Twenty-four from Nigeria Young Scholars Liberated More Than Seven Days Following Capture

Approximately 24 Nigerian-born young women taken hostage from the boarding school more than seven days back are now free, national leadership confirmed.

Attackers invaded the Government Girls Comprehensive Senior Secondary School located in Kebbi State recently, taking the life of an employee and abducting two dozen plus one scholars.

The nation's leader government leadership commended military personnel for their "quick action" post-occurrence - while precise conditions of the girls' release were not specified.

West Africa's dominant power has witnessed a spate of captures during current times - including over 250 children abducted from faith-based academy last Friday still missing.

Through an announcement, a special adviser to the president asserted that every student abducted from educational facility within the region had been accounted for, stating that this event triggered copycat kidnappings across further regional provinces.

Tinubu stated that extra staff are being positioned in sensitive locations to avert further incidents of kidnapping".

Through another message using digital platforms, government leadership stated: "The Air Force must sustain continuous surveillance across distant regions, synchronising operations alongside land forces to effectively identify, contain, disrupt, and eliminate all hostile elements."

More than fifteen hundred students got captured within learning facilities over the past decade, during which 276 girls were abducted during the infamous large-scale kidnapping.

Recently, a minimum of numerous pupils and workers were abducted from a learning facility, a Catholic boarding school, located within regional territory.

Fifty of those abducted from learning institution have since escaped according to the Christian Association - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.

The primary religious leader in the region has stated that Nigeria's government is performing "little substantial action" to rescue those still missing.

This kidnapping within educational premises represented the third occurrence to hit Nigeria within seven days, pressuring President Bola Tinubu to call off journey international conference taking place in the African country days ago to manage the crisis.

UN education envoy Gordon Brown requested world leaders to make maximum effort" to support efforts to recover captured students.

The representative, ex-British leader, said: "We also have responsibility to ensure that learning facilities remain secure environments for learning, not spaces where children might get taken from educational settings for illegal gain."

Michelle Jackson
Michelle Jackson

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