Two dozen Nigerian-born Schoolgirls Liberated More Than Seven Days After Kidnapping

Approximately two dozen West African girls captured from a boarding school eight days prior were liberated, national leadership confirmed.

Armed assailants invaded the Government Girls Comprehensive Senior Secondary School situated within local province on 17 November, fatally wounding a worker and abducting two dozen plus one scholars.

The nation's leader the president commended law enforcement for their "swift response" following the event - although the circumstances surrounding their freedom remained unclear.

West Africa's dominant power has suffered multiple incidents of kidnappings over the past few years - including over two hundred fifty youths taken from a Catholic school days ago yet to be located.

Through an announcement, a special adviser of the administration confirmed that all the girls taken from the school in Kebbi State had been accounted for, stating that this event sparked imitation captures in two other Nigerian states.

Tinubu stated that additional forces are being positioned to "vulnerable areas to stop more cases related to captures".

In a separate post on X, Tinubu commented: "Military aviation will continue constant observation across distant regions, coordinating activities together with infantry to accurately locate, separate, disrupt, and counteract every threatening factor."

Exceeding fifteen hundred students have been abducted within learning facilities over the past decade, back when two hundred seventy-six students were taken hostage amid the well-known major capture incident.

On Friday, at least three hundred students and employees got captured at an educational institution, faith-based academy, located within local province.

Half a hundred individuals taken from educational facility have since escaped according to religious organizations - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.

The main religious leader across the territory has commented that Nigeria's government is undertaking "little substantial action" to recover those still missing.

The abduction at the school represented the third occurrence to hit Nigeria over recent days, compelling President Bola Tinubu to postpone travel plans global meeting taking place in the African country days ago to manage the emergency.

UN education envoy Gordon Brown urged global organizations to try everything possible" to support efforts to return kidnapped youths.

The representative, previous head of government, stated: "It's also incumbent on us to make certain learning facilities remain secure environments for education, not spaces in which students could be removed from educational settings for illegal gain."

Jamie Wright
Jamie Wright

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