

UN education envoy the diplomat urged world leaders to try everything possible" to support efforts to recover captured students.

Brown, a former UK prime minister, said: "It's also incumbent on us to make certain learning facilities provide protected areas for learning, rather than places where youths might get taken from their classroom through unlawful means."

Pamela Swanson
Pamela Swanson

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