Nigeria: One kidnapped student dead, seven rescued in Kebbi

This file photo shows an empty classroom of the Government Science College where gunmen kidnapped dozens of students and staffs, in Kagara, Rafi Local Government Niger State, Nigeria on Feb 18, 2021 (KOLA SULAIMON / AFP)

ABUJA – One student from a group of dozens abducted from a school in northwest Nigeria this week has been found dead, the army said on Friday, adding it had rescued five students and two teachers.

Gunmen raided the school in Kebbi state in broad daylight on Thursday in the latest case of mass abductions in the region. A teacher said more than 80 students were taken, while the police said five teachers were abducted but did not disclose the number of missing students.

Troops are still on the heels of the kidnappers in order to rescue the remaining abductees still in captivity.

 Onyema Nwachukwu, Nigerian army spokesperson

One female student was found dead in the forest by troops tracking the kidnappers, Nigerian army spokesperson Onyema Nwachukwu said in a statement. Those who were rescued were freed after an exchange of fire in the early hours of Friday.

READ MORE: Students, teachers kidnapped after gunmen attack school in Nigeria

"Troops are still on the heels of the kidnappers in order to rescue the remaining abductees still in captivity," Nwachukwu said.

Troops, with support from the Nigerian Air Force, had also recovered 800 stolen cattle, the statement said.

The kidnapping was the third mass abduction from a school in northwest Nigeria in as many weeks, with armed gangs carrying out the kidnappings for ransom. More than 800 students have been taken from their schools in the region since December.

ALSO READ: Gunmen abduct 317 schoolgirls in Nigeria as security collapses

A teacher at the school told Reuters that the school had received warnings regarding potential attacks, but chose not to close.

Previous post IMF proposes carbon price floor among large emitters
Next post Border reopening: Merkel and Macron call for EU coordination