ABUJA, Nigeria—In a significant development for Nigeria’s ongoing security challenges, authorities have successfully secured the liberation of 130 schoolchildren who were abducted from a Catholic educational institution in November. This announcement, made by presidential spokesman Sunday Dare via social media platform X, marks the conclusion of a harrowing captivity that gripped the nation.
The incident originated in late November when armed assailants stormed St Mary’s co-educational boarding school in north-central Niger state, seizing hundreds of students and staff members. This attack echoed the traumatic 2014 Boko Haram kidnapping in Chibok, highlighting the persistent security vulnerabilities facing educational institutions in the region.
Initial reports from the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) indicated approximately 315 individuals were unaccounted for following the assault on the rural Papiri community. While around 50 managed to escape immediately after the attack, and another 100 were released on December 7, the fate of the remaining captives remained uncertain until Sunday’s breakthrough.
The resolution of this case proved particularly complex due to logistical challenges in verifying the exact number of captives. According to United Nations sources, many children originally thought kidnapped had actually fled during the attack and returned directly to their remote villages, scattered across Nigeria’s vast rural landscape where transportation can require hours of motorbike travel.
While the specific mechanics of the release remain undisclosed, security analysts suggest ransom payments likely facilitated the children’s freedom, despite technical prohibition under Nigerian law. This incident represents part of a broader pattern of kidnappings that have evolved into a structured, profit-driven industry in Nigeria, with recent reports indicating militant groups have generated approximately $1.66 million through such operations between July 2024 and June 2025.
The November abduction wave, which included not only schoolchildren but also church worshippers, wedding parties, and farmers, has drawn international attention to Nigeria’s security crisis. This has prompted diplomatic responses, including allegations from former US President Donald Trump regarding religious persecution, though Nigerian authorities and independent analysts reject these characterizations.
With the students’ release confirmed, attention now turns to their reintegration and the ongoing challenge of securing Nigeria’s educational institutions against similar threats in the future.
