Twenty-four from Nigeria Female Students Freed After Eight Days After Abduction
Approximately two dozen Nigerian-born girls who were abducted from a learning facility eight days prior are now free, national leadership stated.
Attackers stormed a learning facility located in local province recently, fatally wounding a worker and seizing 25 students.
Head of state government leadership praised security forces for their "swift response" to the incident - while the circumstances regarding their liberation were not specified.
West Africa's dominant power has witnessed multiple incidents of captures in recent years - including over 250 children captured at a Catholic school recently remaining unaccounted for.
Through an announcement, an appointed consultant within the government asserted that every student abducted from educational facility in Kebbi State had been accounted for, mentioning that this event caused copycat kidnappings across further local territories.
Tinubu stated that additional forces are being positioned in sensitive locations to prevent additional occurrences related to captures".
In a separate post on X, Tinubu commented: "The Air Force will continue constant observation throughout isolated territories, aligning missions alongside land forces to properly detect, isolate, interfere with, and counteract every threatening factor."
Over numerous youths got captured within learning facilities in recent years, back when 276 girls were taken hostage amid the well-known Chibok mass abduction.
Recently, a minimum of numerous pupils and workers got captured at St Mary's School, religious educational establishment, situated in Niger state.
Several dozen people abducted from learning institution managed to get away according to the Christian Association - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.
The primary church official within the area has mentioned that Nigeria's government is making "insufficient measures" to recover captured persons.
The abduction at the school represented the third occurrence affecting the nation within seven days, compelling the administration to cancel travel plans global meeting taking place in the African country days ago to deal with the crisis.
United Nations representative the official urged global organizations to try everything possible" to support efforts to return the abducted children.
Brown, ex-British leader, commented: "It's also incumbent on us to ensure that Nigerian schools provide protected areas for education, instead of locations where children could be removed from their classroom for illegal gain."