Nigeria Secures Release of Final 130 Kidnapped Schoolchildren
Nigerian authorities have secured the release of the final 130 schoolchildren abducted from a Catholic school in November, ending a month-long ordeal amid a nationwide security crisis.
In Brief
Nigerian authorities on Sunday announced they have secured the release of 130 schoolchildren, the final group taken by gunmen from a Catholic boarding school in November. The announcement appears to close a month-long mass abduction crisis that drew international attention to the country's severe security challenges.
All students abducted from a Catholic school in Nigeria's north-central Niger State over a month ago have now been freed, according to a presidential spokesman. "Another 130 Abducted Niger State Pupils Released, None Left In Captivity," Sunday Dare said in a post on X on Sunday, December 21.
The ordeal began in late November when hundreds of students and staff were kidnapped from St Mary’s co-educational boarding school in the rural hamlet of Papiri. The attack was part of a broader wave of mass abductions that have plagued the West African nation, echoing the infamous 2014 Boko Haram kidnapping of schoolgirls in Chibok.
"The remaining set of girls/secondary school students will be taken to Minna [the state capital] on Monday. We’ll have to still do final verification."
The exact number of captives has been a point of confusion throughout the crisis. The Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) initially reported 315 students and staff missing. About 50 escaped in the immediate aftermath, and the government secured the release of 100 more on December 7. Sunday's release of 130 children brings the public total to 280.
A UN source, speaking to the AFP news agency, helped clarify the discrepancy, suggesting that dozens thought to have been kidnapped had actually managed to escape during the attack and made their way home. The source noted that accounting has been complicated because the children’s homes are scattered across remote villages, some requiring hours of travel by motorbike to reach.
A 'Profit-Seeking Industry'
It remains unclear who was behind the mass abduction or what terms, if any, were met to secure the students' release. However, the incident fits a grim pattern in Nigeria, where kidnapping for ransom has evolved into a major criminal enterprise.
Context: Nigeria's Kidnapping Crisis
Nigeria's kidnap-for-ransom crisis has “consolidated into a structured, profit-seeking industry” that raised some $1.66 million between July 2024 and June 2025, according to a recent report by SBM Intelligence, a Lagos-based consultancy. The country is grappling with multiple, interlocking security threats, from armed groups in the northeast to armed “bandit” gangs in the northwest who engage in mass kidnappings of civilians.
The recent spate of attacks in November has cast an uncomfortable spotlight on the country's security apparatus. In addition to the St Mary's students, assailants kidnapped two dozen Muslim schoolgirls, 38 church worshippers, and a bride with her bridesmaids in separate incidents.
The crisis also intersects with international politics. U.S. President Donald Trump has alleged that mass killings of Christians in Nigeria amount to a “genocide” and has threatened military intervention. This narrative has long been promoted by the Christian right in the U.S. and Europe. However, the Nigerian government and independent analysts reject this framing, arguing that the violence is driven by complex socio-economic factors and criminality rather than a singular religious persecution agenda.
관련 기사
미 법무부가 제프리 엡스타인 관련 문서 공개 속도에 대해 공식 해명했습니다. 법무부는 피해자 신원 보호를 위한 법률팀의 검토가 진행 중이며, 이것이 최우선 과제라고 강조했습니다.
한국 정부가 HD현대중공업, 삼성중공업 등과 손잡고 LNG 운반선 핵심 기술인 화물창 국산화에 나선다. 매년 수조 원에 달하는 해외 기술료 의존도를 낮추고 기술 주권을 확보하기 위한 전략이다.
중국과 한국이 9년 만에 중단됐던 자유무역협정(FTA) 2단계 협상을 재개합니다. 제조업을 넘어 서비스 분야로 경제 협력을 확대하려는 이번 움직임의 배경과 지정학적 함의를 분석합니다.
아세안 외교장관들이 2주째 이어진 태국-캄보디아 국경 분쟁을 중재하기 위해 쿠알라룸푸르에서 긴급 회의를 열었다. 수십 명의 사망자를 낸 이번 충돌은 아세안의 단합을 시험하고 있다.