BSS
  09 Dec 2025, 00:05

100 abducted Nigerian children handed over to state officials

Collected photo

MINNA, Nigeria, Dec 8, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Around 100 schoolchildren kidnapped from a Catholic school in Nigeria last month were handed over to state officials Monday, AFP saw, a day after authorities secured their release.

The children -- many wearing football jerseys and girls in long robes -- were driven into the Niger State Government House in white buses escorted by a dozen military vans and armoured vehicles.

Dozens of the 315 students and staff were abducted from the school Minna, in north-central Niger state. Fifty escaped shortly after the raid.

The fate of 165 others is still unclear but the state governor Umar Bago said "I want to reassure parents and guardians of these children that they will be safely delivered to them and very soon".

"We wish to recover the remaining students that are still in captivity and by the grace of God in a very short time from now we are going to receive them," he said during an address to the students and officials.

The children will undergo medical checks before they are reunited with their parents, the governor added.

Bago shook hands with some of the children and led them into a hall where the state emir and local officials were seated to receive them.

"Today is fundamental and very important in redefining the history of this state," the state governor said.

According to a list of the released children seen by AFP, most of those freed are aged between 10 and 17 years. The school catered for children as young as nursery school age.

It is unclear who seized the children from their boarding school in remote rural Papiri village or the circumstances surrounding the release of the 100.

Though kidnappings for ransom are common as a way for criminals and armed groups to make quick cash, a spate of mass abductions in November put an uncomfortable spotlight on Nigeria's already grim security situation.

The news of their release broke on Sunday as Nigerian military intervened in neighbouring Benin conducting countercoup operations after a group of soldiers announced a coup bid in the former French colony.

The country also faces a long-running jihadist insurgency in the northeast, while armed "bandit" gangs conduct kidnappings and loot villages in the northwest.

In November, assailants across the country kidnapped two dozen Muslim schoolgirls, 38 church worshippers, a bride and her bridesmaids, with farmers, women and children also taken hostage.

The kidnappings also came as Nigeria faces a diplomatic offensive from the United States, where President Donald Trump has alleged that mass killings of Christians have amounted to a "genocide" and threatened to intervene militarily.

The Nigerian government and independent analysts have rejected that framing, which has long been used by the Christian right in the United States and Europe.

The religiously diverse country of 230 million people is the scene of myriad conflicts -- including farmer-herder clashes in the centre and separatist violence in the southeast -- that have killed both Christians and Muslims.