“The Federal Government has confirmed that 110 students of
the Government Science and Technical College in Dapchi, Yobe State, are
so far unaccounted for, after insurgents believed to be from a faction
of Boko Haram invaded their school on Monday,” the information ministry said in a statement.
The statement came after authorities were unable to account for 110 of the school’s 906 students, the ministry said.
The kidnapping has raised questions about the military’s
repeated claims that the Islamist militants are on the verge of defeat,
after nearly nine years of bitter fighting.
It has also revived memories of the 2014 mass abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls from Chibok that shook the world.
On Monday night, terrified pupils fled the boarding school
when heavily armed fighters in military fatigues and turbans stormed the
town, shouting “Allahu Akbar” (“God is greatest”).
The authorities initially denied that any student had been kidnapped.
On Friday, President Muhammadu Buhari apologised to the girls’ families, saying: “This is a national disaster. We are sorry that this could have happened.”
Targeting education
Former military ruler Buhari was elected in 2015 on a
promise to defeat Boko Haram, after the jihadists grew in strength under
his predecessor, Goodluck Jonathan.
Jonathan was lambasted for his tardy response to the Chibok
abduction, which saw 276 girls from the town in Borno state taken in the
dead of night.
A teacher at the school, Amsani Alilawan, said there were soldiers in Dapchi until last month but they were then redeployed.
“One month back, they carry (take away) all soldiers, they
transferred them to another side, they leave us without security,” he
said.
Enraged relatives of the missing girls this week tried to
surround the convoy of the state mayor of Yobe, only to be pushed back
by the security forces.
The kidnapping is the worst jihadist assault to have hit Nigeria since Buhari came to power.
Schools, particularly those with a secular curriculum, have
been targeted by Boko Haram, whose name roughly translates from Hausa as
“Western education is forbidden”.
Boko Haram’s quest to establish a hardline Islamic state in
northeast Nigeria has left at least 20,000 dead and made more than 2.6
million others homeless since 2009.
The jihadists have increasingly turned to kidnapping for
ransom as a way to finance their operations and win back key commanders
in prisoner swaps with the Nigerian government
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