24 Nigerian-born Female Students Liberated Over a Week After Kidnapping

A group of two dozen West African young women who were abducted from the educational institution over a week ago were liberated, government officials confirmed.

Attackers invaded the Government Girls Comprehensive Senior Secondary School situated within local province last month, fatally wounding a worker and seizing two dozen plus one scholars.

Head of state the president commended law enforcement concerning the "immediate reaction" to the incident - despite the fact that specific details regarding their liberation remained unclear.

Africa's most populous nation has suffered multiple incidents of abductions over the past few years - including over 250 children abducted from religious educational institution last Friday remaining unaccounted for.

Through an announcement, an appointed consultant within the government verified that each young woman taken from the school in Kebbi State had returned safely, mentioning that this event caused similar abductions in two other local territories.

Tinubu said that more personnel are being positioned towards high-risk zones to avert further incidents involving abductions".

Through another message through social media, government leadership commented: "Aerial forces is to maintain ongoing monitoring across distant regions, aligning missions together with infantry to properly detect, isolate, disrupt, and eliminate any dangerous presence."

Exceeding 1,500 children were taken hostage from Nigerian schools in recent years, when multiple young women were taken hostage amid the infamous major capture incident.

On Friday, a minimum of three hundred students and employees were taken from an educational institution, a Catholic boarding school, in Nigeria's Niger state.

Fifty of those captured at learning institution have since escaped as reported by the Christian Association - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.

The leading religious leader within the area has commented that the administration is undertaking "little substantial action" to rescue captured persons.

The capture incident at the school marked the third instance impacting the country within seven days, pressuring President Bola Tinubu to call off journey to the G20 summit held in the southern nation days ago to address the situation.

United Nations representative the diplomat requested the international community to try everything possible" to help measures to bring back captured students.

The envoy, ex-British leader, commented: "The duty falls upon us to make certain educational institutions are safe spaces for learning, rather than places where youths can be plucked from their classroom for criminal profit."

Christy Scott
Christy Scott

A tech enthusiast and writer passionate about emerging technologies and their impact on daily life.