Twenty-four from Nigeria Schoolgirls Liberated More Than Seven Days Following Kidnapping
Approximately twenty-four Nigerian-born young women who were abducted from the boarding school more than seven days back are now free, government officials stated.
Attackers invaded a learning facility situated within northwestern region recently, killing one staff member and seizing 25 students.
The nation's leader government leadership commended law enforcement for their "immediate reaction" post-occurrence - while the circumstances surrounding their freedom had not been clarified.
Africa's most populous nation has experienced a spate of abductions over the past few years - amounting to two hundred fifty youths captured at religious educational institution recently still missing.
Via official communication, a special adviser of the administration verified that each young woman taken from the school in Kebbi State had returned safely, mentioning that this event triggered similar abductions across further Nigerian states.
National leadership stated that additional forces will be assigned in sensitive locations to avert further incidents of kidnapping".
In a separate post through social media, government leadership wrote: "Military aviation will continue continuous surveillance over the most remote areas, aligning missions with ground units to effectively identify, separate, disrupt, and counteract all hostile elements."
Exceeding numerous youths were taken hostage within learning facilities since 2014, during which 276 girls got captured in the well-known major capture incident.
Recently, at least three hundred students and employees got captured at St Mary's School, religious educational establishment, located within regional territory.
Fifty of those abducted from educational facility were able to flee as reported by religious organizations - but at least numerous individuals haven't been located.
The primary Catholic cleric across the territory has commented that the administration is undertaking "little substantial action" to recover those still missing.
The abduction at the school was the third impacting the country over recent days, pressuring President Bola Tinubu to call off journey to the G20 summit organized within the African country days ago to address the emergency.
UN education envoy Gordon Brown urged world leaders to "do our utmost" to help measures to bring back captured students.
The representative, previous head of government, commented: "The duty falls upon us to guarantee that learning facilities are safe spaces for learning, instead of locations where youths can be plucked from educational settings for illegal gain."