ABUJA (BBC) — Fifty of the 303 children kidnapped by gunmen from a Catholic school in Nigeria on Friday have escaped, according to the Christian Association of Nigeria (Can).
Can has since clarified that they escaped on Friday and Saturday and have been reunited with their parents in Niger state. However, the police say they haven’t been able to confirm these reports.
A major military-led search and rescue operation is under way for the remaining 253 children and 12 teachers who remain missing.
Authorities in several Nigerian states ordered schools to shut following the mass abduction in Niger and another smaller hostage-taking in Kebbi state today when 25 pupils were kidnapped from a boarding school.
In response to the spate of abductions, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu has ordered the recruitment of an additional 30,000 police officers.
In another development, 38 people abducted from a church service in Kwara state last week were freed on Sunday, the state governor said.
Two people were killed in the attack on Christ Apostolic Church in Eruku.
Orders were given for many schools to close in statesincluding Kebbi, Niger, Katsina, Yobe and Kwara.
There is still a lot of confusion and uncertainty in Papiri, the village in Niger state where the children were taken from.
Parents whose children are still missing told the BBC they feel abandoned. While they expected security officers to be deployed in the village in the wake of the attack on St Mary’s School, this has not yet happened.
President Tinubu’s office said on Sunday that all police in Very Important Persons (VIP) protection services had been redeployed to focus on core duties, especially in remote areas prone to attacks.
A report published earlier this month by the European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) said more than a quarter of Nigeria’s estimated 371,000-strong police force – 100,000 – were “assigned to the protection of politicians and VIPs, rather than to tasks serving the general population”.
According to Can, the pupils managed to escape between Friday and Saturday in what is being described as a brave and risky attempt to flee their captors.
On Monday, the police questioned Can’s report that 50 students had escaped, saying they had not been able to confirm this detail.
In response Can’s chairman for Niger State, Bishop Bulus Bawa Yohanna, insisted to the BBC that the figure was correct. He emphasised that the 50 were children who had fled during or shortly after the kidnapping, rather than a more recent set of escapees. As the head of the church in the state, he is in charge of the Catholic school.
President Tinubu had said on Sunday that 51 children had been “recovered”.
The kidnapping of more than 300 schoolchildren surpasses the 276 abducted during the infamous Chibok mass abduction of 2014.
Local police say armed men stormed St Mary’s at around 02:00 (01:00 GMT) on Friday.
Calling for the release of the abductees on Sunday, Pope Leo XIV expressed “immense sadness” and urged the authorities to act swiftly.
Dominic Adamu, whose daughters attend the school but were not taken, told the BBC: “Everybody is weak… It took everybody by surprise.”
One distressed woman tearfully told the BBC that her nieces, aged six and 13, had been kidnapped, adding: “I just want them to come home.”
The military, police and local vigilantes are conducting a search for the children, combing nearby forests and remote routes believed to have been used by the gunmen.
Authorities in Niger state said St Mary’s School had disregarded an order to close all boarding facilities following intelligence warnings of a heightened risk of attacks. The school has not commented on that allegation.
By BBC News

