Nigeria’s freed schoolboys reunited with parents after abduction ordeal

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Nigeria’s Freed Schoolboys Reunited With Parents After Abduction Ordeal
Nigeria, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Lekan Oyekanmi and Sunday Alamba, Associated Press

Nigeria’s freed schoolboys have been reunited with their parents after being held captive for nearly a week by gunmen allied with jihadist rebels in the country’s northwest.

Relieved parents hugged their sons on Saturday in Kankara, where more than 340 boys were abducted from the Government Science Secondary School on the night of December 11.

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Other families met their sons in Ketare, about 15 miles (25km) away. More boys went to their homes further away in Katsina state.


A mother is reunited with her son who was among the kidnapped students in Katsina
A mother is reunited with her son who was among the kidnapped students (Sunday Alamba/AP)

“When I heard our boys were freed, I was full with joy and happiness because I couldn’t sleep, I couldn’t eat,” Murjanatu Rabiu, a mother of one of the boys said.

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“We were crying, not knowing the condition that they were in,” she said.

“When we saw them, we were so happy even though they came back with wounds … and very hungry.”

Many of the schoolboys expressed worry about returning to school, saying their captors threatened them with death if they went back to classes.


Families reunited
More than 300 schoolboys were kidnapped in the attack on the school (Sunday Alamba/AP)

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Nigeria’s Boko Haram jihadist rebels claimed responsibility for the abductions, saying they attacked the school because they believe Western education is un-Islamic.

One freed Kankara student, Usman Mohammad Rabiu, said: “Fear gripped me when they said if they ever see us in school again, that they will kill us.

“I was seriously afraid.”

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The 13-year-old boy told how the students were forced at gunpoint to trek several miles through the bush, without food or water. His feet had sores from the hike across the tough terrain. He said his feet were so painful that he could not walk and was helped by an older boy who carried him on his back. He said he did not want to go back to school.


Family members wait for the schoolboys
Family members wait to be reunited (Sunday Alamba/AP)

“The reason why I’ll not go back to school is because I am thinking if I go back to school the bandits will kill me and then I’ll not see my parents again,” said Usman. “That’s the reason why I will not go back again.”

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After being released by their captors, the schoolboys were bused to Katsina, the provincial capital, where they met with Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari on Friday.

The president appeared to minimise the traumatic abduction, telling the boys they should not be deterred in life by “this little difficulty”.

Another abduction of more than 80 students happened on Saturday night in an area nearby, but the pupils were quickly rescued by security forces after a fierce gun battle, police said on Sunday.

Saturday night’s attempted kidnapping took place in Dandume, about 40 miles (64km) from Kankara, the town where the earlier kidnapping occurred.

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