Gunmen escape with kids from a authorities main college in Kuriga city in Kaduna state.
Gunmen have attacked a college in northwestern Nigeria and kidnapped dozens of pupils as they have been about to start out the college day, native residents and authorities say.
Police in Kaduna state didn’t instantly touch upon the abductions, which occurred on the Native Authorities Schooling Authority Faculty within the city of Kuriga on Thursday.
The variety of pupils taken was not instantly clear.
The assailants stormed the college shortly after morning meeting about 8am (07:00 GMT), taking the pupils hostage earlier than any assist may arrive, Joshua Madami, a youth chief within the space, instructed The Related Press information company.
“They were surrounded from all angles and left with almost 200 pupils and students,” Madami mentioned.
In response to Salasi Musa, chairperson of the Chikun Native Authorities Space in Kaduna, the variety of pupils kidnapped was “far more than 100”.
Abductions of scholars from faculties in northern Nigeria are widespread and have turn out to be a supply of concern since 2014 when Boko Haram kidnapped greater than 200 schoolgirls in Borno state’s Chibok village.
In recent times, the abductions have been concentrated within the northwest and central areas, the place dozens of armed teams typically goal villagers and travellers for big ransoms.
The final main reported abduction involving schoolchildren was in June 2021 when gunmen took greater than 80 college students in a raid on a college within the northwestern state of Kebbi.
‘We don’t know what to do’
Dad and mom of the lacking kids instructed the Reuters information company that the gunmen began taking pictures sporadically on arrival on the college earlier than abducting the kids and escaping.
The college educates main and secondary college college students.
“We don’t know what to do. We are all waiting to see what God can do. They are my only children I have on Earth,” Fatima Usman, whose two kids have been amongst these kidnapped, instructed Reuters by cellphone.
One other mother or father, Hassan Abdullahi, instructed Reuters that native vigilantes had tried to repel the gunmen however have been overpowered.
“Seventeen of the students abducted are my children. I feel very sad that the government has neglected us completely in this area,” Abdullahi mentioned.