Twenty-four from Nigeria Female Students Liberated More Than Seven Days After Kidnapping
A total of two dozen Nigerian-born girls captured from a learning facility more than seven days back were liberated, the country's president announced.
Gunmen raided a learning facility situated within northwestern region last month, taking the life of an employee and seizing two dozen plus one scholars.
Head of state Bola Tinubu commended military personnel for their "swift response" following the event - although specific details surrounding their freedom had not been clarified.
West Africa's dominant power has experienced multiple incidents of abductions in recent years - with more than 250 children taken from a Catholic school recently yet to be located.
Via official communication, an appointed consultant to the president confirmed that every student taken from educational facility in Kebbi State were now safe, noting that this event triggered similar abductions in two other local territories.
National leadership said that additional forces would be deployed in sensitive locations to avert further incidents involving abductions".
In a separate post using digital platforms, government leadership commented: "Military aviation must sustain ongoing monitoring throughout isolated territories, aligning missions alongside land forces to effectively identify, separate, disturb, and eliminate all hostile elements."
Exceeding fifteen hundred students got captured from Nigerian schools in recent years, during which two hundred seventy-six students were abducted during the notorious Chibok mass abduction.
Days ago, at least numerous pupils and workers got captured at an educational institution, faith-based academy, situated in Niger state.
Fifty of those captured at the school managed to get away according to religious organizations - yet approximately numerous individuals haven't been located.
The leading religious leader within the area has stated that the administration is undertaking "insufficient measures" to rescue those still missing.
The capture incident at the school was the third affecting the nation over recent days, compelling President Bola Tinubu to cancel journey global meeting taking place in the African country recently to deal with the emergency.
United Nations representative the official urged world leaders to try everything possible" to support efforts to bring back the abducted children.
Brown, ex-British leader, commented: "It's also incumbent on us to ensure that educational institutions provide protected areas for education, instead of locations where youths could be removed from learning environments for criminal profit."