LAGOS, NIGERIA: A local minority group on Saturday said 315 students and teachers were seized a day earlier in Nigeria’s second mass school abduction in a week, as security fears mounted in Africa’s most populous nation.
The early Friday raid on St. Mary’s school in Niger state in central Nigeria came after gunmen on Monday stormed a secondary school in neighboring Kebbi state, abducting 25 girls.
A local minority Association of Nigeria said the new number came “after a verification exercise” following the early Friday mass kidnapping, and added that “The total number of victims abducted … is now 303 students and 12 teachers.”
According to AFP, the number of students kidnapped is almost half of the school’s 629 enrolled pupils. Authorities in the nearby states of Katsina and Plateau have ordered all schools to close as a precautionary measure.
The Niger state government closed many schools and President Bola Tinubu canceled international engagements, including attending the G20 summit in Johannesburg, to handle the crisis.
The two abduction operations and an attack on a church in the west of the country, in which two people were killed, have happened since US President Donald Trump threatened military action over the killing.
Nigeria is still scarred by the kidnapping of nearly 300 girls by Boko Haram group at Chibok in northestern Borno state more than a decade ago. Some of those girls are still missing.



