nigeria news – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 21 Mar 2024 05:28:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png nigeria news – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Nigerian man has a lucky escape during kidnap bid https://artifex.news/article67974972-ece/ Thu, 21 Mar 2024 05:28:53 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67974972-ece/ Read More “Nigerian man has a lucky escape during kidnap bid” »

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The raid on the village in Kaduna States in Nigeria came weeks after around 280 students were abducted from a school in the State.
| Photo Credit: AP

Waking up to a gunman shining a light around his house, Nigerian Yusuf Thomas took his chance to escape when his would-be kidnapper told him to lie still and walked away to make a call.

He was lucky. More than 80 residents from his village in northwest Nigeria’s Kaduna State were snatched after gunmen marched them out of their homes on Sunday evening in the country’s most recent mass abduction for ransom.

The raid on the village in Kajuru district came just weeks after around 280 pupils were abducted from a school by a criminal gang in the same State, prompting a national outcry about Nigeria’s insecurity.

Mr. Thomas thought he would be shot until he managed to escape. “I heard a voice telling me not to raise my head or I’d be shot, so I laid down,” he said.

“When he turned back and was making a call to his colleagues, I used the opportunity to escape.”

Kaduna is one of the northwestern Nigerian States where heavily armed criminal gangs target villages and communities to raid, loot and carry out mass abductions for ransom.

State officials have not given any figures for the kidnapping, but local officials say 87 people, mostly women and children, were taken.



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The resurgence of mass kidnappings in Nigeria | Explained https://artifex.news/article67964680-ece/ Wed, 20 Mar 2024 16:46:09 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67964680-ece/ Read More “The resurgence of mass kidnappings in Nigeria | Explained” »

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The story so far: Battling its worst economic crisis in years, Nigeria is also facing serious security challenges amid a resurgence of kidnappings in its troubled northern region. Over 600 people, including at least 300 schoolchildren, have been kidnapped in the northeastern and northwestern parts of Africa’s most populous nation since the end of February.

The recent surge in abductions after a brief period of relative calm has refocused international attention on the country’s rapidly deteriorating security situation, bringing back to mind the 2014 abductions when Boko Haram insurgents kidnapped 276 girls from a school in Chibok town of Borno State in northeastern Nigeria.

Since the abduction of the Chibok girls, mass kidnappings have been a recurring nightmare, with nearly 1,500 students abducted from schools in 17 different incidents over the past decade. Over 4,000 people have been reportedly kidnapped since May last year after President Bola Tinubu took office. Despite extremist groups and local armed gangs continuing to rely on kidnappings for political and financial gains, the President remains committed to a no-ransom policy.

Also Read | Nigeria’s new President faces old problems

The recent resurgence: what happened?

Reports of a mass abduction first emerged from a remote area in northeastern Borno earlier this year. On February 29, suspected Boko Haram militants abducted at least 200 internally displaced people, mostly women and children, while they were gathering firewood outside their camps, in the Ngala Local Government Area. The United Nations said victims were ambushed near the border with Chad and taken hostage.

In Borno, an estimated 1.9 million out of a total of 3.6 million displaced individuals (as of 2022) live in displacement camps, as per the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC). They often leave their camps to search for food and firewood due to limited aid.

A map of the local government areas in northeastern Borno State of Nigeria.

Similar incidents were reported from the northwestern region in quick succession. On March 7, 287 students were kidnapped from a government school in the Chikun area of Kuriga town in Kaduna State. According to reports, hundreds of gunmen arrived on motorcycles and surrounded the school just as classes were about to start. The attackers abducted children and a few staff members, demanding one billion naira (about US $600,000) for their release.

Around 48 hours later, assailants attacked a boarding school in Sokoto State at around 1 a.m., abducting 15 children from the hostel as they slept. The gunmen fled before security forces could arrive.

Nigerian soldiers patrol the Kuriga school where students were kidnapped, in Kaduna in March 2024.

Nigerian soldiers patrol the Kuriga school where students were kidnapped, in Kaduna in March 2024.
| Photo Credit:
AP

Tragedy struck the northern region again on March 11. Sixty-one people were kidnapped from a remote village in Kaduna. Locals told Reuters that armed men attacked the Buda community around midnight, firing sporadically. Nearly 100 others were abducted by gunmen in two attacks in Kaduna between March 16 and March 17.

The spate of kidnappings drew condemnation from human rights activists, with the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk saying that he was “appalled” by the recurrent mass abductions. “Children have been abducted from schools and women taken while searching for firewood. Such horrors must not become normalised,” Türk said. He called for perpetrators to be identified and brought to account “as a first step towards reining in the impunity that feeds these attacks and abductions.”

Nigeria last experienced a surge in targeted attacks on educational institutions in 2021. Approximately 150 students were kidnapped by armed men in four months. Although most were eventually released, at least five were killed.

The 2014 kidnapping of girls from their dormitory in Chibok continues to be one of the worst crimes committed in recent years.The incident sent shockwaves and sparked the viral #BringBackOurGirls campaign on social media.  Of the 276 abducted, several were forced to marry and endure physical and psychological abuse. A decade later, 98 are still missing.

The tactic has since been adopted by criminal gangs seeking ransom.

Michelle Obama with the campaign slogan, calling for the safe return of the Nigerian schoolgirls.

Michelle Obama with the campaign slogan, calling for the safe return of the Nigerian schoolgirls.

Who’s behind mass abductions?

At the time of the first attack in February, Boko Haram emerged as the primary suspect, given its track record of violence in Nigeria. The group has been engaged in a prolonged insurgency, causing widespread devastation and displacement. As noted earlier, kidnapping has been a key component of their terror tactics.

However, with no organisation claiming responsibility for the recent abductions and assaults, there are suspicions that local armed gangs in these regions, commonly referred to as bandits, might be behind the incidents.

Relatively new actors in the turbulent security landscape, bandits are believed to be an outcome of years of conflict over land and water between nomadic herdsmen and farming communities. . While disputes earlier centred around such basic needs, bandits have evolved into organised armed groups in recent times. Mainly present in the northwestern and central regions of the country, they have taken to looting, kidnapping for ransom, and forcibly seizing control of valuable assets like gold mines and farmlands.

The Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, which analyses political violence and protests worldwide, said in a recent report that while the February kidnapping might be the doing of violent extremist organisations active in the northeast, bandits could be responsible for the three other abduction incidents in March.

What’s fuelling the kidnapping ‘epidemic’?

The rise of kidnapping as a ‘lucrative’ industry in Nigeria has stemmed from a combination of economic, security, and political issues, including a struggling economy, high unemployment rates, surging inflation, increasing food insecurity, and instability in the delta region. Ransom payments have become the primary motivation behind kidnapping incidents, as successive governments have struggled to tackle these complex security challenges.

Africa-focused consulting company SBM Intelligence says Nigeria faces security crises across all six geopolitical zones, including threats from Boko Haram, bandit groups, criminal youth gangs, sea piracy, and agitation by armed separatists. “The country’s security threats vary and overlap. The Boko Haram insurgency is expanding westwards, and the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra’s agitation is becoming more dangerous,” it adds.

Nigeria’s economic challenges have worsened due to monetary policies which caused the currency to plummet against the dollar, leading to widespread protests and increased desperation. This, in turn, drives youth to join armed gangs. The ransom menace has escalated in recent years, with armed gangs controlling significant territories and amassing a formidable arsenal of weapons, even capable of downing military planes. These gangs have seized control of mining sites and farmlands, forcing rural residents into labour and threatening the country’s food security by controlling vital agricultural areas.

As per former federal lawmaker Shehu Sani, bandits target schoolchildren because they know “it will evoke public sympathy for the pupils, and pressure will be mounted on the government to bow to their demands.”

How is the Nigerian government handling the situation?

While government security forces are working to obtain the safe release of the victims, President Bola Tinubu has rejected the idea of paying ransom for nearly 600 people abducted in separate incidents this month. Nigeria’s information minister Mohammed Idris said the President has directed troops to urgently secure the release of hostages without paying a dime for ransom. “The President has directed that security agencies must as a matter of urgency ensure that these children and all those who have been kidnapped are brought back to safety and also in the process ensure that not a dime is paid for ransom,” the Minister said.

Notably, in Nigeria, anyone found paying a ransom to free a hostage could face at least 15 years in jail. This law was enacted in 2022 due to the increasing prevalence of kidnappings for ransom in the region.

Security operations, however, are expected to last months as government forces navigate the remote forest areas where the victims are being held. Activists say the government must initiate dialogue with the bandits to resolve the ongoing conflict, expressing concerns over the potential consequences of using force.

“The Nigerian authorities should seek the safe release of those kidnapped, put in place adequate measures to prevent more kidnappings, particularly of vulnerable students, and hold perpetrators to account,” the Human Rights Watch has said.





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Four police officers among six dead in Nigerian attack https://artifex.news/article67934743-ece/ Sun, 10 Mar 2024 01:20:13 +0000 https://artifex.news/article67934743-ece/ Read More “Four police officers among six dead in Nigerian attack” »

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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is grappling with violence by armed groups in the northwest, known locally as “bandits”, and jihadist insurgents in the northeast.
| Photo Credit: AFP

Armed men accused of belonging to a separatist group killed six people, including four police officers, in southeastern Nigeria’s Ebonyi state, police said on March 9.

The attack occurred early on Friday near a police checkpoint on a road near the city of Abakaliki, said state police spokesman Joshua Ukandu.

A shootout began in which four officers died and two civilians were killed in the crossfire, he added.

The attackers were still on the run;

They are alleged to be members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) movement, which advocates a separate state for the Igbo ethnic group.

Attacks in the southeast are often blamed on IPOB, which systematically denies any involvement in the violence.

Separatism is a sensitive topic in Nigeria, where a three-year civil war broke out in 1967 after Igbo army officers declared an independent Biafra state.

More than a million people died.

President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is also grappling with violence by armed groups in the northwest, known locally as “bandits”, and jihadist insurgents in the northeast.



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Gunmen Kill 14, Kidnap 60 In Attacks In Nigeria https://artifex.news/gunmen-kill-14-kidnap-60-in-attacks-in-nigeria-4420467/ Sun, 24 Sep 2023 22:38:01 +0000 https://artifex.news/gunmen-kill-14-kidnap-60-in-attacks-in-nigeria-4420467/ Read More “Gunmen Kill 14, Kidnap 60 In Attacks In Nigeria” »

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Attacks in the northwest are part of widespread insecurity in Nigeria. (Representational)

Maiduguri, Nigeria:

Gunmen in Nigeria killed eight people on Sunday and kidnapped at least 60 others in two communities of northwest Zamfara state, residents and a local traditional leader said, two days after armed men kidnapped dozens from a university in the state.

Elsewhere, in the northeast of the country suspected Islamist insurgents ambushed a convoy of vehicles under military escort, killing two soldiers and four civilians, said a police source and a motorist who witnessed the attack.

The attackers set fire to five vehicles and drove off with one truck, the witness said.

President Bola Tinubu is yet to spell out how he will tackle widespread insecurity. His economic reforms, including the removal of a costly fuel subsidy and freeing the naira currency, have increased the cost of leaving, angering citizens.

Residents said gunmen early on Sunday tried to attack a forward army base in a rural Magami community of Zamfara, but were repelled. Zamfara is one of the states worst affected by kidnappings for ransom by armed gangs known locally as bandits.

The gunmen in three groups attacked the army base and the communities of Magami and Kabasa, said a traditional leader who declined to be named for security reasons.

He said 60 people, mostly women and children, were kidnapped.

“The bandits rode many motorcycles with guns and other weapons (and) were shooting sporadically,” Shuaibu Haruna, a resident of Magami, told Reuters by telephone.

Four people were killed during the attack, said Haruna, who attended their burial.

Isa Mohd from Kabasa community said four people were also killed and dozens of others kidnapped.

Police and army did not respond to requests for comment.

Attacks in the northwest are part of widespread insecurity in Nigeria. Islamist fighters still carry out deadly attacks in the northeast, gangs and separatists attack security forces and government buildings in the southeast, and clashes involving farmers and herders continue to claim lives.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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24 Female Students Among 30 Kidnapped By Gunmen At Nigerian University https://artifex.news/24-female-students-among-30-kidnapped-by-gunmen-at-nigerian-university-4417354/ Sat, 23 Sep 2023 13:01:28 +0000 https://artifex.news/24-female-students-among-30-kidnapped-by-gunmen-at-nigerian-university-4417354/ Read More “24 Female Students Among 30 Kidnapped By Gunmen At Nigerian University” »

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The attack was the first mass kidnapping since President Bola Tinubu came to power (Representational)

Zamfara, Nigeria:

Gunmen have kidnapped more than 30 people, including at least 24 female students, in a raid in and around a university in northwest Nigeria’s Zamfara state, residents said Saturday.

Dozens of gunmen from criminal gangs called bandits barged into Sabon Gida village on the edge of a Federal University outside the state capital Gusau in a predawn attack on Friday breaking into three female hostels and taking away the occupants, residents told AFP.

The attack was the first mass kidnapping at a college since President Bola Ahmed Tinubu came to power, promising to tackle the country’s security challenges.

“The bandits rode into the village on motorcycles and broke into the hostels and gained access into rooms by bringing down the windows,” Sabon Gida resident Sahabi Musa said.

“They took away at least 24 female students from the hostels along with two male neighbours, one of whom is a staff (member) of the university,” said Musa, who lives close to the hostels.

The attackers went into the university and seized nine welders working on a new building while they were sleeping, said Shehu Hashimu, another resident who corroborated Musa’s account.

One of the welders managed to escape and returned to the school, Hashimu said.

Troops deployed from Gusau, 20 kilometres away and engaged the attackers in a gunfight but a group of the kidnappers herded the hostages away while another group faced the soldiers, the two sources said.

“The attackers had a field day. They operated in the village from 3:00 am to 6:00 am unchallenged before troops arrived,” Hashimu said.

A video shared online after the assault showed ransacked rooms in one of the hostels with their windows pulled down.

Yazid Abubakar, Zamfara state police spokesman, confirmed the attack but declined to provide details, saying security personnel were working to free the captives.

A military officer said a military operation was underway as soldiers were confronting the attackers in a forest close to the nearby town of Tsafe.

“Six of the female students have been rescued by troops who pursued the terrorists into the forest,” said the officer, who asked not to be identified because he was not authorised to speak on the operation.

Zamfara is one of several states in northwestern and central Nigeria terrorised by bandits who raid villages, kill and kidnap residents as well and burn homes after looting them.

The gangs maintain camps in a huge forest straddling Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and Niger states.

The criminals have been notorious for mass kidnappings of students from schools in recent years.

In February 2021, bandits raided a girl’s boarding school in the town of Jangebe in Zamfara state, kidnapping more than 300 students.

The girls were freed days later following a ransom payment by the authorities.

Nigeria is facing a myriad of security challenges, including a 14-year jihadist insurgency in the northeast that has killed at least 40,000 people and forced more than two million others to flee their homes.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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