Two dozen Nigerian Female Students Freed More Than Seven Days Following Abduction

A total of twenty-four Nigerian female students taken hostage from their educational institution over a week ago were liberated, national leadership confirmed.

Gunmen invaded an educational institution in Nigeria's local province on 17 November, fatally wounding a worker and abducting 25 students.

The nation's leader government leadership praised security forces regarding their "swift response" post-occurrence - although precise conditions regarding their liberation were not specified.

The continent's largest country has witnessed numerous cases of captures in recent years - amounting to two hundred fifty youths abducted from a Catholic school days ago still missing.

Through an announcement, an appointed consultant within the government asserted that every student captured at educational facility within the region were now safe, stating that the incident sparked copycat kidnappings across further regional provinces.

Tinubu said that extra staff are being positioned towards high-risk zones to prevent more cases of kidnapping".

Through another message on X, Tinubu stated: "Military aviation must sustain ongoing monitoring across distant regions, synchronising operations alongside land forces to effectively identify, isolate, disrupt, and counteract every threatening factor."

More than fifteen hundred students were taken hostage from educational institutions in recent years, when 276 girls were taken hostage amid the well-known major capture incident.

Recently, no fewer than three hundred students and employees were taken from St Mary's School, religious educational establishment, situated in regional territory.

Several dozen people captured at learning institution managed to get away according to faith-based groups - but at least two hundred fifty are still missing.

The leading church official within the area has mentioned that Nigeria's government is performing "no meaningful effort" to recover the unaccounted individuals.

The capture incident at the institution was the third impacting the country in a week, pressuring national leadership to postpone his trip to the G20 summit taking place in South Africa recently to deal with the crisis.

International education official the official urged global organizations to "do our utmost" to help measures to bring back the abducted children.

The representative, ex-British leader, commented: "We also have responsibility to make certain educational institutions are safe spaces for learning, rather than places in which students could be removed from educational settings for criminal profit."

Nathan Stephens
Nathan Stephens

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