Twenty-four from Nigeria Female Students Liberated More Than Seven Days Post Kidnapping

A total of 24 West African female students taken hostage from the boarding school more than seven days back are now free, the country's president announced.

Attackers invaded an educational institution situated within local province recently, killing one staff member while capturing two dozen plus one scholars.

Nigerian President government leadership commended security forces concerning the "quick action" following the event - although specific details regarding their liberation had not been clarified.

Africa's most populous nation has witnessed numerous cases of abductions over the past few years - including over two hundred fifty youths abducted from faith-based academy days ago still missing.

In a statement, a special adviser to the president confirmed that every student captured at learning institution within the region had returned safely, stating that this event triggered imitation captures across further local territories.

The president announced that extra staff will be assigned to "vulnerable areas to prevent additional occurrences involving abductions".

Through another message using digital platforms, Tinubu wrote: "The Air Force must sustain ongoing monitoring over the most remote areas, coordinating activities together with infantry to properly detect, isolate, disturb, and eliminate every threatening factor."

More than 1,500 children got captured from educational institutions over the past decade, when two hundred seventy-six students were abducted during the well-known large-scale kidnapping.

On Friday, no fewer than 300 children and staff were taken from an educational institution, faith-based academy, located within Niger state.

Half a hundred individuals taken from educational facility have since escaped as reported by the Christian Association - yet approximately numerous individuals haven't been located.

The primary church official across the territory has mentioned that Nigeria's government is undertaking "no meaningful effort" to save captured persons.

This kidnapping at the school represented the third occurrence affecting the nation over recent days, forcing the administration to cancel his trip to the G20 summit taking place in South Africa at the weekend to manage the crisis.

United Nations representative Gordon Brown urged global organizations to try everything possible" to help measures to bring back kidnapped youths.

The representative, previous head of government, commented: "The duty falls upon us to make certain educational institutions are safe spaces for learning, rather than places in which students might get taken from learning environments for criminal profit."

Amber Brooks
Amber Brooks

Tech enthusiast and futurist with a passion for exploring how emerging technologies shape our world and daily lives.