
ABUJA, November 28 (IPS) – On the morning of 17 November 2025, darkness cloaked Maga city within the Danko/Wasagu Native Authorities Space, Kebbi State, till gunfire shattered the silence. It was round 4 am when armed attackers stormed the Authorities Women Complete Secondary College, firing into the air to terrify residents earlier than heading to the employees quarters. There, they killed two, together with Hassan Yakubu, the college’s Chief Safety Officer after which kidnapped 26 feminine college students.
Two later escaped, stated Halima Bande, the state’s commissioner for Primary and Secondary Schooling. This brazen raid got here lower than 72 hours after the killing of Brigadier-Basic Musa Uba in an ambush by the insurgents.
A rescue mission by Nigerian troopers to intervene in Kebbi’s abduction was itself ambushed and injured by the insurgents, heightening fears that such violence is spiraling past the attain of typical safety responses.
Since then, 24 women have been launched, Nigerian President Bola Tinubu introduced.
Abubakar Fakai, whose 9 nieces are among the many 26 kidnapped schoolgirls, instructed IPS that his household and the whole group have been plunged into insufferable grief.
A father of 4 of the kidnapped women, Ilyasu Fakai, continues to be in shock. Nearly each family within the close-knit village has been affected. For greater than every week they obtained no credible details about the ladies’ situation or whereabouts, Abubakar stated.
“Each night time we attempt to sleep, however we will’t, as a result of we maintain considering of the ladies mendacity someplace on naked floor, scared and chilly. These are teenage women, and we worry for his or her dignity and their lives. We simply need the federal government to rescue them shortly and reunite them with us. This ache is an excessive amount of for our group to bear,” he instructed IPS.
The Kebbi raid was certainly one of a number of mass abductions that occurred inside days of one another.
At the least 402 individuals, primarily schoolchildren, have been kidnapped in 4 states within the north-central area—Niger, Kebbi, Kwara and Borno—since 17 November, the UN human rights workplace, OHCHR, stated on Tuesday.
Name to Authorities
“We’re shocked on the current surge in mass abductions in north-central Nigeria,” OHCHR Spokesperson Thameen Al-Kheetan stated in Geneva.
“We urge the Nigerian authorities—in any respect ranges—to take all lawful measures to make sure such vile assaults are halted and to carry these accountable to account.”
A day after the Kebbi incident, a church was attacked in Eruku, Kwara; two had been killed and about 38 kidnapped throughout a stay church session. State Gov. AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, in an announcement, stated President Bola Tinubu deployed a further 900 troops to the group.
In Niger State, a St. Mary’s College in Papiri was additionally attacked on Friday, November 21, and 303 girls and boys, plus 12 academics, had been kidnapped; solely 50 are stated to have escaped as of Sunday, November 23. This quantity surpasses the variety of women kidnapped in Chibok, prompting a global “Deliver Again Our Women” marketing campaign.
The identical day, militants launched one other lethal assault in Borno State. The checklist will not be exhaustive, underscoring how Nigeria’s overlapping insurgency and banditry crises are converging in devastating methods.
Insurgency a Menace to Meals Safety
The rise in rebel assaults is threatening regional stability and inflicting a spike in starvation, in keeping with the the World Meals Programme (WFP)
The newest evaluation finds practically 35 million individuals are projected to face extreme meals insecurity throughout the 2026 lean season from June to August—the very best quantity ever recorded within the nation.
Rebel assaults have intensified this 12 months, the UN company stated.
Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimin (JNIM), an al-Qaeda affiliate, reportedly carried out its first assault in Nigeria final month, whereas the rebel group Islamic State in West Africa Province (ISWAP) is seemingly in search of to broaden throughout the Sahel area.
“Communities are below extreme strain from repeated assaults and financial stress,” stated David Stevenson, WFP Nation Director and Consultant in Nigeria.
“If we will’t maintain households fed and meals insecurity at bay, rising desperation might gas elevated instability with rebel teams exploiting starvation to broaden their affect, making a safety risk that extends throughout West Africa and past.”
Human-rights activist Omoyele Sowore drew nationwide consideration to the lawlessness in a viral publish.
A Lengthy Shadow Over Faculties
Human-rights activist Omoyele Sowore drew nationwide consideration to the lawlessness in a viral publish.
These current incidents are usually not remoted—they’re a part of a deepening nationwide disaster that has focused colleges for greater than a decade. In response to Save the Kids, 1,683, schoolchildren have been kidnapped in Nigeria from April 2014 by December 2022. UNICEF equally studies that over 1,680 schoolchildren have been kidnapped inside that interval and in keeping with a SBM report, 4,722 individuals had been kidnapped and N2.57 billion (about USD 1.7 million) was paid to kidnappers as ransom between July 2024 and June 2025.
These statistics mirror each previous challenges and an everlasting failure—regardless of Nigeria’s endorsement of the Secure Faculties Declaration, the protections promised on paper haven’t reached a lot of its most weak colleges.
Consultants and analysts say these incidents mirror a broader mannequin: felony gangs and insurgents are more and more seeing schoolchildren as high-value targets. This surge underscores a chilling reality: instructional establishments, particularly in rural and poorly guarded areas, are not protected havens. They’re strategic targets.
“This has now turn into a nationwide and worldwide dialogue, giving Nigeria a really dangerous title,” stated Colonel Abdullahi Gwandu, a battle professional, in an interview with IPS, criticizing the federal government’s failure to anticipate such assaults and the slack competency of safety forces, placing not solely training however each sphere of the nation in mayhem.
Trauma, Belief, and Retreat
Within the wake of the Kebbi abduction, worry rippled throughout communities. Unsure of their youngsters’s security, dad and mom in Maga and close by areas rushed to withdraw their daughters from colleges. Group leaders responded with grief and prayer. Maga’s conventional ruler introduced a particular prayer gathering, calling on God to carry the ladies house safely.
Habibat Muhammad, a youth advocate, stated it involved her that these tendencies put the training of women in danger.
“While you practice a lady youngster, you practice a nation however how do you practice a nation when women who ought to be sitting at school are dragged out of their hostels by individuals who have discovered to take advantage of authorities negligence?”
She stated many rural women’ colleges lack primary safety infrastructure: educated guards, perimeter fencing, early-warning programs and correct lighting. She argued that this absence of safety contrasts sharply with the layered safety given to public officers or monetary establishments. “Schooling should be handled as a nationwide precedence, not a delicate goal,” she instructed IPS.
Why the State Can’t Appear to Cease Assaults
Safety consultants and group voices agree that the Kebbi assault uncovered main systemic flaws. Gwandu described the incident as a stark reminder of how fragile rural college safety has turn into. He famous that the deliberate killing of a faculty safety officer indicators a shift in ways: attackers are actually focusing on authority figures along with college students. He burdened the necessity for a extra intelligence-driven technique and urged the army to take firmer motion. “
The Northwest Division, headquartered in Sokoto, ought to be given full authority and sources to reply shortly and aggressively by combining human intelligence with AI to trace bandits and their informants whereas addressing poverty and poor training to cut back felony recruitment, Gwandu stated.
Past quick safety, he argues, the federal government should deal with root causes: poverty, lack of training, and widespread youth unemployment make banditry and kidnapping extra interesting for disenfranchised younger individuals.
The Price Past the Kidnapping
Dr. Shadi Sabeh, an educationist and the vice-chairman of the Iconic College, argues that closing these wounds should be central to Nigeria’s restoration technique.
“We have now to be there for our youngsters. Steering and counselling are nearly absent in our training system.” he requires trauma-informed curricula, peer help teams, bravery coaching, and sustained psychological well being companies inside colleges to assist college students cope, heal, and reclaim their futures. This highlights the necessity to maintain youth productive.
“A hungry man is an offended man and an idle hand is a satan’s workshop.
Jeariogbe Islamiyyah Adedoyin, Vice President of the College of Bodily Sciences, added a extra private plea.
“No youngster ought to ever should undergo one thing like that simply to get an training. Our women should be taught with out worry. She stated when colleges are not protected, the way forward for the nation is in danger.”
What the Authorities Is Doing—And Why It’s Not Sufficient
In response to the disaster, authorities have initiated each quick and longer-term measures. Quick-term responses embody deployment of troops to high-risk areas like Kebbi and Niger, search-and-rescue operations involving army, police, and native vigilantes, closure of some colleges deemed weak and public condemnation from non secular and political leaders.
Nevertheless, excessive ranges of poverty, unemployment, and illiteracy, and lack of parental care make marginalized youth weak to recruitment by armed teams and defeat these efforts.
A authorized professional, Waliu Olaitan Wahab, instructed IPS that the roots of insecurity in northern Nigeria run far deeper than the actions of Boko Haram, herdsmen, or bandit gangs. He described the disaster as multifaceted, arguing that a long time of neglect by northern elites have created a system the place thousands and thousands of kids develop up with out help, alternative, or safety—making them straightforward targets for recruitment.
IPS UN Bureau Report
© Inter Press Service (20251128084514) — All Rights Reserved. Unique supply: Inter Press Service