Twenty-four Nigerian-born Female Students Liberated Over a Week Post Capture

Approximately twenty-four West African female students captured from the learning facility more than seven days back were liberated, the country's president stated.

Attackers invaded an educational institution situated within Kebbi State last month, killing one staff member and seizing two dozen plus one scholars.

The nation's leader the president commended military personnel concerning the "quick action" to the incident - although the circumstances regarding their liberation had not been clarified.

Africa's most populous nation has suffered numerous cases of captures over the past few years - with more than two hundred fifty youths taken from faith-based academy recently yet to be located.

In a statement, a special adviser within the government confirmed that every student taken from learning institution in Kebbi State had been accounted for, noting that this event triggered similar abductions in two other regional provinces.

National leadership said that additional forces will be assigned in sensitive locations to stop further incidents of kidnapping".

Via additional communication through social media, the president stated: "Military aviation will continue continuous surveillance throughout isolated territories, aligning missions alongside land forces to accurately locate, contain, interfere with, and eliminate all hostile elements."

Exceeding fifteen hundred students got captured from Nigerian schools in recent years, back when multiple young women got captured in the well-known major capture incident.

Recently, no fewer than 300 children and staff were abducted from St Mary's School, religious educational establishment, in Nigeria's regional territory.

Several dozen people taken from educational facility managed to get away according to religious organizations - but at least 250 remain unaccounted for.

The primary Catholic cleric across the territory has mentioned that Nigeria's government is undertaking "insufficient measures" to recover the unaccounted individuals.

The capture incident at the school was the third impacting the country within seven days, pressuring national leadership to postpone his trip to the G20 summit held in the southern nation at the weekend to address the crisis.

International education official the official requested the international community to try everything possible" to support efforts to return the abducted children.

The envoy, ex-British leader, stated: "We also have responsibility to make certain educational institutions remain secure environments for education, rather than places in which students can be plucked from educational settings through unlawful means."

Joann Johnson
Joann Johnson

Experienced journalist specializing in Central European affairs and political commentary.