Twenty-four from Nigeria Female Students Released After Eight Days After Abduction

A group of two dozen Nigerian young women captured from their boarding school more than seven days back were liberated, government officials announced.

Gunmen stormed the Government Girls Comprehensive Senior Secondary School in Nigeria's local province on 17 November, taking the life of an employee while capturing 25 students.

The nation's leader the president commended law enforcement concerning the "immediate reaction" post-occurrence - despite the fact that the circumstances surrounding their freedom had not been clarified.

The continent's largest country has witnessed numerous cases of captures during current times - with more than 250 children abducted from a Catholic school days ago yet to be located.

Via official communication, an appointed consultant of the administration asserted that each young woman captured at educational facility in Kebbi State had been accounted for, mentioning that this event caused imitation captures in two other local territories.

Tinubu stated that additional forces would be deployed in sensitive locations to avert further incidents involving abductions".

In a separate post through social media, Tinubu stated: "The Air Force must sustain continuous surveillance across distant regions, aligning missions together with infantry to accurately locate, separate, interfere with, and neutralise all hostile elements."

More than 1,500 children got captured from educational institutions in recent years, back when 276 girls got captured in the notorious Chibok mass abduction.

On Friday, at least three hundred students and employees got captured at an educational institution, religious educational establishment, located within local province.

Fifty of those captured at the school were able to flee according to the Christian Association - but at least 250 remain unaccounted for.

The primary Catholic cleric across the territory has commented that national authorities is making "no meaningful effort" to save the unaccounted individuals.

This kidnapping within educational premises marked the third instance affecting the nation in a week, pressuring the administration to call off travel plans international conference organized within South Africa days ago to deal with the crisis.

UN education envoy Gordon Brown urged world leaders to make maximum effort" to assist initiatives to recover kidnapped youths.

The envoy, a former UK prime minister, stated: "It's also incumbent on us to guarantee that Nigerian schools are safe spaces for studying, instead of locations where youths could be removed from learning environments for criminal profit."

Timothy Ramirez
Timothy Ramirez

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