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100 students kidnapped from Nigerian Catholic school as Trump explodes over Christian violence

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Students and teachers have been kidnapped from a Nigerian Catholic school in a terrifying raid amid spiraling attacks on Christians.

Armed gangsters stole the children from St. Mary’s School in Agwara, in central Nigeria, officials said Friday – the second kidnapping incident in less than a week.

Local residents fear that close to 100 students and staff were taken away in the early-morning assault. It comes after 25 schoolgirls were stolen by bandits in the country’s northwest on Monday.

Donald Trump has threatened military action over the targeted killings of Nigeria’s Christians by radical Islamists. The narrative is rejected by the Nigerian government.

Nigeria – a country of 220 million – has been plagued by a 16-year jihadist insurgency in the Muslim-dominated north. Terror groups like Boko Haram and Islamic State want to establish a caliphate and their campaign, which has drawn in mercenary bandits, is fueling mass kidnappings and deadly attacks on Christians. 

The Catholic Church in the area said in a statement that ‘armed attackers invaded’ the school between 1am and 3am, abducting ‘pupils, students, teachers and a security’ guard who was shot.

The Niger state government said it had ‘received with deep sadness the disturbing news of the kidnapping of pupils …

‘The exact number of abducted pupils is yet to be confirmed as security agencies continue to assess the situation,’ Abubakar Usman, the state government secretary, said in a statement.

After gunmen on Monday stormed a secondary school in Kebbi state in northwestern Nigeria, abducting 25 schoolgirls, Friday’s attack further raises alarm over security in Africa’s most populous country.

Donald Trump in the Oval Office on November 10. The president has threatened military action over the targeted killings of Nigeria's Christians by radical Islamists

Donald Trump in the Oval Office on November 10. The president has threatened military action over the targeted killings of Nigeria’s Christians by radical Islamists

For years, heavily armed criminal gangs locally known as ‘bandits’ have been intensifying attacks in rural areas of northwest and central Nigeria with little state presence, killing thousands and conducting kidnappings for ransom.

The gangs have camps in a vast forest straddling several states including Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna, Sokoto, Kebbi and Niger from where they launch attacks.

The state government said the school had defied orders to temporarily close all boarding schools in parts of the state following an intelligence report of an ‘increased threat level’ in parts of northern Niger that border Kebbi.

Niger’s state police said its tactical units and the military were deployed to search for the pupils.

Police said they received a report that ‘armed bandits invaded’ the secondary school and ‘abducted a yet to be ascertained number of students from the school’s hostel’.

It said security agencies were ‘combing the forests with a view to rescue the abducted students’.

President Bola Tinubu’s government said earlier this week that security forces had been placed on high alert. He has sent a defense minister to lead the search for the Kebbi school girls.

Tinubu’s office said minister of state for defense Alhaji Bello Matawalle had ‘experience in dealing with banditry and mass kidnapping’, after he secured the release of 279 students aged between 10 and 17 who had been kidnapped from a secondary school in 2021 in western Zamfara state.

In a separate attack on a church in western Nigeria on Tuesday, gunmen killed two people during a service that was recorded and broadcast online. Dozens of worshippers are believed to have been abducted.

As Nigeria grapples with security challenges on several fronts, hostage-taking has spiraled nationwide and become a favored tactic of bandit gangs and jihadists.

Although bandits have no ideological leanings and are motivated by financial gains, their increasing alliance with jihadists from the northeast has been a source of concern for authorities and security analysts.

Jihadists have for 16 years been waging an insurrection in the northeast with the aim of establishing a Caliphate.

The jihadist violence has killed more than 40,000 people and displaced around two million in the northeast since it erupted in 2019.

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